Sean Foley: Most Candid Coaching Conversation You'll Hear - podcast episode cover

Sean Foley: Most Candid Coaching Conversation You'll Hear

Oct 15, 202050 min
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Episode description

We're sharing an episode from Tour Coach. Tonny Ruggiero and Sean Foley discuss candidly about how quickly coaching and pro golf is changing.

Transcript

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We're on a mission to help golfers from all over the world, achieve their goals by understanding what it actually takes to play their best. Golf we're talking is leading instructors researchers and players themselves to find what is actually working. Hey everyone, I have a really good podcast that I want to share with you. If you don't know, we run the tour coach podcast with Tony Ruggiero, kind of a partner show that you can subscribe to Tony.

Does some great shows in his latest one is with Sean Foley. I'm sure you've heard that name you know the top instructor for quite a while now and they just had a really candid honest conversation about coaching professional golf and kind of like how it's shifting and changing so rapidly. It was really, really fascinating I felt like it was something that I think everyone should hear if you're interested and what's going on in coaching and training on the PGA tour.

So fascinating conversation, a lot of things you probably have never heard before because this is just really candid conversation. I enjoyed it just as a warning There's some swearing in this. So if you have some kids, maybe throw some are pods in other than that, let's dive in. Go subscribe to the to our coach podcast while you're at it and see what Tony's up to over there. Hit me with me here at the tour. Coach podcast, someone I wanted to talk to you for a good long time.

Had the opportunity to sit with at the US Open last week, one of the great coaches and names and golf, Sean Foley Foley, what's up my man? Yeah. How you doing? I'm doing good. What's up, buddy? Not much just have licked my wounds after a week of the double miscut and now I'm back at home and ready to go again. Yeah, I understand but tell me ask you this had it when you have a double missed cut like that. What are your thoughts like what do you mean? You know?

Because people always want to know the inside. The ropes thing is a teacher. What are your first thoughts? When you go through the, you know, I've got a double miscut I have it happened. Plenty of times. I went one for one last week, but how do you handle it? You know, I just think you have to appreciate the difficulty of the game. It's like, I don't ever try to really be that emotional with how I approach what I do. I think that that's just a, you know, that's just, that's just

dangerous. So it I had times where I had four players in the field and for three weeks in a row, they finished in the top 10 every week. And I think that what will happen is if you think that should be normal, then the rest of the time you're going to be completely discontent and frustrated rather than recognizing, I see how special that is.

So it's understanding like you left man, when when life and work are going good, you have to be grateful, you have to enjoy it. And then when it's not you have to know that at some point it will again and it's just it's just what happens. You know. I'm not Golf Course out there. It's such a big ask. I mean if if everyone had to tee off again today for the next Days. The top 10 could look totally different and so no, I think it's I think it's just realizing

that. Unfortunately, I think failure is just the way we've been taught what that word is. It's just got such a negative connotation, it's neuroscientist say that failure is actually feedback. So it kind of lets you look a little bit. Okay, at what happened. But then I think this doing too much of that sometimes leads us feel 80. I mean, we had a perfect Drive tone on number 13, and it went 340 and ended up. Six inches in the rough and you had to play out sideways, right? It happens.

And, you know, and that was to me obviously like you walked around and watched a bunch of golf and I saw plenty of shots that were really good shots in particular, you know, where you Lucas on Saturday hits drive down, nine or on Sunday, barely runs through the rough runs right up against the edge of the cut line and he's got no shot to get to the green mean. You don't talk in a matter of inches. And it's not like you hit a bad golf.

To get there. It's just you don't know a couple a couple of inches is an 8-iron to a front, right? Penny makes Eagle in the day's different. Like it's that's I think that's what players don't pay attention enough to. It's just the sheer probability like you know I've had players when they struggle with their puting. They'll say like I miss everything from HP. This like well not really but the average on tour from 18 is like 50%. So do you think you should make 8 out of 10?

You're always going to think something's wrong with you, right? Right. Now, with as a coach with the player. So when you know, everybody thinks your Genius is when the guys playing great but when a guy gets, you know, he's playing good and you mentioned, you know, we were talking about different scenarios and guys who you feel like maybe they're you're not on the right track. How do you handle that as a coach where maybe you feel, you know, you know, maybe where you

feel like the player. Regressing may not always be the right word but like you're not on the right track. How do you handle that or what is your thought process? When you feel like maybe with a player? Like man, I Still. No, I don't know if we're going in the right direction. What do you do? Well, I think it always takes like deep introspection, right? So I did this post on Instagram yesterday.

I did this post on Instagram yesterday just talking about kind of my feelings on the world and what's been the right on very good. So thank you. I got a lot of comments on it. This one guy commented and I don't I don't know who he is, but he said make sense on why you always came in the Pro Shop to say hello to the staff at the PGA. Tournament at our place, only top hundred teacher to do so. Wow. And I'm like, well if you have a kid, plated idea of who you are

look. Well, I don't know if you charge, but I charge my guys five percent of what they are and on the course. So from just a straight mathematical probable, business model, I'm 5% of their success, and I'm 5% of their failure. Now, to be a great coach that you have to feel like you're going to give them everything you have, right? But the idea is like, the golf swing is very, very But the human brain is very, very

complex. Sometimes it's done and it made, they make it look easy, but most of the time it's just really not the case, you know? So I think, you know, you have to look at, you got to be careful, you know, when you have a player in 2020, but you had it like really money in 2016. Well, a lot has changed in that person's brain and body by that point. So the old life, this is what we did when we did it the best. That's dangerous too, right?

But normally, when the player was playing his best, there was more of a shot shape. Yes. So I remember before you started working with Lucas one day, he'd ask me a deli open if I could take a look and I said, you know, I don't have much time but I have two hours this afternoon and it gave me the opportunity to see Lucas who I really enjoy. And Don Cooper, my absolute and Lucas was trying to hit a fade

and I was like, what do you do? And he's like, well, I just feel like I got to I and I'm like, nah, I said, look, dude, put the stick out in front of you. Start it right of that and take a bigger divot and that was all I said. So to me, when I think about Lucas, I think it is starting right draw. That doesn't often cross the target plan. Correct. If Lucas is literally trying to think that the key is to fade the ball moving forward. And that's just so against what

he does that he can't. Yes. Does he need to know how to fade it? Of course, he can fade it, but if he just set up and he had to hit it in the Fairway, Fairway. And on the green then he would hit that shot the the shot that comes easier to him. So I think it's more, it's more like that. So with a player like Danny Willett, he became the number one amateur in the world with a pretty sizable High sling drop. Yeah. And then he won the Masters with

a slight fade. But what happened over time is the carrier of the overdraw became a cancer to where it got to where the only shot he could hit with the bowl cut. Okay. And I don't know if it goes back to like a Mac O'Grady, fast, Action that a lot of people have and how the swing looks. But I just cannot think of that many great players who had a bowl cut. I can't like, no, I can't think about it. Hmm, so I think the desire to get rid of a hook.

A lot of guys want to try and play a cut, but they didn't necessarily do it the right way. It's like, I think it's easier to hit less of a hook than it is to teach a hooker, how to cut it. The great agree. Then, you know, when I started working with Lucas, I had the similar thought. I think that you did that.

Thank you. The first thing he said was I want to get back to hooking it and so to me was just wasn't going back, trying to make do what he used to do but was to set him up and just get him to hit hook and then let him figure out how to hook it less, right? Hey, look fuck that. I mean, you know, the thing about coaching, obviously, it's how we make our living at some, we're passionate about. We enjoy the people that we work with we'd like to see them do

well and all that. But like, how did Ben Hogan and Lee Trevino get to that point. So I think that is I got older, I feel like my role in helping a player, has diminished. It's more of like, creating the understanding in the environment so that they can go out on their own. And, you know, when a flare looks at you and says, you know what, you think I should feel? It's like man, like, well, how

could I ever answer that? So, you know, it's like this afternoon, I'm I'm, I'm working with Hunter Mahan and I work with honor, for most from 2008, for a long time. And, you know, it relationships are hard, right? Like, even in relationships with, Like our children or our wives, are our parents aren't guaranteed, you know what I mean? So yeah. When we when we stop we just weren't getting it done. Like we were getting it done but you know I really know what he

needs to do to get it done. But that's just a piece of the puzzle that desire, the discipline, the everything, I mean when when honor was on top of the world and we top 10 without like every single week, you know, he was just engaged and he didn't have four kids. So you know, life changes in good ways but it also There's other aspects so there's there's more to it than just you know, it's amazing to watch Instagram.

If you want on the range of the PGA Tour event and you did slow motion videos of the guys in the top 125 they would hardly get any likes. Like people would say, they're too steep coming down. They stand up too fast or too Flippy. And you know, we're in a world now of, like, of this swing where everyone hits a ball with both of their arms, straight all the way through it and over, rotate their torso and Open up too much. And it's just fascinating to me. It's like I get it.

Yeah, the theory is correct, but rub comes to you wanted to talk to you about a couple things. This is always fascinating to me and I enjoy what I get the cornea and you know, somewhere at a Tour event. And so going back to like Hunter because that's the path of a couple times. Is it harder when they leave and they come back or do you find it easier when they leave come back for? Is it different each time? You know? Because you know, I've had happened with Miley a few.

I believe they come back at you and I talked about that a little bit and I had, you know, talk about a wide all the way up and then he left and came back, just curious your thoughts, your opinions, and what you've learned over the years from players leaving them back that they inevitably, most of the time. We've done a good job and you have a good relationship and they leave at some point, they kind of do always seem to find their way back in a certain way.

Yeah. Yeah. Look you stop working for a reason in the first place, right? I haven't seen him Many people I get divorced and get married again and then it be alright. Like it's so that you know, there's a reason it's now I have seen people get divorced and then still go together to Italy with their family and have a great time because they're still

very friendly so rap scene that. But yeah, I mean, look, Mike, you know, the way that my dad raised me and everything like that it was, you know, was do your best in life, not to take things personally and understand that, you know how people see you as more function, how they see themselves and how you actually are. So, I don't think I've ever you know I mean gosh when tiger when tiger fired me I sat in airports for two weeks and looked at the ESPN and saw my name on the

ticker. I mean that was, you know, that was that was a little bit that was a little bit different but at the same point it's like look man. Like from the first day you get hired in anything. You're one day closer to getting fired and that's but that's okay. Like there's a lot of there's a lot of golfers out there. Hopefully the time that you had was successful, you it was mutually beneficial. But then when it's not working, Any more to stick around, that's

when it gets kind of nasty. So it's always about class, man. I mean, if much is, this is a business. You can't have that much love for those guys. And all of a sudden one day, just go, you know, this is bullshit. Forget them. It's I just, I've never felt like that about anything and so, yeah, it's different, but can it be successful again?

I'm sure that it can. But look, when these guys are rice and be Shambo had a great team of people around them but price and E. Shambo man is really the caftan in a big way of Team. He's pushing all those people around him to get answers. So we're Bryson's at is attributed to the people that helped them along the way, but no one's fat there and did all those reps in the gym and no one sat there and hit those millions of golf balls.

I mean, the glory has to go, I think it was Roosevelt right? There's the glory has to go to the man in the arena, right? So it's all going to come down to and so when you look at a lot of the top players in the world, right now they have girlfriends or they don't. But they don't have kids. And you know, with the guys in the last generation because of obviously Tiger Woods and what happened to purses and things

like that. I mean, if you're sitting there looking at 35 million in the bank and get it home and you know how much that's important because that's almost better than what you do on the golf course you can get stuck.

So, I think, at that point, that, you know, what their objective is in the right way because if they're still pushing for the finishes that But they're not putting the same amount of time in. I mean, half the off the price and be Shambo, I mean, I've watched for four or five years, I've got to know him quite well, and I've just watched him be the

butt end of all jokes. And you know, to me, if someone is doing something in a completely different way than everyone else, and everyone is kind of taking the piss out of them, that's the guy you invest 100 Grand in. So, for me, it was I thought it was really cool to see him kind of Shhhh what he did. Because people just need to realize this Been A Five-Year Plan in his mind that it's all-encompassing, like almost every waking hour of the day. Well, how long can you keep a long?

Can you keep that up for, right? That's the question that think, you know, is and again, I think that with the money, the way it is right now, I don't know that mean. Do you think that many of these younger guys are wired to where they want to go? Do it for 40 years at that pace or try to do it, but I don't think that they need You anymore with the money that's out there. You can go have a good five, eight year run, and make more than you'll ever need in your

life. I think it's going to get. I think it's going to be more like other sports because I think what we're going to see, there's going to be a lot more Cameron Champs. We get some of these amateurs who come into the field at like the US Open and they're the only ones who have the ball speed that he has. And yeah, and then look, when you doing that, there's going to be, you know, you're applying more force and torque.

There's more velocity, the body's going through more Dynamic ranges of motion and look, so there's not any world-class Sprinter who don't pull their hamstring, it's not possible. So I think we're going to see careers that will look more. Not so much like the NFL but more like the NBA 10 to 10 to 12 years and then some, guys, obviously, golf is different, right?

Like my mom and dad, they are 80 and 76 and they come down from Canada from November 1st, April 1st, and they live in reunions, and they play nine holes every day. My dad actually 80 just started. Breaking eight. So Gulf Coast a little different than that because it's kind of the spiritual Quest that we have is well it's like it's

impossible to ever get it right? I just think in those other sports, a lot of those other guys might have continued to play, but just the fact that they've been jumping and landing on their knees for 15 years, they're kind of done. Yeah. Agree. And I just I don't think they're going to need from a money perspective. It's not, you know it's changed so much that. They're like you said your

tummy. You got 25 million in the bank and you've got Kids and most of these guys, all have other interests, whether it's sports, or do a hunting or fishing or doing different things. They've got the money in the ability to do it. And why wouldn't they go do it? Especially if they're not, kabadi isn't allowed to be competitive anymore. And look, look, I'm grateful to have the job that I have. I'm grateful to work with the guys that I work with. Look man, post covid.

This shit's not been a lot of fun, right, right. And when it was certain way for 13 and a half years and now it's completely different. I can adapt to it but it's different for everybody. Like you know, I think I've had who Bird eats more in the last four months and I've had in my whole life, I don't even know if I actually think I had to ask my 12 year old had an order from the hotel room.

Yeah. So it's you know it's going to be that way for a lot of guys and look the idea of what the used to be. We will never see that time again. It's not ever going to happen again ever. So you know it's kind of comes along that path. Type of idea. I mean we're going to have a bunch of players who come from a generation of kids. Growing up on the phone.

They've been entitled quite a bit more than say Hoagies generation and they're going to be sitting in their hotel room for at least the next year and a half. So it's, it's very, it's just fascinating. So, I honestly think that that is far more difficult on the players who travel with their families than the ones who don't even have. Yeah, I would agree College.

These college kids did, what they came from college, where they're playing video games are being on their social media feed all night and write to the store and get the same thing. Just take over the years writing. Like I had my Pacific at night on Tuesday at Torrey Pines, I had certain Tex-Mex restaurants in Texas like none of that.

That was kind of to me that was kind of the outlet to be around like cool people that are doing the same thing that I am that made traveling like like to where I could handle it but now it's like, wow. Wow, it's just totally different. So yeah, I look I just think that, I think a lot of guys who haven't played well after the quarantine don't really understand that. Like deep within we're not in the right place with all this stuff yet and there's a lot of clutter and confusion on.

Like what's the world going to be like what's going on right now? All this negativity and tension and all these things. There's always been there in the world but it's not been. So conflated. Well, I'd four months to sit at home and either believe more and we believe or challenge that and I just It's a lot easier for people just to keep believing what they believe and now you got this device. That sends you already things everything you already agree with.

So it's like, it's very interesting me. Yeah. It's, there's so much negativity. And I don't know how you are. It just seems like there's more access to it, you know, that's how you did that in front of us, all day every day. Yeah. And then, you know, with the breakdown and Leadership, and when I say leadership, I'm not pointing my fingers at anybody, okay? You asked me, if someone's a leader of a country and I don't care what party they're about. If you do I think a lot of that

spaced on narcissism and ego. Then you've never studied politics and that sound, but doesn't matter. So all the way back to both sides. There's been very few. People have just really stood up and on either side and done racing. So I mean just you know, just the fact is that. That's the way I think. What happens now is the device is negativity has been kind of more allowed, a lack of you know

it's been allowed. So a lot of people who were kind of keeping it under there Keeping it under their breath. Look, Tony, and be very easy for me to sit on Twitter and start ripping on you. And it would probably be a hell of a lot harder for me to be at your Golf Academy doing it to your face. No question. So yeah, it's kind of like it's like a passive-aggressive thing. We're doing. If you have something to say to

somebody, you know, you should. I mean, how about on the PGA tour, when guys get their managers to call their coach or their therapist and Velma not work with him anymore? When I see stuff like this? Like that. And I see Guy break down every weekend. Is it due to mental or is it due to Virtue aspect? Like integrity and character. I mean, when when Justin Rose and I split up, he flew to Orlando when we met and we talked face-to-face. I mean, that's that's how you do that. Correct.

So that make you do, when you watch him play, whether he's playing great or he's not man, he plays with so much Integrity. I mean he's gonna try and get every single shot out of that score, right. But if you can't call someone who's helped you for, you know, eight years. Just to tell you that I don't know how you're going to handle that fire in the back night. I just don't get it. I don't think you will. Do you think players coming out now have less of those qualities of virtue?

You just by the way, everything is or you know, no, I wouldn't. You know what I mean? I've literally fallen in love with more Cowan, doblin, and Matt wolf. I mean, these guys are all different, but they're all great. Yeah, you know, Matt wolf yelled at himself on Wednesday when we're out practicing Cameron's. Fight with him or Tuesday, and he kind of yelled at themselves. Like Matthew, do not let this place bullying, you, and I thought that was just so gold effect.

Don't let him bully. You like you're going to, you're obviously going to be in bad positions, but don't go there because you're not because you're steering it and then he was chipping and he came up on the green. He said to me why am I spending so much time? Getting terrible ships from there? One in the turned I was going to but he's like what am I even doing out here? It was really funny and calm work out man I can stand behind him and watch him his Halls.

All day all day is Coach Rick has a Class Act and Colin is a Primo mover Victor hablen. I find to be fascinating. So yeah, I don't see that. I don't see that in those guys but I think like my son who's 12, never known. Like what the current thing is that that could be different and we you know, we do our best and it's really crazy Tony like sometimes a parent, you know, you get busy, you have a lot of things to do those things become cheap.

Babysitter's, it allows you to accomplish what you need to do. They seem to be Happy and then your kids screws up at school and you take it away from him. And two weeks later you're like oh I've got my son back. Yes, he actually sits with me on the couch and we talked about life and so yeah. You know what are these things also good? Yeah, of course, they're good. You know, you could be more organized, you can do more in a shorter time but we're crazy.

If we don't think that the people who built to do become the richest people of all time, didn't manufacture it in a way that we would come completely addicted to it. And people are Some people, some people get addicted to things faster than other people, and I'd say it's a better addiction than crack cocaine, but his same extent, it's going to slow you

down, you know what I mean? Oh, no question, but you touched on it. One of the things I was going to ask you about is one of the things that frustrates, you know, I know we gotta move into this century and it's part of our existence is teachers but the ability of people on social media to hide behind keyboards and take Shots at players and coaches when they've never coached anybody good themselves or never been in that Arena, drives me crazy. And that's one of my pet peeves, you know?

I just because like, if I hear somebody take a look, if I hear somebody take a shot, I'm just saying you you and whoever like I understand what it's like being out there and often times, you know, you don't understand all the Dynamics going on. Same thing. If Lucas played bad, somebody takes a shot at me. You understand all the Dynamics but that Of the things that these people will say an attack teachers and credibility and players drives me crazy.

Once again, dude, like it shouldn't to me if I was your therapist. Right, if I give if we're before said this bogeys and see what it said that bogeys in Jacksonville, which we would have an exotic. Okay. Have a good. Yeah, I have a couple beers. I mean, look think about it. Like one time we were walking down the Fairway and look, no one's been a bigger punching bag. To me, the fact is that I didn't start on social media until four months ago, so he could really see it.

But I had something sent to me that people were kind of following and some crazy stuff, right? And it was overlooked, all is by someone who didn't put their picture, someone who didn't use their name and then someone who'd never ever met me, like, never met me. So basically, at that point. So here's what I think one day where the US Open and I'm walking down the 11 whole site.

I told a congressional with Justin Rose and Hunter Mahan and they are playing about the Johnson and Phil Mickelson.

So we used to have like fully armed and match once in a while and we're going down, the Fairway we're going down nine and some guy yells, hey fully hear your fucking the game up, like stop ruining Tiger Woods and Rosie lost it and he was going he grows he's going straight to the ropes and so I just said Like Justin turn around, good luck, come back and and whatever he comes back and he says, may you gotta stand up for yourself. I'm like why like why do I need

to stand up for myself? He's like, well, do that's not true, what he said no and I said, well what's like, what is truth? Like, look I said here's the deal Rosie, I'm sitting here so 12, 2011, five years ago, I was waiting tables at an Outback Steakhouse. Okay, now I'm at Congressional. With Justin Rose and Hunter Mahan. I'm standing next to one of my heroes Butch Harmon. I'm with Phil Mickelson and Dustin Johnson, and that guy paid off that guy paid $120 for

a ticket. He looked kind of likes roughly around 45 or 50. So, can you imagine that? He came here today to stand outside the ropes and yell, something like that. It's someone I said, can you ever imagine yourself doing that? And he's like, no. And I said so. If I didn't feel good about myself and then saw Sean Foley walking down the Fairway with that forever smile. Telling a story to Butch Harmon looking like, he's totally

enjoying his life. The only way that I would be able to make myself feel better is to make him feel bad. Yeah. And I'm not and I'm not going, I'm not going to give that to that guy. So look, I'm not ever making a comparison, but what they said about Newton and Einstein and dr. King and I mean, The people who really shaped the Earth weren't really appreciated till they were dead mate. Yeah. So it's like when, you know, you know, what it's like over is ruining golf.

I mean, tiger with you, I was trying to do my best but I told you to never do. I never had a player at for knee surgeries and and literally went through a divorce and who knows all the stuff that went on. So it's like I'm doing my best. I always said to everyone like look if you think it's that easy then come on like come on out here. Come out here. So yeah, could the backswing be a little bit better? Sure. Of course, it could be a little bit better, is there too much of

this or too much of that? Sure. Well what makes you think? I'm telling them to do that. Anyways, what you think you do? You think I want to see the shaft lean 17 inches forward? You think I want to see someone drop a half a foot in transition? Of course, not. I never told anyone do that, my life. So, you know, that's that's the

whole idea. But I think if you take a deeper look Within Like, whenever I really had an issue with someone, but that's more like, in high school and I was like, 14 or 15. All the guys did. I talk shit to or the ones that I was jealous up? So, it's like, you know, to me jealousy and envy. It's kind of like, how should I say this? I remember reading this somewhere said, oh, like the jealousy in the Envy or kind of the disdain and hatred toward

someone in a way. It's just, a confused admiration but interesting because That's just what I that makes sense to me. Like, that's not me protecting myself. Look, no one is a bigger critic of me than me. No one. I am the one who makes myself wake up at three in the morning because I think I'm doing a shit job. It happens at least twice a week.

I think that it's absolutely necessary that when you're helping people try to achieve their dreams that you have some insecurities, you must, you must. So I create these things around me where I have physiologist and car. Practice who can assess a player and I have Mark boal that will run the 3D and tell me what he

sees from from his world. So we're we have all these checks and balances in place so that we don't screw someone up with our unconscious bias of wanting everyone to look like Ben Hogan, which I love I do. Why wouldn't you? Yeah but how many people can actually do that? Like how many people can be Simone Bales?

So we watch your like do a flip and rotate through the air and say see where she puts her arms when she He's maybe one of the greatest athletes to ever live, who found the exact sport that she should be in. That's, that's so you can't, you can't all of kind of those girls can do a single flip with one spins she can do to, and she could do two and three it, you can't teach them that they can't do that.

So you know that to me when you see that special level of like a Ben Hogan or a DJ for Tiger Woods and one of these players, I mean, That's just a lot of them. They're making everybody look great. That's it, Stephen and II like which as you know at one of the things that I realized when I first started coming out on tour, I was you know, I felt real out of place and I thought I was the only one that worried every day that I was going to screw somebody up and was insecure.

And then The more I've had the opportunity to get to know and become friends with and talk with people, like you, you realize that most everybody that's out there that help In those guys or girls has those feelings and then it's okay to feel that way. But like, for me, I first started going. I first started going out.

I was like, man, I was like shit, like I'm the only like Kali. I'm never going to be any good at this because every day I'm stressed and worried that I'm fucking somebody up. Yeah. I mean yeah I think look we know what we know. Basically, we know enough for the principles, the physics and the kinetics behind the golf swing. All these swings that look really, different are still

really powered the same people. You know, people say, well, it just, you know, they'll put a picture up of like the put a picture up of like Jim Furyk, and Dustin Johnson, and Rory, and whoever else at the top of their backswing and say, proves you can play from anywhere, but if you really know what you're measuring, you're going to see a lot of the same things. So yeah, the look is different. Like the look is different.

But it's like a if you have a Ford Fusion that has a Ferrari engine, you have a Ferrari, it's not a full. So you know if you have a Ferrari with a Ford engine, you have a Ford so it's might look like Ferrari but it is not. So I think that's really important is to understand that for one and then two I've done a good job of having the opportunity to work with loads of players but kind of was like,

know what? I think you'd be really good with Mark Blackburn's. I think you'd be really good with Scott. Hamilton, I have a friend named juice crackle. I think you could really help you and so I think one of the things I realized I'd like the at the end of my career, at the end of my career is I help people build their successful Stables.

That that feels that feels amazing, dudes, to be able to like the idea of the guy saying, like and I get this all the time, you know makes sense on why you came in the Pro Shop, all those years and introduce yourself to everyone. And during rain delays talk to us, I'm like, I would Humanity You is astounding to me. But then the funny thing is that I also get wow. You're not as as arrogant and as full as yourself as I thought you were.

I mean, that's my favorite and then I just tell people, like, have you ever met me before? No, can I give you some advice? Yes, for the rest of your life. Never ever make a comment about someone that you haven't met, right? I mean, even my 12 year old son, he's at the point where in the grocery store the other day and the guy at the counter was being like a Supreme type to the lady behind the counter and it was

getting a little terse. And I was about to say something and then he kind of just rattled off. And and I just explained to the lady look that wasn't about you. That's just about him and whatever she was like, yeah, I understand and coin goes to me, we're walking the car, he goes, man. Dad, you gotta wonder what that had gone through his life to act like that.

You know what I mean, man, if we could get, like, I know in first grade, they learn math and they learn all that, but if people could understand like, if we could be teaching kids like little philosophical. Good lessons like people don't see you for who you are? They see you for who they think you are. So guess what? If you've been taught that someone from Afghanistan, it's going to put a bomb on his back and walk into your school.

Then when you meet someone from Afghanistan, I mean, I know you got to be very scared to get. Is that happen there? Yeah, of course it does. But most people, if they haven't had a war for a thousand years because people want that. So that's just, that's the whole thing is, just realize those people have that, that unconscious bias that they do. Don't even know like they don't even know they have it.

That's the danger of it. So you know I mean obviously this not have talked for both but it didn't talk for golf. It's just this is about coaching. And to me, you know, we're coach, look at Cameron Champ, champ champ, is this just out of this world Talent. Well that's a great thing but it's got a curse to because the comments always well y'see not performing better and it's like well you know hitting the ball really far.

Every time is a massive Advantage but Cameron two or three more years of working on more, the Artistry and the softer stuff and he's gonna, I don't know how he'll shoot over

68 any day. But when you are gifted with the ability to hit it harder than anyone with no spin, then learning to hit it as soft as the best with a ton of spin is probably going to take some work, the thing I love about Cameron and that you, we talked about this is not only how far he hits it but how effortless he makes it, you know, it doesn't look like he's trying to not take anything away from Bryson. But when Bryce and hit the tee ball to me, Me, it looks like

he's trying to hit it hard. You know, would Cameron hits a drive? It doesn't look like that to me. Oh yeah. That I mean, that's just Nolan Ryan, right? I mean, you're looking at the peak of athleticism, right there. Now, give them a 46 inch driver. Remember a lot of the numbers you see with him the driver, that's two inches shorter than normal. So when he just goes to a standard driver, I mean his ball speeds like 198 at a deep.

If you really said, okay, I'm going to make my stance meaning almost stands with his feet together. So, I'm going to make myself a little bit wider. I'm going to get a little more force in that direction, right? Hmm. If I'm in a Linked In My backswing, I'm an increase, the hand path a little bit which allow me more time to put impulse into Chef. I mean, he could potentially be 210 ball speed but it's yet

another. He's it is crazy because you know, he's a solid looking at athlete but he's not like 65 2:30. Right, right. But the thing is, it's like that's the case. But if you were to put like Something to detect force in the gripped, and then halve Maan Force plates, and then have them on 3D. You would see incredible peaks in certain places that you wouldn't see anywhere. So yeah, it's powerless effort but power is nothing but effort,

right? It's nothing but after, but if you have a body that can kind of stay in those angles because you're really unlimited in rotation, then you're able to make it look, you know, that, Rory go to that, it looks amazing to, right, right? Well, that you mean, you're born with Building to do that. That is you can do yoga. You can do Pilates, you can train with Colby Wayne and Greg Davies and all the best in the world and they'll improve you. But I think my bird is about 20 inches.

If I worked on it for three years, I could probably get it to 27. So that's the whole thing. But, you know, you look at Cameron and you think, okay, Cameron different kid, right? He's up one of the very few guys on tour who I hate this word, but I just use the words. People use it mixed race but you know, growing up in America with With a black father and a white mother and being mixed race. And feeling like you're stuck in the middle of these two arguments, I mean, that can't be easy.

So I was just wondering, you know, when people don't have confidence in themselves or they doubt their ability. I mean, how much of that is learned by the time we're 11 and

it's like our whole life. We have to strip all that shit off to see the beauty that's within so, you know what, I bring that up and talk to him about it 100%, but I try to put him around other people who have been through that same thing and if they're a little older and they kind of The way to see it 100% because question, well, look, if as human beings, if we don't feel like we're enough and how we ever going to achieve. So it's amazing, you know, because his men were not, you

know, be tough. Take it like a man, what did it take it? Like a man was asking me, so take it. Like a man means you're not going to cry when you should cry and you're not going to show vulnerability when you should. So you're going to pretend to be strong, you're going to hold it all in and you like to become shit because of it because all the stuff you need to deal with.

You're not facing, so it becomes Medicaid those we cross becomes relationships becomes like, it's just such a not playing good like they might literally Cry On The Range and I look at guys all the time and wonder how many of them that would help more than just a lot of them. A lot of nice big. Yeah, man. It's so funny.

Like how many guys on tour after, you know, how many human beings have to get their back adjusted and get their next Fixed and yeah of course the golf swing is attacks in motion, but we did, if you're carrying the weight of the world on your shoulders all day, it's probably not going to make your neck and

your back feel very good. So I think that that's a Tiger Woods man he played with an incredible freedom and you know even if he's just watched tiger you know when he gets to the course everything he does is in slow motion. It's just I mean you watch him walk on the Range. Everything is in slow motion, you watch him warm up, everything is in slow motion, like he understood physiologically. The place that he needs to To

get himself to compete. And I think it looks much more like he's focusing on getting into a place where he's relaxed, where he's going to have access to his skills. Cup subconsciously rather than being looking tense and person. If you watch tiger, 400 your job when he's warming up. You wouldn't know if he's gonna go shoot 707 over because he always looks the same man. You just and on the other hand I've ever done it, but sent that's back to Europe of who's

going to play. I mean, how could You advertise the people, you're competing with that, you have no idea what you're doing right now. It's it's um, it's astonishing to me like it's it's amazing to everyone. Your eyes of the Ryder Cup and I won't name names but I was I was walking across the road. I was walking across the Fairway to go and see tiger a Rosier Hunter.

I can't remember which one it was and the one team was playing behind the other team and there's two guys on the one team sitting up there, just advertising all the way the Tee Box that they did. Not have what it takes that week it was just I said man that's Unbelievable. Right. Why would you want to know about that? Why would you want everybody know. I think that's the problem. That's the unconscious part. There's no way. Like I've done this a lot in the past.

I filmed guys on the course when they're playing well and then when they're playing bad and I've never had one who watched it when they were playing bad and they weren't embarrassed. And then they looked at me almost without a sense of hope saying I don't even know I'm doing this. Yeah. So to me the best players of all time in every sport. Had a real awareness. A real awareness, like amazing watching Jordan play in that docu-series on Jordans life, right? Right. That was fantastic.

And he hardly ever to never bitched, at the raft. Like, after a bad call, like he just moved on to the next play. You don't see that now. The NBA. Yeah, it's yeah. And the thing is back then, like, sometimes it was an obvious foul because like you were on the ground bleeding. I mean, those guys were banging each other, right? No. Yeah, absolutely knocking. Hell out of each other.

And so that, you know, that's like basketballs been a little bit more soccer like, like, I like when they do it in slow motion and you see the guy's not even, he's not even been touched and he's falling backwards. So, to me, I think that's just a really big part of his ability to be such a champion.

Was he just moved on so elegantly from moment to moment to moment and to moment and knew that basically his career would be an amalgamation of 30 billion moments rather than you know, it's going to look it's going to be good and it's going to be bad and if we if we knew the answer, We'd be charging a million dollars, a lesson and we don't and yes, and we can only, we can only utilize knowledge and data and information to help us.

But we still have to remember that a lot of the greatest wedge players and greatest players in the world. A lot of them have their local Pro that was in their junior program and Coach them all the way through college. And, you know, it's, I think that, you know, like a guy like Mike shy who basically built this whole scenario. With, with Brighton on single links and to get the grip in position where all the joints are locked in the end range of

motion. And that would be the most stable way to do it and, and all that. And this, that Matt I kind of feel like the Golf Community to have just haven't given him any credit at all because he took the brunt of how this crazy, how this crazy swing was the the whole time. So I mean, that guy knows, Bryce and swing inside out Friday has put on desk prices, put on Distance. But a lot of that has been more

sensationalized. I remember watching it off the range at Augusta. As an amateur, he drops his hands made a stance wider made a longer backswing. Yeah, I remember watching them at the Walker cup. It lifts them say man's with, I was over there with Robbie Shelton, and they were going to apply to practice run together whenever he wants. He just, he had that.

What he? I forget what he called it, but it was what he wanted to hit the big drive, he wants different than what he would normally do, which looks to me striking. Only similar to what he's trying to swing like now. Yeah, no no, of course. So I think really how big and how big how big and strong he got. I mean, I think we saw that out of the rough more than anything because the fact is, is there's people who aren't nearly as strong as in who have a fireball seat.

So if you know what I mean, that's of course, he can put more Force into the grip, he's heavier. So just to to overall mass and friction he'll have he'll be able to create more torque without slipping but that's just dude Brown. Action forces are the icing on? What is already? A good cake. Okay. That is not the key to this game at all. There's no way that is it. What is the key to the game? What do you think the key to the

game? Well, obviously what's connected to the grip, you know, I hear young instructors now. Talk shit about Bob Koski and Jim flick because there were like, yeah, just, you know, swing the hands and arms in the body will react. And I'm like, oh my God, you cannot talk about them like that. You have no idea. Bob Fosse was 70 years of age, still hitting it, 300 It's swinging his arms. Of course, he was using the ground and using the slings in the body, but more born is children.

The first things we use our hands and our eyes for everything. So a second baseman, in the World Series, the ball gets hit left of him. He goes right? And then he Springs laughed and he jumps and he catches it. He was never thinking of loading, and he was never thinking about creating horizontal and vertical Force. He was thinking about catching it, and because he's an athlete, he did the other. So no one's thinking dies, catch. Thinking cash. So you know that's that's just a

big part. Yeah. I-i've had a swing Catalyst, long time. I love it that. It's a great company. It's another excellent tool to use, but most players I would put on a swing kabbalist, trying to get them to improve something else. I'm sure they can't hit a short-sighted, bunker shot out of wet sand. I know that I probably probably can't, that's probably going to help us potentially earn more money than increasing a peak in

a force at a point in the swing. Like there's so So many like they might struggle chipping, uphill into the grain. I haven't met very few don't know there's, you know, what we're coaching but there's so many opportunities if we're charging five percent, there's benefits to revenue in so many places that don't have to be P. 1, p 2 p 5, P9 P10. And look, I've done all of that. I when I first came on tour, I had a little different attitude than you.

When I first came on tour, I couldn't believe they. Let anyone else out there. I was like, why are they standing on my range? This is crazy to me. Okay. Every single bad shot that was hit was only due to technique and that was only the answer. And you know what? When I believe that then everything seemed to match that belief, then two things started to happen and then had to challenge my belief like but maybe it's a little deeper than what you think it is.

Well its got like 10 times Dicus got 10 times deeper since. Then what was the big snow? Was it that challenge your beliefs on that period? Well, I think I was just very Lucky when I started out there that Shawn O'Hara, Stephen Ames, Sean O'Hair and Hunter Mahan, and Justin Rose could kind of benefit from the same thing. Hmm.

So I felt that they didn't move their lower bodies enough for their backs Wings. Basically, if I got them to Pivot more, like, Hogan and sneeze, that would be helpful for them. Now, that's still very much the case to this day. I mean, they talked about how scene might have been the best athlete to ever play golf. Well, like, who unweighted? And More and allowed more time than he did. I mean he's probably could have kept his lower body still and not even moved it and still been

awesome. Yeah. But kind of the aspect of being centered going more from like my more ads, more than Mac ideas of the head. Not moving. That benefited all of them. But I felt like when I started with tiger that I wasn't had enough knowledge but I was still caught in my preference and quite honestly, I just basically Lee over taught him. It wasn't necessary if we like I think back to it now and of course it's a lot easier to look back at something and go. Wow. I could have done this and that

but no course site. What was I doing? Even speaking to the guy like I mean it's Tiger Woods dude. Like if he you know Tiger Woods wants to hit some drawers and some Fades, I've never met anyone who can aim properly all the time on their own. I've never met anyone who kind of keeps it consistent ball position all the time on their own, I started with Danny Willett. Man, that was like full surgery, dude.

We needed to go. We needed to go as big as possible because we just we had to but I think that was the mistake because I kind of underestimated where tiger was at like within his heart and his mind with how much his life had changed. And that was what we were seeing a lot of in the technique. I mean you're literally talking about someone who went from pretty much being invisible to visible overnight Invincible to Visible overnight.

Yeah, it's so to think that that was going to be fixed with a better, take away and a different plane was probably a mistake. But you know what, I love the guy I feel like I was there for me to very difficult time and I was so grateful for his professionalism and his friendship and we still, you know what, I still hang out with every single guy that I don't work with. That's why one that says a lot. That's a lot and that being said, I'm about to go and see Hunter Mahan as we speak.

Awesome. Well, hey, folks. And this has been great, I really appreciate you taking the time and also my friend and I appreciate also just the person you are out there always willing to look at a video talk to people and you know you've been great me and I appreciate it and I think persistent. All right, Tony have a great day bud.

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