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Posted
19 hours ago, mvmac said:

Yes agree with this. This will help you with the downswing pieces you mentioned. If the tailbone is too far back to start it's going to be impossible to keep it "back" on the downswing.

Thanks Mike.  I think subconsciously I was getter my more and more on my heels at setup to try and get that feel through impact but like you said that is counterproductive. 

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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Posted

Looking good Matt, when you take your swing improvements to the course, you should enjoy your game much more.
I'm heading to Old H on Wed.

Johnny Rocket - Let's Rock and Roll and play some golf !!!

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Posted
1 hour ago, Club Rat said:

Looking good Matt, when you take your swing improvements to the course, you should enjoy your game much more.
I'm heading to Old H on Wed.

have fun!  I wouldn't be able to sneak out that day, I'm hoping the weather holds through Friday and I'm going to try to get out there or at my course that afternoon.  The weekend doesn't look so good weather wise. 

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

 

IMG_4450.thumb.PNG.e55736df538a4f146e8f5b6be65e4599.PNG

IMG_4449.thumb.PNG.744198fd6141f6ac0c5ef472e402d90e.PNG

Feeling ok and making some progress but it's gonna be the same priority for now, cleaning up the right foot and knee action. Trying to feel the hips going towards target and rotating and feeling the right foot bank towards target so the knee doesn't kick in so much towards the ball. Also tied to this is keeping upper body, especially the head, steady and not moving towards target on downswing. This will help maintain the secondary tilt and help with the foot and knee action I'm trying to change.  

On vacation now so taking a (forced) break from hitting balls daily but still getting in at least 5 minutes of mirror work or slow motion swings each day.  Today had a great view while I worked on it.

IMG_4446.thumb.JPG.53f2c739821754c98bc9fd1cad3e7811.JPG

Excited to get back home to keep working on my swing. 

  • Upvote 1

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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Posted

The last video looks like you are getting some good solid fundamentals in.  Question on your finish in that...We're you trying to maintain the tipped spine angle through to finish?  Is that normal?

Very fundamentally solid action just looked to me like you could let yourself go a bit more in the finish by releasing the spine angle.  If there's no strain no worries.

I ask because for me if I finish like that it strains my lower back.  

 

 


Posted
9 hours ago, Jack Watson said:

We're you trying to maintain the tipped spine angle through to finish?

Not really, although the stuff I'm working on will probably lend itself to that some. I mean, trying to reduce a little early extension by keeping my butt on the imaginary wall behind me will give me more of that look.

 

9 hours ago, Jack Watson said:

Very fundamentally solid action just looked to me like you could let yourself go a bit more in the finish by releasing the spine angle.  If there's no strain no worries.

Yeah maybe so, just not really thinking about the finish right now just trying to focus on what I'm changing and I kind of end up where I end up if that makes sense. No strain right now. 

@iacas if I said anything there that isn't right let me know. 

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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  • 2 months later...
Posted

The last couple of weeks I've been working on a drill from my evolvr instructor to feel my left arm pull down quickly from the top of the backswing.  Basically feel like I'm trying to get my hands ahead of my front leg and hitting the ball with a lot of shaft lean.  I have a small "flip" currently that we are trying to get rid of, along with trying to get the right elbow in front of my body on the downswing, instead of lagging behind. So I've been doing this slowly and then hitting some balls with the same feel.  It's kind of crazy how I can hit a  ball 80-90% of full distance with a shortened "punch" type of swing.  Sometimes even from a stopped position at the top of the backswing. 

Addressing....

flip:

Capture.JPG.2019a40710367f201198aff638ca3898.JPG

Right elbow:

Capture.JPG1.JPG.b120e0c276a0883d1c967faa146a8f1b.JPG

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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  • 1 month later...
  • Administrator
Posted

How's it been going?

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

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Posted
On 7/3/2017 at 9:50 PM, iacas said:

 

How's it been going?

 

Thanks for asking. I've been practicing but not as much. I kind of took a break from the technical practice and just tried to play more the last few weeks. I got my first official handicap finally...8.4...and I'm hoping that will trend down this year. I'm also going to play in our club's member guest for the first time next week which is a 2 man best ball and we play 5-9 hole matches. Should be fun. I'm also going to try to play one or two stroke play events later this year to try and get some experience in that environment.  As far as the swing I think it's slowly improving. Right now when I do practice I'm working on trying to get the right elbow in front of me more on the downswing. Here's a couple full speed swings.  

 

 

  • Upvote 1

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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Posted
22 hours ago, Wanzo said:

Thanks for asking. I've been practicing but not as much. I kind of took a break from the technical practice and just tried to play more the last few weeks. I got my first official handicap finally...8.4...and I'm hoping that will trend down this year.

Good! I know people can get addicted to and enjoy practice, but ultimately, what we do on the course is what "matters" the most (usually).

22 hours ago, Wanzo said:

I'm also going to play in our club's member guest for the first time next week which is a 2 man best ball and we play 5-9 hole matches. Should be fun.

Good! Tournaments. Nice.

22 hours ago, Wanzo said:

 

 

Looking good. Good head work, and some other pieces. Keep at it.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

I'm getting back into a routine of working on my swing a little more. My focus right now is:

1. Feel right foot twist or corkscrew in the ground on the backswing to make sure pressure shifts back dynamically

2. Feel a squat in transition

3. Feel trail foot banking to keep lower body structure

A lot of mirror drills and slow mo swings.  We'll see if this cleans up a few other things related to key three. Trying to keep it simple      and focused. 

  • Upvote 1

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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  • 2 months later...
Posted

I'm going to get back in the routine of working on my swing now that we are getting into the winter here in Missouri.  I signed back up for evolvr and looking forward to working hard especially the next few months to get ready for the spring.  Here's a summary of my first analysis and my focus for now, 3 small items:

1. At address, right knee out to match foot flare.


Capture.JPG.d36a38fd8b3491af8322e07a07685468.JPG

2. Hand path inward right away in the back swing.


Capture.JPG.8dfa1bc9887a98584def2ca4b6cf9b04.JPG


3. Punch shots, no roll of face, in the follow through.

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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Posted

Going to keep working what I've been working on along with:

-feel the right hip crank back a little more towards target in the backswing

-Head steady in the downswing

-Torso will be in more flexion to help swing more in to out

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

I had the opportunity to visit @iacas in Erie and spend some time working on my game so I wanted to document my notes here for reference.  I'm not going to put them all here, because there is a lot, but these are the main ideas.

First of all, thank you Erik for your hospitality, I think we made a lot of progress and I have a good understanding of my swing now and the things I need to work on to get my scores down in the future. Here's my takeaways:

  • Practice slower
    • My tendency is to swing too fast when I'm trying to incorporate changes.  Erik would tell me to swing at 50%, I'd try the move, and we both would agree that was probably more like 90%.:-(
    • So from now on, I really need to focus my practice sessions on working slowly to do the move right.
  • Jason Dufner is my spirit animal
    • Or he should at least be the swing picture I'm working towards, especially when referencing how compact his swing is and how his right elbow works

The first day we spent most of the time working on my takeaway, getting the club to work more up...and then working on my right elbow starting down by moving towards the ball (not just down) and in front of me, in order to get the shaft to lay down. A lot of drills, slo-mo swings with a few training aids, etc..

Here is me exaggerating the feel on the takeaway:

1.thumb.JPG.a9b5bdd66582a75866d5c6b185bb8928.JPG

A before and after showing the right elbow concept

2.JPG.99c726309f8904ea06b291582f2f5f1b.JPG


As we were working on these two items, a couple of other issues started to clear up some without addressing them directly.  I was keeping my head more steady as I started the downswing and I was retaining more secondary axis tilt.  Also, my hands weren't rolling over so fast in the forward swing after impact.

Here is where I'm hoping to get to in the backswing:

3.JPG.47315a9d7f5bf4a05f0a0e12d6722baf.JPG

We also spent some time working on my pitching the first day.  I got a better feeling for the concepts from the instructional thread about pitching on the site.  Practiced feeling the club fan open and under the plane a little and feeling gravity do a lot of the work to let the club fall back on the ball.  Also touched on setup for these short shots.

Day two we added in a couple setup tweaks:

4.thumb.JPG.5db6d4def01980e3f41615bbbd81cb92.JPG

Also added a feel of keeping the chest pointed at the ground.  This is me exaggerating but shows the feel of not retracting the right shoulder, this also helped shorten the swing and keep the right elbow in check.

5.JPG.eac02d1bbe189bd05b8a5a3a2ed27a9c.JPG

 

We made a couple of tweaks to the setup with the driver too.  I was a little too tall and had the ball too far back in my stance.

Later we worked on my putting and I thought this part was really cool.  I seemed to do ok aiming my current putter, we made a small tweak but the main objective was to create a little overspin.  Also, I had a tendency to have the putter accelerate slightly after impact.  We worked on having the putter rise a little through impact with a little more forward press/shaft lean feel or "float loady" feel. 

I am glad I was able to make the trip and now more motivated than ever to try and make the changes necessary to improve. 

 

  • Like 1
  • Informative 1

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

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Posted
18 minutes ago, Wanzo said:
  • Jason Dufner is my spirit animal

Indeed, but to be clear, you'll never really get those elbow positions… they're just the exaggerations that you should keep in mind as you work toward your goal of making it better

18 minutes ago, Wanzo said:

As we were working on these two items, a couple of other issues started to clear up some without addressing them directly.  I was keeping my head more steady as I started the downswing and I was retaining more secondary axis tilt.  Also, my hands weren't rolling over so fast in the forward swing after impact.

Particularly when you do it slowly (for now). :-) Work at the proper speed.

18 minutes ago, Wanzo said:

Also added a feel of keeping the chest pointed at the ground.  This is me exaggerating but shows the feel of not retracting the right shoulder, this also helped shorten the swing and keep the right elbow in check.

5.JPG.eac02d1bbe189bd05b8a5a3a2ed27a9c.JPG

With most people, we'd have worked the other way, but most people aren't here for eight hours one day, and six hours the next day. So, we spent more time on the elbow stuff, because it was the tougher piece, and I wanted to make sure more time was spent there.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

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  • 2 months later...
Posted

Posting goals in this thread too for easy reference and accountability.  I'll get a fresh video in here soon.

2018 Goals

  • Sub 4 handicap (Currently 7.6).  I posted 14 scores last year, so didn't get to play a lot.
    • Commit to evolvr for the year and practice the right way
    • Swing Speed training 3x per week
    • Practice my evolvr priority 3x per week
    • Short game practice 2x per week
    • Play 20 or more rounds for handicap (and get to the course more often to squeeze in a few holes)
    • Play 2-3 tournaments where I play my own ball
    • Track my stats

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Working on a lot of the same pieces but trying to keep the idea simple in practice sessions.  One drill right for now, slow backswing like I worked on when in Erie, slow down to A-6 with right elbow leading, small pump and finish to abbreviated, punch shot type finish.  Going to do this daily for a while and keep working hard hitting indoors while the weather stinks outside. 

Matt          My Swing

 

 :ping: G425 Max Driver

Sub 70 3 wood, 3 hybrid and 5-p 639CB

Edison wedges 51, 55, 59

Sub 70 004 Mallet

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

  • Administrator
Posted
3 hours ago, Wanzo said:

Working on a lot of the same pieces but trying to keep the idea simple in practice sessions.  One drill right for now, slow backswing like I worked on when in Erie, slow down to A-6 with right elbow leading, small pump and finish to abbreviated, punch shot type finish.  Going to do this daily for a while and keep working hard hitting indoors while the weather stinks outside. 

Yeah, good, KISS. :-) Check the finish with the belt forward, knees (left especially) extended, still in your tilts with good arm and club angles. You'll get it quickly.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
Director of Instruction Golf Evolution • Owner, The Sand Trap .com • AuthorLowest Score Wins
Golf Digest "Best Young Teachers in America" 2016-17 & "Best in State" 2017-20 • WNY Section PGA Teacher of the Year 2019 :edel: :true_linkswear:

Check Out: New Topics | TST Blog | Golf Terms | Instructional Content | Analyzr | LSW | Instructional Droplets

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Note: This thread is 1865 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!

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  • Posts

    • This is one of the cleanest, least emotional ways to separate the Nicklaus–Tiger debate, because international participation is a direct proxy for field depth. Not vibes. Not nostalgia. Talent supply. Below is a tight, historically grounded explanation of how field strength changed — with special emphasis on how many non-U.S. players were actually in PGA TOUR fields, and what that means competitively for Jack Nicklaus vs Tiger Woods. 1. Why international share = field strength (conceptually) The PGA TOUR doesn’t draft players. It selects talent from a global labor market. So: more international players in the field from more countries who earned access through competitive tours → means a deeper, harder field, even if total field size stays the same. International share isn’t cosmetic — it’s how globalization enters the win-probability math. 2. Nicklaus era (roughly mid-1960s to early-1980s) International presence in PGA TOUR fields ~2–5% of players in a typical PGA TOUR field Often 5–8 non-U.S. players in a 140-player event Many weeks: fewer than five Who those internationals were Gary Player occasional Europeans (Seve later, Woosnam briefly) a handful of Australians or South Africans Crucially: They were elite imports, not a broad middle class. What that means for field strength The top of the field was excellent The middle and bottom were shallow After ~10–12 legitimate contenders, win equity dropped sharply This is why Nicklaus: contended constantly piled up runner-ups remained relevant for decades The field simply didn’t replenish elite threats fast enough. 3. Transition era (late-1980s to early-1990s) This is the inflection point. Structural changes Official World Golf Ranking (post-1986) European Tour becomes a true pipeline Easier travel, better incentives to cross over International share ~8–12% of PGA TOUR fields Now 15–20 non-U.S. players per event Importantly: not just stars, but solid Tour-caliber pros This is when field strength begins to compound. 4. Tiger Woods era (late-1990s through early-2010s peak) International presence explodes ~25–35% of PGA TOUR fields Often 40–55 international players in a 156-man field Representing Europe, Australia, South Africa, Asia, Latin America This is not just more flags — it’s more win equity. Why this matters competitively The median player is better The gap between #1 and #40 shrinks Every round is contested by professionals who already won elsewhere This is what people mean by “deep fields.” 5. Side-by-side comparison (simplified but accurate) Era Intl % of.    Field Intl Players       Event Competitive Meaning Nicklaus prime ~2–5% ~5–8 Elite top, thin middle Early transition ~8–12% ~15–20 Talent thickens Tiger prime ~25–35% ~40–55 Deep, global, relentless This is a 5–7× increase in international representation from Jack’s prime to Tiger’s peak. 6. Why international % matters more than field size A 140-player field with: 8 internationals vs 50 internationals are not the same tournament, even if the entry list length is identical. More internationals means: more elite tours feeding the field more players already proven winners fewer “free” spots for the elite to separate easily This is why win probability collapses in modern golf. 7. The GOAT implication (this is the hinge) Nicklaus Beat great players But usually beat fewer elite players at once Field difficulty was top-heavy, not dense Tiger Beat great players and dozens of near-elite professionals simultaneously Field difficulty was both tall and wide Tiger’s environment: lowers win probability increases variance punishes even small declines Yet Tiger still won 22.8% of PGA TOUR starts. That’s the paradox — and the argument. 8. Why this doesn’t “discredit” Nicklaus Jack dominated his environment as well as anyone ever could. But environments matter. If you translate achievements across eras: Jack’s career length looks more impressive Tiger’s per-start dominance looks more impressive International depth is the biggest reason why. Final synthesis International share of PGA TOUR fields increased ~5–7× from Nicklaus’ prime to Tiger’s peak That increase directly correlates with field depth and difficulty Tiger won more often, by larger margins, against deeper global fields So when people say: This is what they mean — not emotionally, not rhetorically, but structurally. Below is a by-era breakdown of: International share of PGA TOUR fields International share of PGA TOUR wins Win-efficiency ratio = Win share ÷ Field share All wins counted (not unique winners). “International” = non-U.S. citizenship. This framework maps directly onto the GOAT debate between Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods. International Win Share vs. Field Share by Era Era Intl % of Field   Intl % of Wins   Win Efficiency 1965–1974 (early Nicklaus) ~2–3%        ~4–6%      ~1.8–2.0× 1975–1984 (Nicklaus prime) ~3–5%       ~7–10%      ~1.8–2.3× 1985–1994 (transition) ~8–12%     ~15–22%      ~1.8–2.0× 1995–2004 (Tiger ascent/peak) ~20–25%     ~30–35%      ~1.3–1.5× 2005–2014 (Tiger era, global maturity) ~25–30%     ~35–40%      ~1.3–1.4× 2015–2025 (post-Tiger peak) ~30–35%.            ~40–45%.      ~1.25–1.35×
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    • Day 49 - 2026-02-07 More mirror work. Back to the range tomorrow. Weight shift and slide/rotation feeling very normal now.
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