Look at all the information about the golf swing and most of the time you will see some of the simple things overlooked. One of these is posture. One of the overriding themes I try to stress with everyone I help is that you can't change one part of the golf swing or address position without influencing everything else. Without neutral posture at address and dynamic posture during the swing, a golfer's efficiency and physiology is greatly affected. Are you one of those people who can't keep your head level and steady during the golf swing (some people call this "keeping your head down")? Chances are you are out of position in your address posture and when you swing your poor back position in relation to your hips forces you up and out of your posture (a.k.a. loosing your spine angle). Do you sway or move off the ball sideways too much during the swing and can't stop no matter how hard you try? Again posture greatly influences this problem. The list of in-swing problems related to posture goes on and on.
Here is a check list for you to consider for posture:
Take your setup where you can see yourself from behind either in a mirror or have someone stand behind to look at your posture. If you are using a mirror, you want to position yourself like you are hitting the ball directly away from the mirror.
4 areas to focus on:
1) Head / neck angle: Is your head and neck in line with the rest of your back or is it arched downward (hunched).
2) Upper back / shoulders: Are your shoulders positioned in the center of your torso or are they rounded toward the ball? Is your upper back in line with your mid / lower back or is it arched downward (hunched)?
3) Pelvis / hips: When you bend at the waist is your lower back flat, arched forward ("c" shape) or cupped downward ("u" shape)?
4) Knees: Are your knees bent slightly, locked / very straight, or bent like a softball player?
The position you want to be in is with a flat back (head, upper back & lower back) and knees slightly bent. The amount of bend you want with your upper body is 42-49 degrees from vertical. This is the range that the Touring Professionals bend (irregardless of swing style). This allows the torso and shoulders to rotate with a minimum amount of spinal side tilt during the swing and thru the follow thru. When the whole spine is not in a neutral position (hunched or arched or both) at address then the spine cannot twist as one unit but must turn at different angles against itself. This forces the golfer to make compensating movements to relieve the off-angle stresses. It also greatly increases the risk of injury.
Next time you watch professional golf on TV or live, notice the address posture of any of the pro's. You will notice that 99 % of them have the neutral spine position. This "flat" backed position allows them to not only maximize their efficiency and effectiveness thru impact but also allows them to play and practice on a daily basis for years without injury and with a high degree of consistency.
How do I get into a neutral spine position at address?
1) Get into good posture standing vertical. If you don't know what that feels like then stand up with your back against a wall. Your heals and your head should touch the wall. Your shoulder blades and your lower back (just above your pelvis) should also touch the wall. Your arms and shoulders should hang in the middle of your torso. Practice getting into neutral posture from a standing position to know what it feels like.
2) Once you can get into a neutral standing position, take a golf club and place it accross your hip sockets and bend over at roughly a 45 degree angle from vertical. Make sure to keep your spine and head in flat position and your shoulders and arms in the mid torso position. Check your positioning in a mirror or have a playing partner put a golf club along your back and head to check for "flatness".
3) Once you can get into a neutral posture address position without a golf club in your hands, then you are ready to take your setup with golf club in hand. Get into your neutral address position (45 degree back angle) and take your grip on a club. Do not let your shoulders get rounded when doing this. This will force the golf club and your hands to be closer than they normally are (especially if you normally round your shoulders). If you truely bend at a 45 degree angle, you will still have 4 - 6 fingers of space between your hands and your body when you take your grip on the golf club. Most people stand to tall in relation to the ball and then reach with their arms.
4) The best way to test to see if you have the 45 back degree angle required to optimize your swing angle to the ball is to use the 4 foot test. Take any club and setup to the ball. Take your backswing and hold. If you run a club accross your shoulder line at this point your shoulders should point downward to a point roughly 4 feet out from the ball. You should be able to get to this position with any club. You will bend over more with a wedge than you will with a driver. Most people are amazed that they are supposed to bend this much. However your shoulder angle strongly influences your arm and club angle during the swing. Most people will stand too tall from the hips and hunch over with the upper back to get down to the ball (known as a "C" posture or they will bend enough at the waist, then straighten or arch downward in the mid back and round the shoulders and reach for the ball (known as the "S" posture). Both the "C" and "S" postures help create the most common swing problems and inconsistencies.
When put in the neutral address posture golfers have a much greater chance of getting into effective swing positions more consistently with a greatly lowered risk of injury.
Friday, February 22, 2008
Monday, February 18, 2008
Why custom club fitting is so important for golfers of any skill level.
Why should you need or want custom fit clubs for yourself?
1) You are unique in your physiology, swing style, & sports background.
Simply stated, your body has certain strengths and weaknesses. Each muscle group has different ranges of motion and levels of flexibility. You have your unique way of swinging that is based on your aforementioned physical ability, the sports environment you have been exposed to in your life, and your expression of that a.k.a. your golf swing. Your golf swing generates a certain level of energy at the moment of impact that makes the ball do what it does after impact. Your golf clubs should allow you to swing as naturally as you know how with the least amount of physical compensations to give you the ball flight and performance you desire. In other words, if you have to make your swing or setup fit the club you are using then you are sacrificing your advancement in the game (or slowing it down tremendously).
2) Golf clubs that are pre-built (off the "rack") are generally made in an overseas assembly line by non-golfers to maximize profit.
Most golf clubs are made today the same way (and sometimes in the same assembly line as) many of the other mass produced items we consume. Each company makes its own assumptions about who the "average" golfer is and how he or she swings and builds a club according to those assumptions (Which begs the question, do you fit their assumptions?). Once the assumptions are made then clubs are built as cheaply and as quickly as they can be to maximize profits. Where can you find the least expensive assembly line labor in the world?....That is where most of the clubs are built.
3) There is NO agency or organization in the world that QUALITY tests golf equipment!
Let's say that you did happen to be lucky enough to fit to some company's golf equipment standards perfectly....the set you buy would not be matched for performance. If I had a penny for all the golfers who told me that they had a great set but could only hit certain clubs within that set....or that certain clubs performed dramatically different than others (that were supposed to be matched), I could retire today. The reality is that there are no industry standards for performance, quality or consistency and there is no regulatory testing agency to protect the consumer. Consequently dramatic inconsistencies in the performance and quality of mass assembled and even supposed "custom fit" clubs are evident even with the most expensive clubs. If you want proof of this, go out to your next demo day and hit 2 clubs from the same company that are supposed to be exactly the same....you will see what I am talking about! Talk to any old golfer who has been to company demo's and he/she will tell you that if you find a club that hits well....buy that specific club because you won't be able to get another one like it.
4) All professional golfers have custom fit / custom built golf clubs specifically for their skills and tendencies.....and they don't necessarily need them!
Tiger Woods is so good he could take any set and make them work on any golf course. He gets fit for the benefit of maybe one or two shots every other round. A set fit, built and fully matched to minimize the effects of an amatuer golfer's specific misses as they pertain to contact, face angle, head angle of approach as well as the physiological interaction with the weight and feel of a club (or clubs) can literally change that golfer's game. The difference between a well fit set and one that is not is how good the misses are for the golfer and how often they occur. Also, how many of the clubs in the set does the golfer use and is there a noticable dropoff in performance with certain clubs? The driver should have the correct combination of trajectory & spin to compliment the player's strengths based on their playing "philosophy". The long clubs (fairway woods/ metals, hybrids, and long irons should be first and foremost playable off the grass, bridge the distance gaps under the driver to the middle irons and have enough height of trajectory to be able to stop a ball when it lands. The middle irons and short irons should feel & look comfortable to the player as well as help offset any inconsistencies the player might have with regard to contact, trajectory and sidespin. Wedges should be fit to match the player's angle of approach. Wider soles with more bounce for steep swingers (diggers), narrower soles with square edges for shallow swingers (sweepers). The putter should line up where the golfer thinks it is lined up. The loft on the putter should offset the golfer's angle of impact to impart the ideal roll on the ball. Length, weight & feel should give the golfer the proper feedback, confidence and consistency.
The clubs should be made to fit the golfer. The short answer to the description from above is that the clubs should not require that the golfer make compensations in his swing just to make the clubs work.
An average amatuer golfer does not have shot consistency, either with contact or direction. Well fit clubs can soften these inconsistencies and compliment the golfer's inefficiencies as well as increase their confidence.
5) Mass produced clubs are sweat pants.....custom fit & built clubs are the taylored suit!
To sell thousands to millions of clubs worldwide, each company tries to build clubs to work pretty well to o.k. for as many people as they can. They can't build a club that fits one specific person too well because that sacrifices how well the club will fit another. The average company assumes the "average" golfer to be a male, somewhere between 25 - 65 years of age who has trouble with the driver slicing and can only hit it between 175 - 220 yards. This golfer is probably assumed to be in the 5' 10" height range and somewhere in the 210 pound weight range. My question is how many golfers fit this description? And then how many hit the ball the same way? Let's say that there are millions of golfers that fit this description....how many ways are there to slice a ball? I can tell you from my instructional experience that are many, many ways to slice a ball! A properly fit, properly built club will not only specifically fit the golfer for physiology and swing mechanics, but will offset his / her specific ball spin / trajectory / and contact tendencies.
How should your clubs be built? And how should they be built to help compensate for your errors?
That answer will follow this article.
1) You are unique in your physiology, swing style, & sports background.
Simply stated, your body has certain strengths and weaknesses. Each muscle group has different ranges of motion and levels of flexibility. You have your unique way of swinging that is based on your aforementioned physical ability, the sports environment you have been exposed to in your life, and your expression of that a.k.a. your golf swing. Your golf swing generates a certain level of energy at the moment of impact that makes the ball do what it does after impact. Your golf clubs should allow you to swing as naturally as you know how with the least amount of physical compensations to give you the ball flight and performance you desire. In other words, if you have to make your swing or setup fit the club you are using then you are sacrificing your advancement in the game (or slowing it down tremendously).
2) Golf clubs that are pre-built (off the "rack") are generally made in an overseas assembly line by non-golfers to maximize profit.
Most golf clubs are made today the same way (and sometimes in the same assembly line as) many of the other mass produced items we consume. Each company makes its own assumptions about who the "average" golfer is and how he or she swings and builds a club according to those assumptions (Which begs the question, do you fit their assumptions?). Once the assumptions are made then clubs are built as cheaply and as quickly as they can be to maximize profits. Where can you find the least expensive assembly line labor in the world?....That is where most of the clubs are built.
3) There is NO agency or organization in the world that QUALITY tests golf equipment!
Let's say that you did happen to be lucky enough to fit to some company's golf equipment standards perfectly....the set you buy would not be matched for performance. If I had a penny for all the golfers who told me that they had a great set but could only hit certain clubs within that set....or that certain clubs performed dramatically different than others (that were supposed to be matched), I could retire today. The reality is that there are no industry standards for performance, quality or consistency and there is no regulatory testing agency to protect the consumer. Consequently dramatic inconsistencies in the performance and quality of mass assembled and even supposed "custom fit" clubs are evident even with the most expensive clubs. If you want proof of this, go out to your next demo day and hit 2 clubs from the same company that are supposed to be exactly the same....you will see what I am talking about! Talk to any old golfer who has been to company demo's and he/she will tell you that if you find a club that hits well....buy that specific club because you won't be able to get another one like it.
4) All professional golfers have custom fit / custom built golf clubs specifically for their skills and tendencies.....and they don't necessarily need them!
Tiger Woods is so good he could take any set and make them work on any golf course. He gets fit for the benefit of maybe one or two shots every other round. A set fit, built and fully matched to minimize the effects of an amatuer golfer's specific misses as they pertain to contact, face angle, head angle of approach as well as the physiological interaction with the weight and feel of a club (or clubs) can literally change that golfer's game. The difference between a well fit set and one that is not is how good the misses are for the golfer and how often they occur. Also, how many of the clubs in the set does the golfer use and is there a noticable dropoff in performance with certain clubs? The driver should have the correct combination of trajectory & spin to compliment the player's strengths based on their playing "philosophy". The long clubs (fairway woods/ metals, hybrids, and long irons should be first and foremost playable off the grass, bridge the distance gaps under the driver to the middle irons and have enough height of trajectory to be able to stop a ball when it lands. The middle irons and short irons should feel & look comfortable to the player as well as help offset any inconsistencies the player might have with regard to contact, trajectory and sidespin. Wedges should be fit to match the player's angle of approach. Wider soles with more bounce for steep swingers (diggers), narrower soles with square edges for shallow swingers (sweepers). The putter should line up where the golfer thinks it is lined up. The loft on the putter should offset the golfer's angle of impact to impart the ideal roll on the ball. Length, weight & feel should give the golfer the proper feedback, confidence and consistency.
The clubs should be made to fit the golfer. The short answer to the description from above is that the clubs should not require that the golfer make compensations in his swing just to make the clubs work.
An average amatuer golfer does not have shot consistency, either with contact or direction. Well fit clubs can soften these inconsistencies and compliment the golfer's inefficiencies as well as increase their confidence.
5) Mass produced clubs are sweat pants.....custom fit & built clubs are the taylored suit!
To sell thousands to millions of clubs worldwide, each company tries to build clubs to work pretty well to o.k. for as many people as they can. They can't build a club that fits one specific person too well because that sacrifices how well the club will fit another. The average company assumes the "average" golfer to be a male, somewhere between 25 - 65 years of age who has trouble with the driver slicing and can only hit it between 175 - 220 yards. This golfer is probably assumed to be in the 5' 10" height range and somewhere in the 210 pound weight range. My question is how many golfers fit this description? And then how many hit the ball the same way? Let's say that there are millions of golfers that fit this description....how many ways are there to slice a ball? I can tell you from my instructional experience that are many, many ways to slice a ball! A properly fit, properly built club will not only specifically fit the golfer for physiology and swing mechanics, but will offset his / her specific ball spin / trajectory / and contact tendencies.
How should your clubs be built? And how should they be built to help compensate for your errors?
That answer will follow this article.
Sunday, December 30, 2007
YOUR GRIP--How to find your best grip pressure
There is probably more information on the grip than any other single issue in the golf swing. Although many different grip types can be effective, one issue that affects consistency and control more than any other is grip pressure. Not just too tight/too loose grip pressure, but changes in grip pressure during the swing. I see many people who will white knuckle the grip at address and then let go of the club at the top of their backswing and re-grip the club on the downswing. Consequences of this action include club twisting, blistering hands, ball striking inconsistencies and a general feeling of a lack of control over the club.
There are 2 ways to remedy these grip pressure problems.
1) FINDING THE CORRECT GRIP PRESSURE: This is easier than you think, but it does require going to the driving range and experimenting. The question you should ask is how tight is just right? But how do you know how tight is too tight and how loose is too loose? This is where you need to experiment. Get a bucket or 2 of balls and get loosened up. Now take 5 balls and hit them with the tightest grip pressure you can muster (100%). Now do the same using the lightest pressure that you can still control the club with (15%). Now work your way toward the middle....go to 70%, 30% and finish with 50%. While you are doing this activity use a club you are comfortable hitting and don't try anything else. Just hit balls and focus on the pressure exerted by your hands. Now notice your contact with the ball, control of the club and your shots; the more ideal pressure will result in better shots and swing comfort. Go back if you have to and do it again....as you do this you will start to see patterns developing. I have done this with students many times and it is amazing how different a golfer's shots and comfort level can be once the "correct" grip pressure is found. Beleive it or not some people do better with really tight pressure or really loose pressure (not the pressure recommended by instructional books). Why? Everyone's physiology is different. Once you find your ideal pressure, your level of effort and your contact improves immediately. When your grip pressure is not ideal the result is inconsistent control, erradic contact and the swing feels like "work". Make a mental note of your best pressure and make an effort reinforce the pressure with practice. Reinforce the pressure on the course by incorporating this awareness exercise in your pre-shot routine. When you address the ball take your grip and squeeze as tightly as possible....then back off the pressure until you reach your ideal, then take your swing.
2) REMOVING THE TENDENCY TO LET GO OF THE CLUB DURING THE SWING: Many more golfers do this than people think....not just beginners, but I have seen it with golfers who have played for many years. The most typical problem is when the golfer lets go with the "pinkie" finger of the top hand (left hand on the right handed golfer) on the club at the top of the backswing. Then when the swing is finished and golfer brings the club back to center the head is twisted. A great way to check and fix this problem is to put a golf tee just under the "pinkie" finger (or where ever you are letting go of the club, put the tee under that part of the hand). Your goal is to keep the tee under your finger(s) throughout the swing without over-squeezing in the process. If the tee drops out, then you let the finger loose. I have had people practice with a tee under the hand, and I have even had them play with the tee under the hand until they no longer have problem letting go of the club.
REMEMBER: For anything to become properly incorporated into the swing, you must have anextended committment over time for it to become habit. Some call this the 'rule of 21'.21 sessions (whether practice for 10 minutes or more or play a round of golf, each is considered 1 session) focused onthe activity to incorporate into the swing.
The 2 aforementioned drills should be done at least twice (once at the beginning of the season and once well into the season) a year just to check to insure that you have full control of the club with proper pressure.
There are 2 ways to remedy these grip pressure problems.
1) FINDING THE CORRECT GRIP PRESSURE: This is easier than you think, but it does require going to the driving range and experimenting. The question you should ask is how tight is just right? But how do you know how tight is too tight and how loose is too loose? This is where you need to experiment. Get a bucket or 2 of balls and get loosened up. Now take 5 balls and hit them with the tightest grip pressure you can muster (100%). Now do the same using the lightest pressure that you can still control the club with (15%). Now work your way toward the middle....go to 70%, 30% and finish with 50%. While you are doing this activity use a club you are comfortable hitting and don't try anything else. Just hit balls and focus on the pressure exerted by your hands. Now notice your contact with the ball, control of the club and your shots; the more ideal pressure will result in better shots and swing comfort. Go back if you have to and do it again....as you do this you will start to see patterns developing. I have done this with students many times and it is amazing how different a golfer's shots and comfort level can be once the "correct" grip pressure is found. Beleive it or not some people do better with really tight pressure or really loose pressure (not the pressure recommended by instructional books). Why? Everyone's physiology is different. Once you find your ideal pressure, your level of effort and your contact improves immediately. When your grip pressure is not ideal the result is inconsistent control, erradic contact and the swing feels like "work". Make a mental note of your best pressure and make an effort reinforce the pressure with practice. Reinforce the pressure on the course by incorporating this awareness exercise in your pre-shot routine. When you address the ball take your grip and squeeze as tightly as possible....then back off the pressure until you reach your ideal, then take your swing.
2) REMOVING THE TENDENCY TO LET GO OF THE CLUB DURING THE SWING: Many more golfers do this than people think....not just beginners, but I have seen it with golfers who have played for many years. The most typical problem is when the golfer lets go with the "pinkie" finger of the top hand (left hand on the right handed golfer) on the club at the top of the backswing. Then when the swing is finished and golfer brings the club back to center the head is twisted. A great way to check and fix this problem is to put a golf tee just under the "pinkie" finger (or where ever you are letting go of the club, put the tee under that part of the hand). Your goal is to keep the tee under your finger(s) throughout the swing without over-squeezing in the process. If the tee drops out, then you let the finger loose. I have had people practice with a tee under the hand, and I have even had them play with the tee under the hand until they no longer have problem letting go of the club.
REMEMBER: For anything to become properly incorporated into the swing, you must have anextended committment over time for it to become habit. Some call this the 'rule of 21'.21 sessions (whether practice for 10 minutes or more or play a round of golf, each is considered 1 session) focused onthe activity to incorporate into the swing.
The 2 aforementioned drills should be done at least twice (once at the beginning of the season and once well into the season) a year just to check to insure that you have full control of the club with proper pressure.
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Lessons for Kids---When to start your child or grandchild.
Every year I get this question: What age do I get lessons for my child? The short answer is to let your child try hitting balls without instruction at first. When they are ready for instructional help, they will ask. At that time get them lessons.
This is the long answer: There is no specific age to start everyone with lessons. My opinion is that everyone goes thru stages in golf as in life. The best time to get lessons for kids is at the end of stage one (see golf stages below). Your child has tried hitting balls on the range and/or golf course. They have gotten to the point where they want to have a better quality of shot and they ask for help. Now they are ready to receive instruction. If you enroll your child in a golf camp or lessons before they are through stage one they will not be ready to receive instruction (i.e. they won't listen).
The exception to this rule is if the child specifically asks for lessons in advance of picking up a club (this is rare for kids and most adults as well).
Stage 1: GOLF IS A "HIT"(a.k.a. the curiosity stage): The person's interest is in just making contact with the ball without regard to where the ball goes...only that it goes somewhere. For some this experimental phase is enough to last them a long time. At some point the person gets bored and they either quit hitting (we won't call it golf at this point) or they ask for help.
Stage 2: LEARNING THE TOOLS OF THE GAME: At this stage the person is tired of just swinging and wants to have more control and consistency over where the ball goes. Even if they only have a little success with one club in this stage it is enough to help them to start "spreading their wings" and developing rudimentary golf skills that will help eventually carry them to the golf course.
Stage 3: LEARNING TO PLAY GOLF: Making contact with the ball now is not the formost concern for this person. They have enough skills however raw, to make the ball move forward on a regular basis. Now they must learn how to apply their skills toward playing the game of golf. They learn that sometimes an ugly shot gets a great result and a pretty shot does not always end up in the best place. The final part of this stage is having enough golf skills to be able to keep score without having to pick up and move the ball forward at some point to complete a difficult hole.
Stage 4: REFINING THE GOLF SKILLS & PLAYING SKILLS: The golfer begins to hone his or her skills and become more efficient in applying and executing those skills on the course. Score becomes more important as a measure of success in golf and there is a greater level of expectation for the outcome of certain shots.
Stage 5: MASTERING SHOTS & COMPETITIVE SCORING: For the golfers in this stage solid, consistent contact with each shot is a forgone conclusion. Golfers at this stage are approaching par for their 18 hole scores and are looking for maximum efficiency on the course.
For any lesson to have a chance for success, the person (either child or adult) must be readyto receive the instruction. They have to have an attitude of openess toward help and trying something new.
This is the long answer: There is no specific age to start everyone with lessons. My opinion is that everyone goes thru stages in golf as in life. The best time to get lessons for kids is at the end of stage one (see golf stages below). Your child has tried hitting balls on the range and/or golf course. They have gotten to the point where they want to have a better quality of shot and they ask for help. Now they are ready to receive instruction. If you enroll your child in a golf camp or lessons before they are through stage one they will not be ready to receive instruction (i.e. they won't listen).
The exception to this rule is if the child specifically asks for lessons in advance of picking up a club (this is rare for kids and most adults as well).
Stage 1: GOLF IS A "HIT"(a.k.a. the curiosity stage): The person's interest is in just making contact with the ball without regard to where the ball goes...only that it goes somewhere. For some this experimental phase is enough to last them a long time. At some point the person gets bored and they either quit hitting (we won't call it golf at this point) or they ask for help.
Stage 2: LEARNING THE TOOLS OF THE GAME: At this stage the person is tired of just swinging and wants to have more control and consistency over where the ball goes. Even if they only have a little success with one club in this stage it is enough to help them to start "spreading their wings" and developing rudimentary golf skills that will help eventually carry them to the golf course.
Stage 3: LEARNING TO PLAY GOLF: Making contact with the ball now is not the formost concern for this person. They have enough skills however raw, to make the ball move forward on a regular basis. Now they must learn how to apply their skills toward playing the game of golf. They learn that sometimes an ugly shot gets a great result and a pretty shot does not always end up in the best place. The final part of this stage is having enough golf skills to be able to keep score without having to pick up and move the ball forward at some point to complete a difficult hole.
Stage 4: REFINING THE GOLF SKILLS & PLAYING SKILLS: The golfer begins to hone his or her skills and become more efficient in applying and executing those skills on the course. Score becomes more important as a measure of success in golf and there is a greater level of expectation for the outcome of certain shots.
Stage 5: MASTERING SHOTS & COMPETITIVE SCORING: For the golfers in this stage solid, consistent contact with each shot is a forgone conclusion. Golfers at this stage are approaching par for their 18 hole scores and are looking for maximum efficiency on the course.
For any lesson to have a chance for success, the person (either child or adult) must be readyto receive the instruction. They have to have an attitude of openess toward help and trying something new.
Monday, December 24, 2007
Introduction to GairsGolfBlog
Hello and fore(!) to all golfers and future golfers!
Do you love golf? Or are you intrigued and would like to learn more about this great game we call golf? Well, you've come to the right place!!!
My name is Gary Winters and I love golf as much as you do! I am a PGA professional whose been involved in the game for almost 30 years in some capacity either as a player or working in the business of golf. The game to me is most importantly about the fellowship we develop with other golfers, the courses we play, and memories we have of our experiences in the game.
I live in Northeast Kansas and own a driving range called Tee It Up. I have a small shop called Gair's Golf Shop that I do all the "traditional" golf pro stuff. I do my very best to help people with their game thru both traditional and modern(digital video) instruction. I also work with their equipment thru repairs and re-furbishment. And finally I fit, adjust and construct equipment to specifically fit all who come to Gair's Golf Shop at Tee It Up Driving Range. My hopes and goals for this site are to give all who come here something they can use in their life's journey in this great game o'golf.
Much of what I submit here are experiences, observations and common questions that I have had over the years and every day at my shop. My intention is to have specific articles to help each level of golfer as well as equipment, equipment maintenance, club fitting articles and more. It will take a while to transpose all the information I've accumulated over the years, so I ask that you please be patient and come back to this site on a regular basis to see the updates.
If you want to contact me directly for any questions or to just talk golf, here is my contact information.
Gary Winters
PGA Professional
Gairs Golf Shop Inc.
Tee It Up Driving Range
785-554-9249
gairsgolfshop@gmail.com
Do you love golf? Or are you intrigued and would like to learn more about this great game we call golf? Well, you've come to the right place!!!
My name is Gary Winters and I love golf as much as you do! I am a PGA professional whose been involved in the game for almost 30 years in some capacity either as a player or working in the business of golf. The game to me is most importantly about the fellowship we develop with other golfers, the courses we play, and memories we have of our experiences in the game.
I live in Northeast Kansas and own a driving range called Tee It Up. I have a small shop called Gair's Golf Shop that I do all the "traditional" golf pro stuff. I do my very best to help people with their game thru both traditional and modern(digital video) instruction. I also work with their equipment thru repairs and re-furbishment. And finally I fit, adjust and construct equipment to specifically fit all who come to Gair's Golf Shop at Tee It Up Driving Range. My hopes and goals for this site are to give all who come here something they can use in their life's journey in this great game o'golf.
Much of what I submit here are experiences, observations and common questions that I have had over the years and every day at my shop. My intention is to have specific articles to help each level of golfer as well as equipment, equipment maintenance, club fitting articles and more. It will take a while to transpose all the information I've accumulated over the years, so I ask that you please be patient and come back to this site on a regular basis to see the updates.
If you want to contact me directly for any questions or to just talk golf, here is my contact information.
Gary Winters
PGA Professional
Gairs Golf Shop Inc.
Tee It Up Driving Range
785-554-9249
gairsgolfshop@gmail.com
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