Jump to content
Note: This thread is 4836 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Recommended Posts

If you look at the guys who have won the long drive championship the past 10 years they tend to be guys who are jacked.  Sadlowsky may only be 5'11" and 175ish at this point but he is still quite young. And jacked for his size.  Zuback is a beast and Sean "The Beast" Fister....the guys knocking it way out on tour are all big guys....Johnson, Woodford, Watson, Garrigus.....The golfer of the future on tour is destined to be a bigger stronger athlete.  If you lookk at the developement of baseball over the past few decades, the average player is bigger and stronger.  I believe the "Tiger Factor" has brought athletes toward golf for the first time and they are now just starting to appear.

On a personal level I have a buddy who was a very average hitter in HS and College.  He gave up the game for about 7 years. He became a power lifter.  He was pretty dedicated to his power lifting and improved quite a bit...Fast forward a couple years and he becomes involved in marketing at a corporate level and goes back to golf after not playing for 7 years. Using the same clubs he had he goes out and he is driving the ball 350....Not 350 every now and then, but 350 like every swing.  He is absolutely flaborgasted by the distances he was generating with every club...This guy plays out of a nice club in CT and the club he is at has stories of him.  He has driven 4 par 4's on the course that are thought to have never been driven by anyone else.  All are 375 to 410.

It's about swing speed. Natural abilities set the basic tone[decent swing pattern repetitiveness]. Limberness adds a 2nd gear.  Quick twitch muscle developement is the 3rd gear and pure power may be the 4th.  Slam all that stuff together in a repeating pattern and look out.

This is a specific case study that goes against the logic of not everyone can hit it as far as Bubba.  If you start early enough, whilst still limber and developing muscle mass this guy went from 250 tops to 400 every now and then. 6' 210 guy. But pure dedication. This guy lifted like a maniac for 5 years. And a decade past his brutal prime long driving he still knocks em past just about everybody.....and still pops 350 a few times a round.


Quote:

http://www.golf.com/golf/video/article/0,28224,2023121,00.html

A clip showing Sadlowski pound a few.


Absolutely incredible....

Deryck Griffith

Titleist 910 D3: 9.5deg GD Tour AD DI7x | Nike Dymo 3W: 15deg, UST S-flex | Mizuno MP CLK Hybrid: 20deg, Project X Tour Issue 6.5, HC1 Shaft | Mizuno MP-57 4-PW, DG X100 Shaft, 1deg upright | Cleveland CG15 Wedges: 52, 56, 60deg | Scotty Cameron California Del Mar | TaylorMade Penta, TP Black LDP, Nike 20XI-X




Originally Posted by FLOG4

If you look at the guys who have won the long drive championship the past 10 years they tend to be guys who are jacked.  Sadlowsky may only be 5'11" and 175ish at this point but he is still quite young. And jacked for his size.  Zuback is a beast and Sean "The Beast" Fister....the guys knocking it way out on tour are all big guys....Johnson, Woodford, Watson, Garrigus.....The golfer of the future on tour is destined to be a bigger stronger athlete.  If you lookk at the developement of baseball over the past few decades, the average player is bigger and stronger.  I believe the "Tiger Factor" has brought athletes toward golf for the first time and they are now just starting to appear.

On a personal level I have a buddy who was a very average hitter in HS and College.  He gave up the game for about 7 years. He became a power lifter.  He was pretty dedicated to his power lifting and improved quite a bit...Fast forward a couple years and he becomes involved in marketing at a corporate level and goes back to golf after not playing for 7 years. Using the same clubs he had he goes out and he is driving the ball 350....Not 350 every now and then, but 350 like every swing.  He is absolutely flaborgasted by the distances he was generating with every club...This guy plays out of a nice club in CT and the club he is at has stories of him.  He has driven 4 par 4's on the course that are thought to have never been driven by anyone else.  All are 375 to 410.

It's about swing speed. Natural abilities set the basic tone[decent swing pattern repetitiveness]. Limberness adds a 2nd gear.  Quick twitch muscle developement is the 3rd gear and pure power may be the 4th.  Slam all that stuff together in a repeating pattern and look out.

This is a specific case study that goes against the logic of not everyone can hit it as far as Bubba.  If you start early enough, whilst still limber and developing muscle mass this guy went from 250 tops to 400 every now and then. 6' 210 guy. But pure dedication. This guy lifted like a maniac for 5 years. And a decade past his brutal prime long driving he still knocks em past just about everybody.....and still pops 350 a few times a round.


Sort of what I think too. I think the people who disagree are only thinking about cases where the average joe is trying to gain some strength... of course hes not going to hit the ball much further because he never actually REALLY trains.

:whistle:

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Yup if we just lifted weights we could all be pitchers and long drive champs.... wish I knew that before I got into IT.

nickent.gif4DX Evolver Driver, ping.gif Rapture 3 Wood, taylormade.gif Burner 08 5 Wood, nickent.gif 3DX RC 3-4 & 5DX 5 Hybrid,
nickent.gif 6-PW 3DX Hybrid Irons, cleveland.gif High Bore 09 GW-SW, touredge.gif 60* Wedge, maxfli.gif Revolution Blade Insert Putter
 
Yes I'm Aware That's 16 Clubs!



Originally Posted by LankyLefty

Yup if we just lifted weights we could all be pitchers and long drive champs.... wish I knew that before I got into IT.



This is just stupid.  No one has presented this as fact.  I (and quite a few others) have said that an increase in strength through lifting will increase YOUR hitting distance.  YOUR is the key word. I have not said you will hit it farther than some one else, I have not said you will drive 300 yards, I have not said that you will be a long drive champ.  I have said that you will see an increase in your hitting distance.

Also I like how people laugh at the simplicity of lifting weights.  Actually move some real iron and report back to me.  15 minutes with the Ol' shake weight won't get it done.


Golfers need to gain power not strength. The training is slightly different. The right muscles also need to be targeted. Getting huge biceps or a monster bench really isn't going to help your swing. In many ways golf is 20+ years behind other sports. Back in the 70/80s you would still hear people question the benefits of weight and power training for sports like baseball, basketball and even hockey. By the 90s pretty much everyone in those sports were hitting the gym on a regular basis. Golf has started that transition and I expect in a little bit it will be shocking to hear about PGA pros that don't hit the gym on a regular basis. It definitely isn't magic that will turn a 30+ handicaper into scratch golfer. But it will make pretty much any golfer better.

Originally Posted by jshots

Sort of what I think too. I think the people who disagree are only thinking about cases where the average joe is trying to gain some strength... of course hes not going to hit the ball much further because he never actually REALLY trains.




I agree a tiny bit about working out and hitting it longer.  But the problem is if you don't play for a living, have a job, you really can't have a bunch of hobbies.  Playing well isn't about hitting it as far as possible, it is about playing consistantly, recovering.  Hitting it long is a big advantage for sure.  But in the world I live in with a family some  have to choose.  Do I want to work out really hard and not play as much golf (probably should have done this as my play has been bad) or play/practice more.  I'd bet that people who can really play play alot.  I'd venture if your playing to a 5, your probably playing/practicing 4 days a week.  I don't like waking up at 5 in the morning to workout, I like to sleep.  My family needs me around a little bit.  I can't just go to the gym and then the range everyday after work.  That is why I believe in the real world playing more is much more benifical to playing well than having a gym routine.

In the winter I workout and focus on fitness.  I've gotten results in the gym but I can't say I have personally seen that big of an improvement in my golf game.  In the summer I play golf and try to get in the gym twice a week for an hour just to keep from regressing.

Brian


Note: This thread is 4836 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    TourStriker PlaneMate
    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FitForGolf
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-20%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack/FitForGolf, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope. 15% off TourStriker (no code).
  • Posts

    • Its way past time both tours  have  major  penalties for  slow  play. I  hate  it when they say" This group is  on the  clock". Big damn deal. Issue  penalties. Maybe Hull is a  bit too harsh but  its time a slew  of  2 stroke  penalties start  being  issued.     Charley Hull is fed up with slow play on the LPGA, so she offered a ‘ruthless’ solution “I’m quite ruthless, but I said, ‘Listen, if you get three bad timings, every time it’s a tee shot penalty; if you have three of them, you lose your Tour card instantly.’ I’m sure that would hurry a lot of people up, and they won’t want to lose their Tour card. That would kill the slow play, but they would never do that.” Who knows if that will work. But if it does not, maybe the PGA Tour should adopt Hull’s idea. The LPGA should, too, or at least assess penalty strokes for slow play. Five-hour rounds for a final group on Sunday is unacceptable and a quick way to lose interest and engagement from fans.
    • Wordle 1,248 4/6 🟨⬜⬜🟩⬜ ⬜⬜🟩⬜⬜ ⬜🟩🟩🟩🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
    • A hair under 190. It was pretty downhill, though, so I think we were playing between 180-185 to the pin. My 6 iron went 187 according to shot scope and ended up 18 feet away.
    • That's a tough pin on 14 at TR, had to make the hole play much longer, how far was that shot? I've only played that hole with a front pin.
    • No, but I spent (marginally) less time in the trees at Southern Pines, so it definitely played wider for me 😆. It definitely felt wider.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.

The popup will be closed in 10 seconds...