• #451 Golf Putting Mechanics
    2025/12/28

    This podcast explores the technical mechanics of putting, focusing on how a golf ball transitions from impact to true roll. After being struck, the ball moves through four key phases:

    1. Launch Phase: The ball lifts slightly off the green.

    2. Skid Phase: The ball slides without full rotation.

    3. Transition Phase: Sliding slows, rotation takes over.

    4. True Roll: The ball rolls end-over-end without slipping.

    The goal in elite putting is to minimize the skid phase and reach true roll as early as possible—ideally within 10–15 cm of impact. Once true roll begins, the ball behaves predictably, improving distance control and start line accuracy.

    Launch Angle: The Critical Variable

    The launch angle determines how cleanly the ball leaves the putter and escapes the “nest” (its slight depression in the grass).

    • Too low (< 0.75°): The ball drags on the surface, causing grabs or bounces.

    • Too high (> 2.5°): The ball goes airborne, landing inconsistently.

    • Ideal range: 0.75°–2.5°

    Staying within this range ensures smooth launch, shorter skid, and early true roll.

    Measuring with QUINTIC Ball Roll

    The QUINTIC Ball Roll System uses high-speed cameras to capture every detail of the ball and putter during the stroke. It tracks:

    • Launch Angle: The vertical departure angle from the putter.
    • Flight Angle: The actual trajectory after impact.
    • Skid Distance: How far the ball glides before rolling.
    • Time to True Roll: Duration to reach end-over-end rotation.

    Key Insight: Launch vs. Flight AngleBy comparing Launch Angle and Flight Angle, coaches can diagnose if the ball is launching cleanly or interacting too long with the surface.

    A small difference = Clean launch.A large difference = Grass interference and poor rollout.

    Real Example

    A player had a launch angle of 0.5°, but the flight angle differed by over 1.5°. The ball snagged on the surface and skidded inconsistently. After adjusting the player’s shaft lean and putter loft, the launch was improved to 1.5°, matching the flight angle—and the ball rolled smoothly with better control.

    🎯 Summary

    Clean launch = consistent roll.Launch angle between 0.75°–2.5° = optimal.QUINTIC helps players and coaches fine-tune stroke and equipment for predictable putting results.


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    15 分
  • #450 The countdown is on: TGL starts in just 1 day and 11 hours with its first official match.
    2025/12/27

    Season 2 opens with a high-profile matchup between Atlanta Drive GC and New York Golf Club. The league features six teams composed of elite PGA TOUR players, including global stars such as Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy. Instead of traditional individual stroke play, TGL is built around a head-to-head team format designed for speed, strategy, and entertainment.

    At the core of the competition is the unique “Screen to Green” format. Players begin each hole by hitting long shots into a massive screen that displays a data-rich virtual golf course. Once within scoring range, play transitions to a first-of-its-kind physical short-game complex where shots are executed live. Despite the hybrid setup, every hole still requires the full range of traditional golf skills.

    The virtual environment enables course designs that would be impossible outdoors. One standout example is the Cenote hole, inspired by limestone sinkholes of the Yucatán Peninsula, featuring deep water-filled caverns surrounded by jungle and stone. The system also allows for team-specific holes, strengthening team identity and fan engagement.

    Technology enhances both competition and broadcast. Players are mic’d up, giving fans direct insight into strategy and emotion. A shot clock controls pace of play, while live data overlays modernize the viewing experience. With spectators in the stands and primetime broadcasting, the atmosphere feels closer to an arena sport than a traditional golf tournament.

    In essence, TGL represents golf’s evolution into a digital-first, stadium-based competition—where elite skill, technology, and entertainment converge.


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    11 分
  • #449 Data-Driven Putting: From Guesswork to Precision
    2025/12/26

    Elite putting performance is built on a data-driven framework that combines advanced diagnostics with disciplined execution. Technologies such as high-speed video analysis and ball-roll measurement systems reveal stroke mechanics and ball behavior that the human eye cannot detect. Successful putting goes beyond technical accuracy; it requires stable rhythm, reliable visual alignment, and the ability to perform under pressure. When physical mechanics, spatial perception, and mental control are trained together, players move from overthinking their stroke to executing with clear intent.

    Modern diagnostics break the putting stroke into measurable components. Impact data reveals face angle at strike, start direction, and spin rate, while launch and roll metrics identify launch angle and skid distance before true roll begins. Even small deviations—such as a consistently open face by just over one degree—can explain repeated misses on longer putts. This objective feedback exposes issues related to excessive or insufficient loft, inconsistent launch, or prolonged skidding, allowing precise corrections instead of guesswork.

    Putting physics is based on the motion of a rolling ball on an inclined plane. Physics-based models calculate the ideal line using four inputs: green speed (Stimp), slope percentage, putt length, and target speed. From these, three key outputs are generated: the ideal aim line, the distance point (where the ball should stop if it misses), and the total effective putt length. Ball speed is critical, as it directly affects forgiveness at the hole. At an optimal entry speed of roughly three rotations per second, the effective hole size is maximized. Faster speeds reduce forgiveness dramatically, making speed control a decisive scoring factor.

    Data also corrects visual distortion. Many golfers believe they are aligned correctly when head or eye position creates a false perception. Objective measurements replace feel-based assumptions with reality, ensuring that setup, aim, and stroke match the intended physics model. Trying to putt without this feedback is comparable to navigating in fog without instruments—intuition alone cannot guarantee accuracy.

    Execution is stabilized through rhythm training, most effectively with a three-beat metronome cadence: start, top of backswing, and impact. This structure regulates energy flow, prevents deceleration or rushed follow-throughs, and promotes even energy buildup with instinctive release. Rhythm is defined as motion without hesitation. By operating within a short, consistent timing window, the golfer minimizes conscious interference and allows athletic intent to guide the stroke.

    Consistent scoring emerges from the combination of scientific diagnostics, physics-based targeting, and a disciplined routine. When modern data tools are integrated with structured rhythm training, putting becomes a precise, repeatable skill rather than a matter of feel or chance.

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    14 分
  • #448 How to Generate Spin on Chip Shots: The Key Technical Principles
    2025/12/25

    This guide explains how to execute spin-heavy chip shots by focusing on loft, strike quality, and turf interaction rather than force. On short shots, backspin is created primarily by loft at impact, not speed. Because chip shots lack the velocity of full swings, correct mechanics become decisive.

    Loft is the single most important factor. Using a high-lofted wedge (typically 56–60 degrees) and preserving its natural loft through impact allows the ball to engage the upper grooves of the clubface. A common mistake is excessive forward hand press, which de-lofts the club, lowers launch, and reduces spin. Keeping the hands neutral ensures the clubface delivers sufficient loft for the ball to land softly and stop quickly.

    Speed still matters, but differently than in full swings. Spin on chip shots depends on quality of contact, not raw acceleration. The stroke must be committed and crisp, with controlled acceleration through impact. Decelerating leads to poor groove engagement, inconsistent contact, and unpredictable rollout. Think of loft as the ramp and speed as the car: on a short runway, you cannot rely on speed alone, but the car must still drive confidently up the ramp without hesitation.

    A shallow angle of attack is essential. Rather than chopping down steeply, the club should brush the turf, allowing the bounce of the wedge to glide along the ground. This sweeping motion improves consistency, prevents the club from digging, and promotes clean ball-first contact. Contrary to popular belief, a steep angle does not increase spin; it often produces fat or chunked shots and reduces effective loft at impact.

    Maintaining loft, shallow contact, and steady acceleration work together. A steep attack reduces loft, compromises contact, and limits spin. A shallow motion preserves loft, enhances turf interaction, and allows the ball to “grab” the grooves properly. Much like skipping a stone across water, the correct angle lets the ball react and check instead of diving forward and running out.

    By consistently applying these principles—neutral hands, high loft, controlled acceleration, and shallow turf interaction—golfers can dramatically improve spin control on chip shots and save more pars around the green.


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    11 分
  • #447 Pelvis Sway – The Engine Room of an Efficient Golf Swing
    2025/12/24

    Pelvis sway, the lateral movement of the hips, plays a fundamental role in creating an efficient, powerful, and healthy golf swing. Often described as the “engine room” of the body, the pelvis is the central hub where balance, force transfer, rhythm, and injury prevention come together. How well a golfer controls this movement directly influences ball striking, clubhead speed, distance potential, and stress on the lower back.

    Pelvis sway is measured relative to the pelvis’s starting position at address, known as the zero point. For a right-handed golfer, the pelvis shifts slightly to the right during the backswing and then moves decisively to the left during the downswing and finish. This controlled side-to-side motion is not optional; it is essential for efficient biomechanics.

    In the backswing, efficiency begins with a subtle lateral shift of the pelvis away from the target. This movement allows the golfer to load into the trail leg and build stored energy. Pressure develops under the right heel while overall balance remains stable and centered. This loading phase provides the foundation for speed and stability later in the swing. Problems arise when golfers lean their entire upper body instead of shifting the pelvis independently. That pattern leads to loss of balance, inconsistent contact, and wasted energy.

    The most critical phase is the downswing and impact. Here, the pelvis must actively shift toward the target. This forward movement allows the golfer to push forcefully off the lead leg, converting interaction with the ground into power. At the same time, the pelvis moves slightly ahead while the chest stays back for a fraction longer, creating the X-factor stretch—the separation between lower- and upper-body rotation that drives speed. When this lateral shift is missing and the pelvis stays passive, clubhead speed drops, ball contact becomes inconsistent, and the lower back absorbs excessive stress due to unstable rotation. This pattern is also a common cause of slicing, as the upper body takes over and pulls the club outside the target line.

    Pelvis sway also dictates the quality of the finish. In an efficient swing, the hips move clearly past the original address position toward the target, with the golfer balanced on the lead leg. This finish confirms that pressure was built, energy was released, and balance was maintained throughout the motion. If weight remains split between both legs or hangs back on the trail side, it indicates incomplete energy transfer and reduced swing efficiency.

    Beyond performance, pelvis sway plays a decisive role in injury prevention. When the pelvis shifts correctly, forces are transferred through the ground and into the ball as intended. When it does not, the lower back is forced to compensate, increasing the risk of pain and overuse injuries. Proper lateral movement allows the body to work the way it is designed to work—powerful, stable, and resilient.

    In simple terms, pelvis sway functions like drawing and releasing a bow. The backswing shift stores energy, and the downswing shift releases it. Without both phases, speed, control, and consistency suffer. Modern AI-driven analysis now allows golfers to measure pelvis sway precisely in each swing phase, replacing guesswork with objective data. This makes pelvis sway not just a concept, but a measurable key to better performance and long-term physical health.


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    11 分
  • #446 Putting Performance: How Visual Perception and Speed Control Shape Distance Accuracy
    2025/12/23

    A technically skilled golfer was struggling to convert putts beyond 10 feet and often missed key up-and-down chances. Despite excellent ball-striking, the scoring didn't reflect his ability. A detailed Puttalyze coaching session uncovered three primary causes: a subtle visual bias, ineffective green-reading, and a mismatch between read and pace.

    The first key insight came from visual testing. Signs of mild esophoria led to a misperception of distance, especially on uphill putts. The brain saw the hole as closer than it was, causing putts to fall short. The solution was simple but effective: mentally project the hole 30 to 50 centimeters farther away on uphill putts. This improved energy delivery and rhythm.

    The next breakthrough came from improving green-reading structure, beginning with one critical task: identifying the fall line. This is the steepest path down from the hole—where water would naturally flow. Recognizing the fall line gives clarity, as it defines the break direction for every putt around the hole. Putts from the right of the fall line will always break left, and vice versa. Once the fall line is known, most of the putt is already understood.

    After finding the fall line, the player was instructed to stand roughly 90 degrees to it and imagine where the ball would roll if putted directly at the hole and missed low. That drop point—on the fall line—is mirrored across to the high side and becomes the Aimpoint. This intuitive method helped the player quickly visualize the correct start line based on the slope and intended pace.

    The next step was learning how to adjust the Distance Point—the spot where the ball should roll past the hole if it doesn’t fall. Its location depends on the putt’s direction: on uphill putts, the Distance Point lies farther than the Aimpoint; on downhill putts, it’s shorter. At 90 degrees to the fall line, both values are nearly the same. With help from the Puttalyze tables, the player began matching read, aim, and speed more precisely.

    Lastly, we addressed the connection between speed and break. The longer a ball stays on the slope, the more it breaks. Downhill putts, played slower, break more. Uphill putts, played faster, break less. This principle—time on break—transformed the player’s ability to judge both line and pace.

    When all elements—visual perception, fall line awareness, aimpoint estimation, distance control, and speed matching—came together, the result was immediate improvement. The player stopped second-guessing, gained confidence in green reading, and drastically reduced edge misses.


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    15 分
  • #445 Week in Review: December 15–21, 2025
    2025/12/22

    This report summarizes the defining moments of professional golf during the final competitive week of 2025, highlighting how late-season performances and strategic developments shaped the transition into the 2026 season.

    On the course, Jayden Schaper delivered one of the most compelling storylines of the year by securing his second consecutive DP World Tour victory at the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open. After finishing regulation play tied at 22-under-par, Schaper claimed the title on the second playoff hole with a decisive eagle. Remarkably, this win mirrored his victory one week earlier, when he also prevailed in a playoff sealed by an eagle. These back-to-back performances signaled a clear leap in competitive maturity and positioned Schaper as a standout player heading into the new season, with direct implications for world ranking position and major championship qualification.

    At the PNC Championship, Matt Kuchar and his son Cameron produced a historic father-son performance, finishing at a record-breaking 33-under-par. Their seven-shot victory margin and final-round score of 18-under-par rewrote the tournament’s scoring history. In an exhibition format designed for tight competition, the Kuchars’ dominance generated significant global attention and reinforced the event’s value as a high-impact showcase despite the absence of Official World Golf Ranking points.

    Beyond competition, the week carried major structural significance. LIV Golf finalized its 2026 team lineups and confirmed key roster decisions, including a contract extension for Sergio García. More importantly, leadership at the Official World Golf Ranking indicated that a decision on LIV Golf’s eligibility for ranking points could be reached before the league’s 2026 season opener in early February. This marked a shift from prolonged uncertainty to a defined timeline, with potential consequences for major championship access, player mobility, and competitive balance across professional golf.

    As the calendar now enters its seasonal pause, attention turns toward equipment testing, strategic planning, and preparation for the 2026 schedule. The late-season victories and record performances of December 2025 served as a bridge between competitive years, closing one chapter while firmly setting the narrative direction for the next.


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    11 分
  • #444 What Separates PGA Tour Players from Ambitious Amateurs
    2025/12/21

    The key distinction between PGA Tour players and highly ambitious amateurs lies not in talent alone, but in the extreme precision, consistency, and intentionality with which professionals approach every aspect of the game. According to insights from golf coach Henrik Jentsch, elite performance is built on disciplined fundamentals, stable rhythm, and data-driven decision-making.

    At the foundation is setup precision. Professionals treat alignment, grip, ball position, posture, and distance to the ball as non-negotiable constants. This precision is applied universally—full swings, short game, and putting alike. Ball position and body posture remain consistent shot after shot, verified through regular use of training aids such as alignment sticks. Unlike amateurs who often aim directly at the flag, professionals align themselves to statistically defined target corridors, deliberately allowing for a margin of error left or right of the pin.

    This approach can be compared to a commercial airline pilot versus a casual driver. While a driver adjusts roughly and drives off, a pilot follows a strict pre-flight checklist, knowing that even a small initial error can lead to a major miss later.

    Distance control is another defining factor. Professionals do not rely on raw yardage alone. They integrate wind, temperature, elevation, and trajectory to predict how far the ball will actually travel. This deep understanding of playing conditions allows them to adapt precisely rather than guess.

    Like a sniper adjusting for wind and elevation, Tour players calculate invisible variables before committing to a shot, ensuring precision under all conditions.

    Equally important is rhythm. Professionals rely on a deeply ingrained inner cadence that remains unchanged under pressure. Whether hitting a driver, wedge, or partial shot, the tempo stays constant. Power is generated without speeding up. This rhythm is trained consciously, often using metronomes, until it becomes automatic in competition.

    This is similar to a professional drummer maintaining the same BPM during a loud, intense performance—the beat stays constant regardless of pressure.

    Finally, professionals use statistics to guide strategy. They analyze accuracy and dispersion within specific distance bands and define safe target corridors rather than aiming directly at the flag. This data-driven method manages risk and maximizes scoring potential.

    Like a tennis player aiming inside the baseline instead of at the line itself, professionals choose targets where even a small miss remains safe and playable.


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    13 分