Tuesday, February 22, 2022

PROFESSIONAL HELP

PROFESSIONAL HELP

 Golf pros can also help you better your golf swing? The pros have seen many people make the swings and can easily be able to note a problem with the swing when it is made. They are at a position to offer you with the greatest improvements tips and better your skills. All that is required is approaching them and seek the help that you need.

 


 

Keep watching each week for more exciting golf tips!

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Monday, February 21, 2022

Niemann Goes Wire to Wire

Joaquin Niemann takes fast lane to win Genesis Invitational

Source: robinhoodnews

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Tuesday, February 15, 2022

SET YOUR MIND FOR THE SWING

SET YOUR MIND FOR THE SWING

The human brain is one of the most crucial controls of the activities that we undertake. You should set your mind on better ways of making golf swings. This should be accompanied by self-confidence and the belief that one can be able to make the right swing. Lack of self-belief will end up making one fail to accomplish their goal of learning to make fantastic swings.

 


 

Keep watching each week for more exciting golf tips!

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Monday, February 14, 2022

Scheffler Tops Cantlay

The wait is over for Scottie Scheffler.

The 25-year-old Texan sank a 26-foot birdie putt on the third extra hole to defeat Patrick Cantlay at the WM Phoenix Open and claim his first PGA Tour victory.

“I think the first one is probably always the hardest and I definitely made it pretty difficult on myself today,” Scheffler said.

To hear former Tour pro turned CBS broadcaster Colt Knost tell it, he always knew Scheffler was destined for greatness. He remembers when the rangy Scheffler was knee-high to him, a kid who couldn’t get enough of practicing at Royal Oaks Golf Club in Dallas, where Tour winners such as Justin Leonard, Hunter Mahan and Harrison Frazar were regulars.

“He just followed us all around like a little puppy dog,” Knost recalled.

At the range, Scheffler became known for peppering a yellow pole from 70 to 90 yards depending on where the tee was set up that day.

“That was kind of Scottie’s pole,” Knost said. “Every five minutes, you just heard this ding, and Scottie would just turn around and smile. He would wear that thing out.”

Knost has never forgotten the time he was practicing in a bunker and Scheffler sat on top of a bucket of balls watching him for at least 30 minutes and then helped Knost pick them up. But that wasn’t all he did.

“I see this ball come flying out of the bunker and land and kind of spin. I’m like, ‘What in the world was that?’ And I look over and it’s Scottie and I say, ‘How the hell did you do that?’ He said, ‘I was just watching you and just did what you did.’ He just had that weird ability. He would see things, and then he could go do it himself, and to get a ball to spin out of the bunker at nine years old was just really, really impressive.”

So was Scheffler’s resume, which included U.S. Junior Amateur champion, All-American at Texas and Korn Ferry Tour Player of the Year. Scheffler already had shot 59 in a FedEx Cup playoff event, had a chance to win a host of Tour events, most recently at the Houston Open, but victory had remained elusive. Entering the week at No. 16 in the Official World Golf Ranking, Scheffler was the highest-ranked player in the world without a PGA Tour victory.

He added Ryder Cup stud to that resume in September, teaming with Bryson DeChambeau in Four-Ball and knocking off World No. 1 Jon Rahm in singles on Sunday. On Saturday, he was asked what he thought was harder: winning a Tour event, shooting 59 or beating Rahm?

“Well, apparently winning a tournament might be the hardest,” he said.

Scheffler opened with rounds of 68-71 and trailed by nine strokes at the tournament’s midway point. But he torched the back nine at TPC Scottsdale to the tune of seven threes on the scorecard en route to tying the back-nine record of 29. His 62 was the lowest round of the tournament and earned him a spot in the final threesome for the second straight year.

On Sunday, Scheffler overcame three bogeys in a four-hole stretch on the front nine at TPC Scottsdale and trailed by three strokes after a bogey at No. 12. Having the veteran presence of caddie Ted Scott, who won 12 times on the PGA Tour with Bubba Watson and joined Scheffler at the RSM Classic in November, was a calming influence.

“I think we kind of sit on the same wavelength. We get along really well. He does a good job keeping me level-headed and making jokes and having fun,” Scheffler said. “We never felt totally out of the golf tournament, and I looked at him on 14 green, we were only I think maybe two back at the time, and I think I was a little bit surprised still to be that close to the lead.”

Scheffler birdied four of the last six holes to make up his deficit, but missed a 6-foot birdie putt on the final hole to win in regulation. He signed for 4-under 67 and finished with a 72-hole total of 16-under 268.

The calendar may have flipped but Cantlay, who was named PGA Tour Player of the Year and is the reigning FedEx Cup champion, continued his torrid run with a bogey-free 4-under 67 on Sunday. He, too, missed a 10-foot birdie at 18 for the win. Still, he’s won two times and hasn’t finished outside the top-10 in his last six starts, and is an impressive 132-under par in his last 30 Tour rounds, with 28 of them in the 60s.

Cantlay, however, could only manage three pars in the playoff, including missing from 11 feet to extend it to a fourth hole.

“I played well today,” Cantlay said. “I hit a lot of good putts and didn’t really get anything to go in all day. Scottie obviously played really well this weekend and deserves to win.”

Seeking his first win, rookie Sahith Theegala, the 54-hole leader who was playing on a sponsor’s exemption, built a three-stroke lead after five holes, but made a bogey at the par-3 seventh and Cantlay rolled in three birdies on the front side to catch him at 15 under. Theegala hung tough with birdies at Nos. 12 and 15, but his tee shot at the drivable par-4 17th hole rolled into the water to the left of the green and he made bogey.

“I thought I hit a great shot on 17. It was cutting,” Theegala said. “As long as it’s another yard right, I think that’s perfect. Kick straight and it’s good; kicked left into the water there.”

Theegala closed in 1-under 70 to finish tied for third with defending champion Brooks Koepka (69) and Olympic gold medalist Xander Schauffele (68).

One day after Sam Ryder made an ace at the infamous par-3 16th hole, Carlos Ortiz of Mexico made it rain in the desert again, holing his 9-iron from 178 yards for an ace. A shower of beer, ice and cans, one of which nailed Ortiz in the back, created a rain delay of sorts on another picture-perfect weather day. Ortiz said he used the time for cleanup in aisle 16th green to calm down, and he drove the 17th green to make back-to-back eagles. Ortiz shot 67 and finished in a tie for 33rd place.

“That was pretty special,” Ortiz said. “And then making that 2 on the next, that’s a first for me, making a 1 and then a 2.”

“Today was a little bit better,” Rahm said. “The only time I really felt in command of the golf swing was the first 18 holes and the last nine. That’s about it. Everything else in between, there was a bit of doubt in a lot of the swings.”

But there’s no doubting that Scheffler is officially a Tour winner, becoming the fifth first-time winner on the Tour this season and third in a row – following in the footsteps of Luke List and Tom Hoge. It took longer than expected for Scheffler to bust through, so, it was only fitting he should have to wait three extra holes to taste victory.

“He’s a worldbeater,” Knost said. “Now that he’s got that first one, I think the floodgates are going to open for him.”

Source: usatoday.com

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Tuesday, February 8, 2022

HAVE A RANGE ROUTINE

HAVE A RANGE ROUTINE

While most beginner golf tips are related to the swing itself, other factors, like how you practice that swing, are equally as important. As you begin to hone your skills, it’s important to maintain some kind of practice routine. Whether you practice once a month or three times a week, pro tips always include sticking to the same routine on the driving range. While we know it’s tempting to grab the driver first, start by hitting some wedges or short irons instead. After warming up and getting a feel for your golf swing again, then proceed to longer irons, woods, and finally the driver. While on the range, be sure to take note of how far your ball goes with each club. This will assist in determining what club to hit from various distances on the golf course.

 


 

Keep watching each week for more exciting golf tips!

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Monday, February 7, 2022

Hoge Claims First Win

Tom Hoge surges past Jordan Spieth at Pebble Beach for first PGA Tour win

Another cliff-hanger at Pebble Beach, this one memorable for Tom Hoge, who delivered all the right shots on the back nine Sunday to surge past Jordan Spieth and win the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am for his first PGA Tour title.

Hoge, one of seven players who had at least a share of the lead in the final round, came within inches of holing out from the 16th fairway, tapping in for birdie to catch Spieth. Then after Spieth made bogey from the bunker on the par-3 17th, Hoge rolled in a birdie from just outside 20 feet.

He closed with a par for a 4-under 68.

“It’s awesome,” Hoge said. “I’ve worked through so many hard times.”

The 32-year-old Hoge, who grew up in North Dakota, had been runner-up twice in his previous 202 starts on the PGA Tour, most recently at The American Express two weeks ago.

His time came amid the magnificent setting of Pebble Beach under a clear California sky, and it didn’t come easily with so many players in the mix for so long.

“I’m almost a little in shock,” Hoge said. “It’s been so long since I won anything that I forgot how to celebrate.”

Spieth looked like a winner when he birdied the 12th and 13th holes, and he reached the 15th tee with a two-shot lead. But he missed a 5-foot par putt on the 17th, and only as he stood under the pine in fairway on the par-5 18th did he realize he needed an eagle.

He caught a sandy lie that left him in a fairway bunker, and the best he could do was par for a 69. Hoge had to wait for Beau Hossler, one of three players who shared the 54-hole lead, who needed eagle on the 18th to force a playoff.

Hossler sent his fairway metal right into a bunker, blasted out long, and three-putted for bogey for a 71 to finish alone in third.

Hoge earned his first trip to Augusta National for the Masters, along with getting a two-year exemption. Until this year, his best season on the PGA Tour was in 2020 when he was 50th in the FedEx Cup and won just over $1.8 million.

Hoge, who finished at 19-under 268, earned $1,566,000.

So many others had chances, including Patrick Cantlay, at No. 4 the highest-ranked player in the world at Pebble Beach. He opened with two birdies and was still atop the leaderboard until a bogey at the eighth that left the final three hours wide open.

Cantlay didn’t make another birdie until the 18th when it was too late. He spent most of the back nine scrambling for par and his luck finally ran out on the 15th and 16th hole. He shot 71 and tied for fourth along with Troy Merritt (67).

Joel Dahmen (72) and Andrew Putnam (73) also had a share of the lead during the final round. They were in the group that tied for sixth.

Spieth won at Pebble in 2017, had a two-shot lead going into the final round last year and had everything seemingly in his favor. That includes the signature moment of this week, when he had his left foot planted on the edge of a 60-foot cliff on the eighth hole Saturday that only gave him anxiety after he realized the risk he had taken.

His hopes began to fade with an 8-iron he was starting down on the 17th, shocked that it came up short and in the sand.

“Maybe my best swing of the day,” he said. “I thought it was going to be 2 feet.”

Instead, he blasted out 5 feet long and hit the putt too hard to take the left-to-right break.

Hoge hit the ball so pure on the back nine that he had a birdie putt from inside 20 feet on every hole until he got to the 17th, and that’s where he made the biggest putt of his career.

Hoge, who played college golf at TCU, has been on the PGA Tour since 2015. He started out on the Canadian tour, where he won in 2011.

SOURCE: bostonglobe.com

The post Hoge Claims First Win appeared first on Warren Valley Golf Course.

Tuesday, February 1, 2022

FIND YOUR GRIP

FIND YOUR GRIP

While the standard golf grip for a right-handed player is simply placing the right hand below the left, don’t be afraid to play around with what feels best. Some players will interlock their left index finger with their right pinky for a different feel while others do some kind of variation. One of the best tips we can give you is to play around with your golf grip until you find something that is comfortable and gives you control over the golf club and your swing.

 


 

Keep watching each week for more exciting golf tips!

BOOK YOUR NEXT TEE TIME

The post FIND YOUR GRIP appeared first on Warren Valley Golf Course.