Hi Pete
Good to hear from you and I'm glad you liked the article.
Who I'm working with is top secret....but I can tell you his initials are TW and he wears red on a Sunday!!!!!!!!!!! Only joking but that would be pretty cool if that ever happened!!
The couple of players who I was 'helping' last week where Lee Slattery and Phil Price, for now with both players it's pretty informal as a relationship between me and them has to be developed, but they both made the cut and did ok at the weekend, so we'll see what happens over the coming months.
One of the things alot of people wouldn't think was true of tour pro's and coaching is that they like things that work quick!!!
Now I 'm sure all of you reading this have had lessons or friends who've had lessons and wanted from the lesson something that works 'quickly' to turn your game around, infact there's probably nothing worse when going for a lesson than hearing the pro say " Well there's a few things to work on, and you might get worse before you get better but we'll have you playing better in a couple of months"!!!
A lot of club golfers just don't have the time for these types of lessons and changes and live their golfing lives with a mixture of quick fix tips because of the lack of time to change.
Now most people wouldn't realise this but most tour pro's are pretty similar, you might think because it's their career, they would have a pretty clear plan of swing/skill improvement when they take lessons and practise their golf.
Well in an ideal world they would do this, but in a results game like tournament golf, time is a very large luxury.
Imagine this, a tour player starts the season, playing ok and working with a new coach on his game, changes are made to his swing and things seem good, optimism is high on what they're working on.
Four months later, the most important part of the season is approaching (May through September) and the player has missed the last 5 cuts and has been hitting the ball terribly for a few weeks.
What does the player do? Does he change things or does he keep with it?
What ever the player chooses he needs results very quickly and often around the PGA Championship at Wentworth, the scenario I've created above is a very real one for perhaps 20 or 30 tour players and changes are made, sometimes it's the caddie that gets sacked, sometimes the clubs or sometimes the coach.
The reality is that most tour players don't get the luxury of time during a season so they need lessons that sometimes are quick fixes, which get them playing well and building confidence quickly.
So the next time you go for a lesson and you come away thinking that you're not sure you've got the time to make the changes the pro suggests, don't feel bad there's plenty of tour pros feeling very similar.
What are Pricey and Slatts working on? Well simple stuff really, Pricey was trying to not hook it and Slatts was trying to feel like he could hook it!!!!!!!
That's the nature of golf, especially on tour it's different things for different people but in a months time they could be working on the opposite!!
Cheers
Paul