Not sure where to start? Ask Mulligan
Tyler Ferrell is the only person in the world named to Golf Digest's list of Best
Young Teachers in
America AND its list of Best Golf Fitness Professionals in America.
Understanding Tour Pros' Warm-Up Routines for Better Play
After this video, you'll be able to:
- Identify whether you benefit more from feel or target awareness during warm-ups
- Implement effective recalibration techniques like those used by tour pros
- Develop a personalized warm-up routine that prepares you mentally and physically for your round
Explore the contrasting warm-up strategies of Jason Day and Alex Noren to discover what works best for your game. Learn how to tailor your pre-round routine to enhance your performance on the course.
Video Transcript
WEBVTT
1
00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.880
In this video we're gonna take a look at the warm-up routines of Jason Day and
2
00:00:04.880 --> 00:00:09.080
Alex Norrin at the Torrey Pines tournament a couple weeks ago. So you may
3
00:00:09.080 --> 00:00:14.040
have noticed that with the playoff they ran out of daylight and they had to
4
00:00:14.040 --> 00:00:18.280
start the next day. Well on Facebook they did a great job of posting a video of
5
00:00:18.280 --> 00:00:22.840
these two getting warmed up. You saw two totally different systems. One golfer
6
00:00:22.840 --> 00:00:26.080
was working on really grooving his feel, the other was really grooving his
7
00:00:26.080 --> 00:00:32.100
feeling of target awareness and alignment. Now you got to play around to kind
8
00:00:32.100 --> 00:00:32.120
of
9
00:00:32.120 --> 00:00:35.440
figure out which one's more important for you. I tend to be more of a feel gol
10
00:00:35.440 --> 00:00:35.520
fer
11
00:00:35.520 --> 00:00:39.720
but I know many good golfers who are more of the visual target awareness. You
12
00:00:39.720 --> 00:00:39.840
can
13
00:00:39.840 --> 00:00:43.040
play great, the important thing is to know what works for you and that comes
14
00:00:43.040 --> 00:00:48.360
from trial and error. What you saw both of them doing was they would hit maybe
15
00:00:48.360 --> 00:00:48.520
a
16
00:00:48.520 --> 00:00:53.730
shot to maybe a little cluster up to five for Alex and then they would recalibr
17
00:00:53.730 --> 00:00:53.960
ate.
18
00:00:53.960 --> 00:01:00.840
So Alex would go into recalibrating by doing his little exaggerated crunch and
19
00:01:00.840 --> 00:01:05.880
white move and Jason would recalibrate by walking back behind the ball starting
20
00:01:05.880 --> 00:01:09.640
over and recalibrating his vision even though he had an alignment stick down
21
00:01:09.640 --> 00:01:10.120
the
22
00:01:10.120 --> 00:01:14.380
whole time. So play around with how you get warmed up and make sure that you
23
00:01:14.380 --> 00:01:14.440
have
24
00:01:14.440 --> 00:01:17.920
a specific purpose that you're trying to calibrate in order to get ready for
25
00:01:17.920 --> 00:01:21.580
the day. Through trial and error you'll be able to figure out what it is that
26
00:01:21.580 --> 00:01:21.720
you
27
00:01:21.720 --> 00:01:25.800
need to focus on in order to play your best. Let's take a look and see just how
28
00:01:25.800 --> 00:01:31.920
these warm-up routines look from both Alex and Jason. So here we have the two
29
00:01:31.920 --> 00:01:36.120
of them getting warmed up over on the left is Alex and over on the right is
30
00:01:36.120 --> 00:01:41.600
Jason Day. You can see that Jason Day has an alignment stick down and he's
31
00:01:41.600 --> 00:01:46.680
starting from behind the ball and Alex is mid-routine there. Alex would hit a
32
00:01:46.680 --> 00:01:52.730
handful of golf balls and then he would back away from the golf ball and recal
33
00:01:52.730 --> 00:01:53.240
ibrate
34
00:01:53.240 --> 00:01:57.560
his movement where we'll see Jason in between shots would recalibrate vision.
35
00:01:57.560 --> 00:02:03.480
So now here over on the left we're gonna see Alex doing that little crunch and
36
00:02:03.480 --> 00:02:09.480
white movement and if you've done your drills enough so that you you build a
37
00:02:09.480 --> 00:02:13.680
strong enough map you build a good awareness of the drill then you can do
38
00:02:13.680 --> 00:02:18.280
what he just did. That was a little five-second practice move and it kind of
39
00:02:18.280 --> 00:02:23.560
reminded his brain what he's trying to do. Now we've got Jason actually
40
00:02:23.560 --> 00:02:26.900
demonstrating a hard scale of putting a ball on a tee just using the club in
41
00:02:26.900 --> 00:02:26.960
the
42
00:02:26.960 --> 00:02:33.160
foot. So fairly loose here during the warm-up. He goes back to start the
43
00:02:33.160 --> 00:02:36.920
process. He didn't even look at the target too long in that rep. It was more
44
00:02:36.920 --> 00:02:43.880
of just getting set back to home base basically his swing starts from behind
45
00:02:43.880 --> 00:02:51.240
the ball. So then he goes through his pre-shot routine hits a good shot gets
46
00:02:51.240 --> 00:02:59.160
another ball from the caddy and what you'll see is he's not just gonna stand
47
00:02:59.160 --> 00:03:04.960
there and whack away he's getting ready to go play. So he goes back and he
48
00:03:04.960 --> 00:03:10.600
resets to his visual alignment. Now he's gonna walk back up go through his
49
00:03:10.600 --> 00:03:15.040
same alignment routine. So he's basically going through the process that he's
50
00:03:15.040 --> 00:03:22.920
gonna use on the course. I find too often that amateurs are just getting
51
00:03:22.920 --> 00:03:27.640
physically warmed up trying to find a physical groove and they do so by hitting
52
00:03:27.640 --> 00:03:32.960
balls in rapid succession and when you hit the balls in rapid succession you
53
00:03:32.960 --> 00:03:39.480
might get a decent feel for the short term but you don't actually build a
54
00:03:39.480 --> 00:03:43.760
feel for the long term. It's kind of the difference between cramming for a test
55
00:03:43.760 --> 00:03:49.720
versus actually study. So Alex is going to practice his short game. Let's go
56
00:03:49.720 --> 00:03:49.920
back
57
00:03:49.920 --> 00:03:57.160
to Jason and you'll see one more ball every ball starting from behind the golf
58
00:03:57.160 --> 00:04:03.760
ball. I challenge my students especially those who we think are visual to start
59
00:04:03.760 --> 00:04:08.440
every golf ball behind the golf ball have visual alignment stations just like
60
00:04:08.440 --> 00:04:12.800
Jason is doing here. If you're more of a feel golfer then you'll want to use
61
00:04:12.800 --> 00:04:13.160
more
62
00:04:13.160 --> 00:04:18.280
of the setup that or the routine that Alex was doing. Hit four or five balls
63
00:04:18.280 --> 00:04:24.800
and then if you need to recalibrate by practicing your feel move. This will
64
00:04:24.800 --> 00:04:27.440
help you take your game from the range to the course.
1
00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.880
In this video we're gonna take a look at the warm-up routines of Jason Day and
2
00:00:04.880 --> 00:00:09.080
Alex Norrin at the Torrey Pines tournament a couple weeks ago. So you may
3
00:00:09.080 --> 00:00:14.040
have noticed that with the playoff they ran out of daylight and they had to
4
00:00:14.040 --> 00:00:18.280
start the next day. Well on Facebook they did a great job of posting a video of
5
00:00:18.280 --> 00:00:22.840
these two getting warmed up. You saw two totally different systems. One golfer
6
00:00:22.840 --> 00:00:26.080
was working on really grooving his feel, the other was really grooving his
7
00:00:26.080 --> 00:00:32.100
feeling of target awareness and alignment. Now you got to play around to kind
8
00:00:32.100 --> 00:00:32.120
of
9
00:00:32.120 --> 00:00:35.440
figure out which one's more important for you. I tend to be more of a feel gol
10
00:00:35.440 --> 00:00:35.520
fer
11
00:00:35.520 --> 00:00:39.720
but I know many good golfers who are more of the visual target awareness. You
12
00:00:39.720 --> 00:00:39.840
can
13
00:00:39.840 --> 00:00:43.040
play great, the important thing is to know what works for you and that comes
14
00:00:43.040 --> 00:00:48.360
from trial and error. What you saw both of them doing was they would hit maybe
15
00:00:48.360 --> 00:00:48.520
a
16
00:00:48.520 --> 00:00:53.730
shot to maybe a little cluster up to five for Alex and then they would recalibr
17
00:00:53.730 --> 00:00:53.960
ate.
18
00:00:53.960 --> 00:01:00.840
So Alex would go into recalibrating by doing his little exaggerated crunch and
19
00:01:00.840 --> 00:01:05.880
white move and Jason would recalibrate by walking back behind the ball starting
20
00:01:05.880 --> 00:01:09.640
over and recalibrating his vision even though he had an alignment stick down
21
00:01:09.640 --> 00:01:10.120
the
22
00:01:10.120 --> 00:01:14.380
whole time. So play around with how you get warmed up and make sure that you
23
00:01:14.380 --> 00:01:14.440
have
24
00:01:14.440 --> 00:01:17.920
a specific purpose that you're trying to calibrate in order to get ready for
25
00:01:17.920 --> 00:01:21.580
the day. Through trial and error you'll be able to figure out what it is that
26
00:01:21.580 --> 00:01:21.720
you
27
00:01:21.720 --> 00:01:25.800
need to focus on in order to play your best. Let's take a look and see just how
28
00:01:25.800 --> 00:01:31.920
these warm-up routines look from both Alex and Jason. So here we have the two
29
00:01:31.920 --> 00:01:36.120
of them getting warmed up over on the left is Alex and over on the right is
30
00:01:36.120 --> 00:01:41.600
Jason Day. You can see that Jason Day has an alignment stick down and he's
31
00:01:41.600 --> 00:01:46.680
starting from behind the ball and Alex is mid-routine there. Alex would hit a
32
00:01:46.680 --> 00:01:52.730
handful of golf balls and then he would back away from the golf ball and recal
33
00:01:52.730 --> 00:01:53.240
ibrate
34
00:01:53.240 --> 00:01:57.560
his movement where we'll see Jason in between shots would recalibrate vision.
35
00:01:57.560 --> 00:02:03.480
So now here over on the left we're gonna see Alex doing that little crunch and
36
00:02:03.480 --> 00:02:09.480
white movement and if you've done your drills enough so that you you build a
37
00:02:09.480 --> 00:02:13.680
strong enough map you build a good awareness of the drill then you can do
38
00:02:13.680 --> 00:02:18.280
what he just did. That was a little five-second practice move and it kind of
39
00:02:18.280 --> 00:02:23.560
reminded his brain what he's trying to do. Now we've got Jason actually
40
00:02:23.560 --> 00:02:26.900
demonstrating a hard scale of putting a ball on a tee just using the club in
41
00:02:26.900 --> 00:02:26.960
the
42
00:02:26.960 --> 00:02:33.160
foot. So fairly loose here during the warm-up. He goes back to start the
43
00:02:33.160 --> 00:02:36.920
process. He didn't even look at the target too long in that rep. It was more
44
00:02:36.920 --> 00:02:43.880
of just getting set back to home base basically his swing starts from behind
45
00:02:43.880 --> 00:02:51.240
the ball. So then he goes through his pre-shot routine hits a good shot gets
46
00:02:51.240 --> 00:02:59.160
another ball from the caddy and what you'll see is he's not just gonna stand
47
00:02:59.160 --> 00:03:04.960
there and whack away he's getting ready to go play. So he goes back and he
48
00:03:04.960 --> 00:03:10.600
resets to his visual alignment. Now he's gonna walk back up go through his
49
00:03:10.600 --> 00:03:15.040
same alignment routine. So he's basically going through the process that he's
50
00:03:15.040 --> 00:03:22.920
gonna use on the course. I find too often that amateurs are just getting
51
00:03:22.920 --> 00:03:27.640
physically warmed up trying to find a physical groove and they do so by hitting
52
00:03:27.640 --> 00:03:32.960
balls in rapid succession and when you hit the balls in rapid succession you
53
00:03:32.960 --> 00:03:39.480
might get a decent feel for the short term but you don't actually build a
54
00:03:39.480 --> 00:03:43.760
feel for the long term. It's kind of the difference between cramming for a test
55
00:03:43.760 --> 00:03:49.720
versus actually study. So Alex is going to practice his short game. Let's go
56
00:03:49.720 --> 00:03:49.920
back
57
00:03:49.920 --> 00:03:57.160
to Jason and you'll see one more ball every ball starting from behind the golf
58
00:03:57.160 --> 00:04:03.760
ball. I challenge my students especially those who we think are visual to start
59
00:04:03.760 --> 00:04:08.440
every golf ball behind the golf ball have visual alignment stations just like
60
00:04:08.440 --> 00:04:12.800
Jason is doing here. If you're more of a feel golfer then you'll want to use
61
00:04:12.800 --> 00:04:13.160
more
62
00:04:13.160 --> 00:04:18.280
of the setup that or the routine that Alex was doing. Hit four or five balls
63
00:04:18.280 --> 00:04:24.800
and then if you need to recalibrate by practicing your feel move. This will
64
00:04:24.800 --> 00:04:27.440
help you take your game from the range to the course.
Have questions?
Ask Mulligan for help
Tyler Ferrell is the only person in the world named to Golf Digest's list of
Best Young Teachers in America AND its list of Best Golf Fitness Professionals in America.
Understanding Tour Pros' Warm-Up Routines for Better Play
After this video, you'll be able to:
- Identify whether you benefit more from feel or target awareness during warm-ups
- Implement effective recalibration techniques like those used by tour pros
- Develop a personalized warm-up routine that prepares you mentally and physically for your round
Explore the contrasting warm-up strategies of Jason Day and Alex Noren to discover what works best for your game. Learn how to tailor your pre-round routine to enhance your performance on the course.
Video Transcript
WEBVTT
1
00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.880
In this video we're gonna take a look at the warm-up routines of Jason Day and
2
00:00:04.880 --> 00:00:09.080
Alex Norrin at the Torrey Pines tournament a couple weeks ago. So you may
3
00:00:09.080 --> 00:00:14.040
have noticed that with the playoff they ran out of daylight and they had to
4
00:00:14.040 --> 00:00:18.280
start the next day. Well on Facebook they did a great job of posting a video of
5
00:00:18.280 --> 00:00:22.840
these two getting warmed up. You saw two totally different systems. One golfer
6
00:00:22.840 --> 00:00:26.080
was working on really grooving his feel, the other was really grooving his
7
00:00:26.080 --> 00:00:32.100
feeling of target awareness and alignment. Now you got to play around to kind
8
00:00:32.100 --> 00:00:32.120
of
9
00:00:32.120 --> 00:00:35.440
figure out which one's more important for you. I tend to be more of a feel gol
10
00:00:35.440 --> 00:00:35.520
fer
11
00:00:35.520 --> 00:00:39.720
but I know many good golfers who are more of the visual target awareness. You
12
00:00:39.720 --> 00:00:39.840
can
13
00:00:39.840 --> 00:00:43.040
play great, the important thing is to know what works for you and that comes
14
00:00:43.040 --> 00:00:48.360
from trial and error. What you saw both of them doing was they would hit maybe
15
00:00:48.360 --> 00:00:48.520
a
16
00:00:48.520 --> 00:00:53.730
shot to maybe a little cluster up to five for Alex and then they would recalibr
17
00:00:53.730 --> 00:00:53.960
ate.
18
00:00:53.960 --> 00:01:00.840
So Alex would go into recalibrating by doing his little exaggerated crunch and
19
00:01:00.840 --> 00:01:05.880
white move and Jason would recalibrate by walking back behind the ball starting
20
00:01:05.880 --> 00:01:09.640
over and recalibrating his vision even though he had an alignment stick down
21
00:01:09.640 --> 00:01:10.120
the
22
00:01:10.120 --> 00:01:14.380
whole time. So play around with how you get warmed up and make sure that you
23
00:01:14.380 --> 00:01:14.440
have
24
00:01:14.440 --> 00:01:17.920
a specific purpose that you're trying to calibrate in order to get ready for
25
00:01:17.920 --> 00:01:21.580
the day. Through trial and error you'll be able to figure out what it is that
26
00:01:21.580 --> 00:01:21.720
you
27
00:01:21.720 --> 00:01:25.800
need to focus on in order to play your best. Let's take a look and see just how
28
00:01:25.800 --> 00:01:31.920
these warm-up routines look from both Alex and Jason. So here we have the two
29
00:01:31.920 --> 00:01:36.120
of them getting warmed up over on the left is Alex and over on the right is
30
00:01:36.120 --> 00:01:41.600
Jason Day. You can see that Jason Day has an alignment stick down and he's
31
00:01:41.600 --> 00:01:46.680
starting from behind the ball and Alex is mid-routine there. Alex would hit a
32
00:01:46.680 --> 00:01:52.730
handful of golf balls and then he would back away from the golf ball and recal
33
00:01:52.730 --> 00:01:53.240
ibrate
34
00:01:53.240 --> 00:01:57.560
his movement where we'll see Jason in between shots would recalibrate vision.
35
00:01:57.560 --> 00:02:03.480
So now here over on the left we're gonna see Alex doing that little crunch and
36
00:02:03.480 --> 00:02:09.480
white movement and if you've done your drills enough so that you you build a
37
00:02:09.480 --> 00:02:13.680
strong enough map you build a good awareness of the drill then you can do
38
00:02:13.680 --> 00:02:18.280
what he just did. That was a little five-second practice move and it kind of
39
00:02:18.280 --> 00:02:23.560
reminded his brain what he's trying to do. Now we've got Jason actually
40
00:02:23.560 --> 00:02:26.900
demonstrating a hard scale of putting a ball on a tee just using the club in
41
00:02:26.900 --> 00:02:26.960
the
42
00:02:26.960 --> 00:02:33.160
foot. So fairly loose here during the warm-up. He goes back to start the
43
00:02:33.160 --> 00:02:36.920
process. He didn't even look at the target too long in that rep. It was more
44
00:02:36.920 --> 00:02:43.880
of just getting set back to home base basically his swing starts from behind
45
00:02:43.880 --> 00:02:51.240
the ball. So then he goes through his pre-shot routine hits a good shot gets
46
00:02:51.240 --> 00:02:59.160
another ball from the caddy and what you'll see is he's not just gonna stand
47
00:02:59.160 --> 00:03:04.960
there and whack away he's getting ready to go play. So he goes back and he
48
00:03:04.960 --> 00:03:10.600
resets to his visual alignment. Now he's gonna walk back up go through his
49
00:03:10.600 --> 00:03:15.040
same alignment routine. So he's basically going through the process that he's
50
00:03:15.040 --> 00:03:22.920
gonna use on the course. I find too often that amateurs are just getting
51
00:03:22.920 --> 00:03:27.640
physically warmed up trying to find a physical groove and they do so by hitting
52
00:03:27.640 --> 00:03:32.960
balls in rapid succession and when you hit the balls in rapid succession you
53
00:03:32.960 --> 00:03:39.480
might get a decent feel for the short term but you don't actually build a
54
00:03:39.480 --> 00:03:43.760
feel for the long term. It's kind of the difference between cramming for a test
55
00:03:43.760 --> 00:03:49.720
versus actually study. So Alex is going to practice his short game. Let's go
56
00:03:49.720 --> 00:03:49.920
back
57
00:03:49.920 --> 00:03:57.160
to Jason and you'll see one more ball every ball starting from behind the golf
58
00:03:57.160 --> 00:04:03.760
ball. I challenge my students especially those who we think are visual to start
59
00:04:03.760 --> 00:04:08.440
every golf ball behind the golf ball have visual alignment stations just like
60
00:04:08.440 --> 00:04:12.800
Jason is doing here. If you're more of a feel golfer then you'll want to use
61
00:04:12.800 --> 00:04:13.160
more
62
00:04:13.160 --> 00:04:18.280
of the setup that or the routine that Alex was doing. Hit four or five balls
63
00:04:18.280 --> 00:04:24.800
and then if you need to recalibrate by practicing your feel move. This will
64
00:04:24.800 --> 00:04:27.440
help you take your game from the range to the course.
1
00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.880
In this video we're gonna take a look at the warm-up routines of Jason Day and
2
00:00:04.880 --> 00:00:09.080
Alex Norrin at the Torrey Pines tournament a couple weeks ago. So you may
3
00:00:09.080 --> 00:00:14.040
have noticed that with the playoff they ran out of daylight and they had to
4
00:00:14.040 --> 00:00:18.280
start the next day. Well on Facebook they did a great job of posting a video of
5
00:00:18.280 --> 00:00:22.840
these two getting warmed up. You saw two totally different systems. One golfer
6
00:00:22.840 --> 00:00:26.080
was working on really grooving his feel, the other was really grooving his
7
00:00:26.080 --> 00:00:32.100
feeling of target awareness and alignment. Now you got to play around to kind
8
00:00:32.100 --> 00:00:32.120
of
9
00:00:32.120 --> 00:00:35.440
figure out which one's more important for you. I tend to be more of a feel gol
10
00:00:35.440 --> 00:00:35.520
fer
11
00:00:35.520 --> 00:00:39.720
but I know many good golfers who are more of the visual target awareness. You
12
00:00:39.720 --> 00:00:39.840
can
13
00:00:39.840 --> 00:00:43.040
play great, the important thing is to know what works for you and that comes
14
00:00:43.040 --> 00:00:48.360
from trial and error. What you saw both of them doing was they would hit maybe
15
00:00:48.360 --> 00:00:48.520
a
16
00:00:48.520 --> 00:00:53.730
shot to maybe a little cluster up to five for Alex and then they would recalibr
17
00:00:53.730 --> 00:00:53.960
ate.
18
00:00:53.960 --> 00:01:00.840
So Alex would go into recalibrating by doing his little exaggerated crunch and
19
00:01:00.840 --> 00:01:05.880
white move and Jason would recalibrate by walking back behind the ball starting
20
00:01:05.880 --> 00:01:09.640
over and recalibrating his vision even though he had an alignment stick down
21
00:01:09.640 --> 00:01:10.120
the
22
00:01:10.120 --> 00:01:14.380
whole time. So play around with how you get warmed up and make sure that you
23
00:01:14.380 --> 00:01:14.440
have
24
00:01:14.440 --> 00:01:17.920
a specific purpose that you're trying to calibrate in order to get ready for
25
00:01:17.920 --> 00:01:21.580
the day. Through trial and error you'll be able to figure out what it is that
26
00:01:21.580 --> 00:01:21.720
you
27
00:01:21.720 --> 00:01:25.800
need to focus on in order to play your best. Let's take a look and see just how
28
00:01:25.800 --> 00:01:31.920
these warm-up routines look from both Alex and Jason. So here we have the two
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of them getting warmed up over on the left is Alex and over on the right is
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Jason Day. You can see that Jason Day has an alignment stick down and he's
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starting from behind the ball and Alex is mid-routine there. Alex would hit a
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handful of golf balls and then he would back away from the golf ball and recal
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ibrate
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his movement where we'll see Jason in between shots would recalibrate vision.
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So now here over on the left we're gonna see Alex doing that little crunch and
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white movement and if you've done your drills enough so that you you build a
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strong enough map you build a good awareness of the drill then you can do
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what he just did. That was a little five-second practice move and it kind of
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reminded his brain what he's trying to do. Now we've got Jason actually
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demonstrating a hard scale of putting a ball on a tee just using the club in
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the
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foot. So fairly loose here during the warm-up. He goes back to start the
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process. He didn't even look at the target too long in that rep. It was more
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of just getting set back to home base basically his swing starts from behind
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the ball. So then he goes through his pre-shot routine hits a good shot gets
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another ball from the caddy and what you'll see is he's not just gonna stand
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there and whack away he's getting ready to go play. So he goes back and he
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resets to his visual alignment. Now he's gonna walk back up go through his
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same alignment routine. So he's basically going through the process that he's
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gonna use on the course. I find too often that amateurs are just getting
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physically warmed up trying to find a physical groove and they do so by hitting
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balls in rapid succession and when you hit the balls in rapid succession you
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might get a decent feel for the short term but you don't actually build a
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feel for the long term. It's kind of the difference between cramming for a test
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versus actually study. So Alex is going to practice his short game. Let's go
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back
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to Jason and you'll see one more ball every ball starting from behind the golf
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ball. I challenge my students especially those who we think are visual to start
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every golf ball behind the golf ball have visual alignment stations just like
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Jason is doing here. If you're more of a feel golfer then you'll want to use
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more
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of the setup that or the routine that Alex was doing. Hit four or five balls
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and then if you need to recalibrate by practicing your feel move. This will
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help you take your game from the range to the course.
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