Thursday, November 28, 2019

Black Friday is HERE!

Black Friday is HERE!

Shop these deals in our online store.

Get 4 ROUNDS FOR $100!

Get 20% OFF GIFT CARDS

$5o Gift Card ➜ NOW $40

$100 Gift Card ➜ NOW $80

$150 Gift Card ➜ NOW $120

$200 Gift Card ➜  NOW $160

You can also shop this deal on our Golf Pro’s website!
30% OFF GOLF LESSONS!

No minimums to purchase! Offer ends 12/2.

Use coupon code BlackFriday19 at checkout on Doug Lemons’ website. Click the button below to go to Doug’s site.

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Wednesday, October 9, 2019

5 Top Reasons Why Golfer’s Don’t Improve Pt. 2

5 TOP REASONS WHY GOLFER’S DON’T IMPROVE

Everywhere golfers are beating balls trying to improve and actually many are getting worse! There are a few that will improve and it will take much longer with very little knowledge of how they achieved this change. I will explain 5 reasons why I believe golfers struggle to improve.

Below are the last two reasons why golfer’s don’t improve. Click the button to see reasons 1 thru 3.

4 – TAKE IT TO THE COURSE

  • You picked the right things to work on.
  • You even have a great learning process and are able to make the change on the range.
  • Then you head to the course and it all goes haywire – you revert back to your old swing “what you know”, or some version between the old and new swings, which is non-functional.

If you want to transfer your new movement to the course you are going to have to:

  • Have exceptional attentional control
  • Have spent more time ingraining the move with quality repetitions (not mindless ones)
  • Have trained with games which simulate the course and game of golf better.

Hitting 30 balls in a row from the same spot close to the flag might look fancy – but it’s not going to transfer well to the course, under pressure.

If all you have done is the usual scrape-hit-scrape-hit practice on the range, you will get what all other golfers get – an ability to perform well on the range, but a lack of on-course transference.

5 – THE MOST IMPORTANT ONE

The biggest reason golfers don’t improve is simple – what they are working on does not relate to improving impact.

The ball doesn’t care how you arrive at impact.  The ball is only concerned how the club-head interacts with the ball during that .75 inches of space where they are in contact with each other! I am not talking about body positions or mirroring your swing photos to tour players in this month’s golf article!

What inputs are you giving to the ball during this 0.75 inch space?

Most golfers work on things in their swings which have absolutely no relevance to their specific impact patterns, and therefore never see any improvement. Usually, they have picked some random swing piece to work on based on what their favorite tour player does, or what the latest magazine article is promoting. This is not a recipe for improvement.

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Tuesday, October 1, 2019

Fall rates are here!

Fall rates are here!

Here are your fall savings.

Monday thru Friday
$15 for 9 Holes w/ Cart
$28 for 18 Holes w/ Cart

Saturday & Sunday
$18 for 9 Holes w/ Cart
$32 for 18 Holes w/ Cart

The post Fall rates are here! appeared first on Chenoweth Golf Course.

Thursday, September 19, 2019

5 Top Reasons Why Golfer’s Don’t Improve

5 TOP REASONS WHY GOLFER’S DON’T IMPROVE

Everywhere golfers are beating balls trying to improve and actually many are getting worse! There are a few that will improve and it will take much longer with very little knowledge of how they achieved this change. I will explain 5 reasons why I believe golfers struggle to improve.

1 – FAULTY THINKING

I spend hours on the range teaching and over-hearing amateurs discussing to their buddies how they are getting better when actually they are chasing their tail and getting worse. They are working on mechanics and trying to perfect the model swing (which doesn’t exist). They have been hypnotized by instruction and cliché from 50 years ago. They hit a good shot and by chance something they felt made them think this is the magic move I need to repeat over and over! I did it! No you didn’t and your about to remember the wrong feeling. They need to better understand the concept and science of what they did and how it affects the swing.

2 – CEMENTING MISTAKES

When a golfer makes a mistake they are actually making a less efficient way of striking the ball. Although there is not ONE CORRECT way of doing this because there are many ways to hit a ball correctly. We see this on television all the time. It is only a mistake if the student cannot accomplish this with their current approach. There are but a handful of golfers that can figure this all out without a coach and the others that can play well, are most likely making compensations.

I can give you an example. If I saw a golfer snap hooking every shot on the range because their grip was too strong causing the clubface to close abruptly, I could have a dozen more golfers have that same or even stronger grip and sooner or later they will figure a way to stop hooking. They would have to make several physical adjustments with their wrists, forearms, and timing to accomplish this, but nonetheless it will work or will it? This change will cause other elements to fail such as impact, ground contact, loft and spin. They will then add more wasteful adjustments and the cycle will repeat itself.

3 – FAILING TO DO IT

Even in the unlikely event that a player is working on the right thing(s) for them (I can tell you from experience that most players are not), the majority of players struggle to do it. Perhaps you have experienced this yourself, where you are working on a certain swing-move but you just can’t seem to do it with a ball there.
Making the swing we want seems effortless without the ball there. But, under the gun, the sight of that golf ball does strange things to us. Now, this might be a physical issue, but (in most cases), if a player can perform the movement at full speed in a practice swing, there should be no reason why a player can’t perform it with that little white object there. The fact is, most golfers don’t know how to learn effectively. They don’t understand how to change a motor program – they have no process or tools with which they can make swift and lasting movement-pattern shifts. It’s one of the most frustrating things that an aspiring improving golfer experiences. It’s a huge roadblock which, once removed, opens up the floodgates to more rapid learning. There can be many reasons for it, including;

  • Impact intentions which contradict the desired movement pattern
  • Unrealistic expectations for performance in the initial stages
  • Poor attentional control
  • Desire to stay within comfort boundaries

The reality is, as long as you can do something in a practice swing, there is no reason why you can’t do it with a ball there – it’s just that your process for learning sucks.

4 – TAKE IT TO THE COURSE
5 – THE MOST IMPORTANT ONE

I will share numbers 4 and 5 in my next tip! You don’t want to miss it!

The post 5 Top Reasons Why Golfer’s Don’t Improve appeared first on Chenoweth Golf Course.

Tuesday, August 27, 2019

7 shots anybody can rely on in the heat of competition

7 shots anybody can rely on in the heat of competition

Written by Ron Kaspriske

For some, golf is stress relief—a pastoral stroll interspersed by 70 or 80 golf swings and maybe a stop for a hot dog at the turn. For others, it’s a fist-clenching, nerve-racking, nearly out-of-body experience where success is often defined by getting through 18 holes without feeling like you need to see a therapist afterward. We’ve been there, too. For the latter, the adventure is only exacerbated when playing for money, or in a tournament, or with strangers, or in front of a crowd—or all of the above.

If you’re faced with needing to execute in one of these competitive moments, but your central nervous system is failing like the Manhattan power grid on a 95-degree day, you need a go-to shot you can rely on. What’s a go-to shot? It’s one that might not make the highlight reel on a newscast or go viral on YouTube, but it’s so reliable and easy to execute that you can use it even when flop sweat is blurring your vision. Here are seven shots that will become second-nature once you’ve worked on them:

OFF THE TEE

Let’s start with a little honesty. Most golfers lean on their driver when they need a great tee shot. You know it, we know it. We’ve got a clutch drive when getting it in play is paramount. This shot will come out low, probably move a little left to right (for right-handers), and chase down the fairway when it lands.

1 . Tee the ball down about half as high as normal.
2 . Grip down an inch on your driver.
3 . Play the ball halfway between center in your stance and your lead heel.
4 . Make a slow, steady backswing.
5 . When you swing down into the ball, feel like your chest is on top of it.
6 . Swing through impact, finishing when your right shoulder is pointing at the target.

APPROACH FROM THE DEEP STUFF

Unless the ball is sitting up in the grass, flying it all the way to the hole might be too much to ask for in pressure situations. You need a shot that advances the ball, so it lands back in the fairway or possibly chases up near the green leaving you with an easy chip or putt. If there’s a window, you might roll it on.This is the play.

1 . Take a high-lofted club.
2 . Grip down an inch.
3 . Take a stance that gives you the best chance at minimizing contact with the rough, bush, fescue, etc.
4 . Make a steep backswing, feeling like you’re lifting the club nearly straight up.
5 . Swing down directly at the ball, but with less-than-full effort, so you maintain your address posture.
6 . Follow through as best you can, an expect the ball to come out hot and roll once it lands.

APPROACHES FROM THE FAIRWAY (OR FIRST CUT)

Hitting a green when you’re nervous is a lot simpler if your go-to shot is a shortened one that you’ve practiced. If you go with a full swing, you’ll have too much time for your brain to short-circuit and produce a wonky move. A cut-off iron shot will give you your best chance at solid contact. It also flies lower and is more accurate. The three-quarter iron shot might soon be your best friend.

1 . Use a club one longer than normal.
2 . Play the ball roughly center in your stance.
3 . Make an unhurried swing back and through, focusing on solid contact.
4 . Think: shoulder height to shoulder height. Your swing ends going back when your hands are shoulder high and ends going through when they reach the opposite shoulder.

IN THE ROUGH AROUND THE GREEN

There are a number of pressure situations when just getting the ball on the green is enough to make you breathe easier. You need a pitch that delivers every time. So forget about the low-percentage lob shot. And we’re certainly not talking about taking it in low and hoping there’s enough spin on the ball for it to check up. You need a technique that’s simple to repeat and is forgiving enough to still work even if you hit it a little fat.

1 . Grab your highest-lofted wedge.
2 . Take a slightly wider-than-normal stance, and open your body in relation to the target.
3 . Play the ball roughly in line with your front foot’s heel.
4 . Take the club back until the butt end of the shaft is pointing downward at the ball.
5 . While rotating your entire body toward the target, pull the butt end of the club toward the ball, keeping your left hand palm down and your trail hand palm up.
6 . Don’t stop the swing or your body rotation until your hands are at least shoulder height in the follow-through.

GREENSIDE BUNKERS

Sand shots should be easy because you can strike an area anywhere from right behind the ball to four inches behind it and still get the ball on the green. But when something is on the line, the fear of catching too much ball can creep into your mind and you end up making a short, choppy swing that leaves it in the sand. Don’t let that happen again by using this reliable bunker shot.

1 . Grab your highest-lofted wedge.
2 . Address the ball off your front foot.
3 . Take a wider stance, put all your weight on your front foot, and open your body in a little in relation to the target.
4 . Pick a spot two inches behind the ball and stare at that spot intently, erasing the ball from your mind.
5 . Hinge the club up quickly in the backswing.
6 . Splash the back of the club down on the spot you were staring at.
7 . Finish with the club over your lead shoulder. (Don’t stop short of that.)

JUST OFF THE GREEN

Chipping it close when a match or round is on the line is a skill that doesn’t have to be reserved for better players only. There’s a technique you can employ that makes it fairly easy to get the ball on the green quickly and rolling like a putt. Try this.

1 . Use a gap wedge or a 9-iron.
2 . Play the ball center in your stance.
3 . Pick a spot that’s a third of the way to the hole on the line you think it would roll along to the hole if it were a putt.
4 . Take your putting grip and set the clubshaft nearly vertical.
5 . Mimic a putting stroke at the same fluid pace (and length) as if you were putting from that distance.
6 . Keep the clubface low and moving toward your target after impact.

MAKABLE PUTTS

When it comes to putting, the bad news is that you can do everything right and still miss. Imperfections in the green, cleat marks, a gust of wind—it doesn’t take much for a putt to rim out. That being said, you can give your makable putts a real chance of going in if you focus on one thing—face control.

1 . Once you’re confident in your read, set up to the ball so you’re eye closest to the target is directly over the ball or just inside of it.
2 . Hold the putter in whatever way minimizes control of the handle with your dominant hand. You just want that hand to lightly hold on. (The claw-style grip can help.)
3 . When you make the stroke, keep your lower body as still as possible.
4 . Trace the putterhead down the line of putt after it strikes the ball.
5 . Hold your finish position, including posture, until the ball falls in the cup.

Source: golfdigest.com

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