Celebrating Ten Years of FLYing!

In today’s speed-of-light culture, it’s not very often we get to celebrate a 10th ...

This Week in BlogTalkRadio, 11/30-12/6

With Thanksgiving behind us and Christmas and Hanukah up ahead, it’s been a lively week ...

Partying with Cosby on BlogTalkRadio

Have you heard about Bill Cosby’s LISTENing parties? The New York Times just reviewed ...

 

Your show will start playing after this message

Profile

JoelSuggsPGAMaster

http://www.JoelSuggsGolfSuccess.com


Country: United States

Language: English

Follow on Twitter


Listeners

  • Kaizen GOLF
  • the long shot
  • Josh Jeffi
  • The Wrong Angle
  • JoelSuggsPGAMaster
  • Bridgin The Gap
  • WildWagon
  • TV TALK
  • Tryst
  • BTR Mindy
  • *Nikki*

Friends

  • Rob Trautman
  • Connie Ragen Green
  • Josh Jeffi
  • Dawn Grant
  • Bridgin The Gap
  • Lillian Brummet
  • TV TALK

JoelSuggsPGAMaster  

'Top 50' PGA Master Teaching Professional gives you unique 'takes' on golf - most especially your OWN, UNIQUE - GOLF...SUCCESS.

  • Archived Blog Post

    Date / Time:

    Par Golf: With Only 7 Clubs!

       14 Clubs.  That is the limit...determined by the USGA, long ago.

       I've seen players shoot Par Golf, though, with as few as 7 clubs.

       A couple caveats;  it has been at a Mid-Length course (Meadow Links & Golf Academy), it has been by a Junior Golfer, "Par" was shortened to "junior-appropriate" distances.

       Now the same principles apply, though, to all adults and all yardaged courses.

       (Doug Stultz, PGA Golf Manager of the Hamilton County Park District, recently told me of how he watched Jim Dent shoot 72, on  a regulation course, with 3 clubs.)

       I've also seen older juniors, at adult-length "par" - shoot their same scores - with about 6 clubs in their bag.

       How can this be done?

       The secret lies in understanding two simple golf concepts:

       1)  Greens are about 30 yards from front-to-back.

       2)  The only place you need perfection in golf, is in your putting, chipping and pitching.

       Meditate on and consider these two principles/concepts/dynamics/observations - and tomorrow I'll explain them in more detail.

       ...looking forward to it!

Comments

There are no comments at this time.

Everything Else

Listen

 

Participate

 

Services and Terms

 

Corporate

 

BlogTalkRadio

 

© 2009 BlogTalkRadio.com. All Rights Reserved.