January 10th, 2010 by admin
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Buying your first set of golf golf equipment is in no way easy.
While you can usually purchase second-hand golf clubs or older models, these won’t offer you the top quality trial golf equipment and demonstration days offered by the bigger name brands. Inexpensive golf club sets do not have the same technical qualities, balance or feel as the irons and woods manufactured by the big companies and the well known custom club makers. They spend tons of time to research, for instance the right head sizes and configuration as well as technical aspects of a golf club.
Alternatively, you can trade in used golf equipment for brand new golf equipment or another used set of golf equipment. Selecting a used golf club set can be as straightforward as going to the closest golf store and buying a set of golf clubs off the shelf with the golf brand that you want. The goal while buying golf clubs ought to be to own the most effective golf clubs you can afford, that suits you whether or not they are name brands, used, or a reproduction of one of the name brands.
Some individuals raise their self-esteem by purchasing a name brand club for more money.
January 2nd, 2010 by admin
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The Characteristics of a Professional Golfer That is only one side of the story though. There are a number of ingredients that are required to produce a successful professional golfer.
Practice – Practice! Practice! Practice! Even practice can become mundane for common people, but for the professional golfer if is honing time. You must have some level of natural ability to work with.
Participating in an amateur event will forfeit all work experience credits earned before the event.
Satisfy the Playing Abilities Test, PAT, requirement.
Submit a signed apprentice registration form verifying employment and documenting your review of the Professional Readiness Orientation (PRO). » Read more: Learning to Play Golf Professionally
December 29th, 2009 by admin
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Not trying to dump on Tiger Woods at this point. The New York Post reported that Golf Digest is “loosening its ties to Tiger Woods, suspending his monthly instructional golf articles while Woods is on leave from professional golf,” but the magazine “has not totally severed its connection with Tiger.” Writer Keith Kelly noted that Golf Digest has an “exclusive long-term contract with Woods valued at $3[M] per year,” and the publication “declined to say whether Tiger’s compensation would be suspended.” A spokesperson for Golf Digest publisher Conde Nast said that Woods “will remain on the magazine’s masthead as Playing Editor.”
Golf Digest’s admission that it is “benching Tiger was buried in an editor’s note,” Kelly said.