Are Instructors necessary on Tour?

Are Instructors necessary on Tour?

Hi, I’m Mel Sole, Director of Instruction at the Mel Sole Golf School, headquartered at Pawleys Plantation Golf and Country Club in Pawleys Island, SC.  We conduct 1, 2, and 3-day golf schools, hourly golf lessons, and senior golf schools—any golf instruction program your heart desires. Give us a call at 800-624-4653 or 843-237-4993.  We will be happy to book a commuter school or a package that contains accommodations, golf, and golf school.

Golf Blog by the Mel Sole Golf School.

Are Instructors necessary on Tour?

As a golf instructor, articles like this always pique my interest.  As soon as a player has a bad streak, his instructor must have "messed up" his swing.  How stupid!  Most of the instructors who teach PGA Tour players are excellent instructors, usually have some tournament playing experience, and have a client list of top golfers.  Tour players would not seek out these teachers if they did not have a high pedigree! 

Personally, an instructor with a background in BioMechanics understands each swing and will teach each golfer differently.  This is ESSENTIAL to being a good instructor.  Instructors who teach a "Method" of swinging and have everybody swing the same way are headed for disaster.

A PGA Tour Instructor is like a Nascar mechanic.

I like Wayne DeFrancesco's description of a golf instructor is like a Nascar mechanic.  They don't drive the car, but they try and make sure the car is prepped and ready to go at the start of the race.  Things can happen along the way, and the car does not win the race.  Nobody's fault.  It's just the way it is!

Wayne DeFrancesco gives a good account of the relationship between teacher and player and how that relationship (like any relationship) sometimes goes sour!  It does not mean that either the golfer or the teacher was at fault.  There comes a time where the students think they want to move on and explore something different.  Sometimes that decision is correct, ala Ricky Fowler, and sometimes it is not, ala Tiger Woods.

Are Instructors necessary on Tour?

Here's Wayne...

 If you watch golf on television these days, you might think that golf instructors are ruining the game. Certainly the travails of Tiger Woods have offered up plenty of ammunition for the anti-instruction movement.  Embraced by just about every commentator on the Golf Channel and PGA Tour broadcasts. Their argument is a simple one: too much information ruins the “natural” ability of the players who seek help from instructors.

Sean O'Hair.

Just this week, Sean O’Hair gave an interview that was hailed by every media person who commented on it as an honest assessment of how too much instruction ruined his game, and only now that he was “finding his own game” was he finding success again.

Tiger Woods.

Tiger’s problems have been laid directly on Sean Foley.  Pundits would have you believe Foley had Tiger working on a swing technique guaranteed to hurt his back.  And give him the short game yips. Brandel Chamblee has gone as far as stating that “Tiger has had the greatness coached out of him.” And “Modern golf instruction is a cancer on the game.” According to Johnny Miller, anyone who qualifies to play on the PGA Tour is already good enough and should never change anything.

Of course, Miller forgets that every year a bunch of players lose their card due to substandard play, while every player not yet on the big tour tries to improve enough to get there. The desire to improve is a constant characteristic of successful athletes.

Not all players understand technique.

In a game as complex as golf, the player can’t be expected to understand the nuances of all the technique he or she uses to navigate around the course.  And the truth is most players don’t want to think about what they are doing. But the game is so difficult that there will always be periods of poor play.  And the player will naturally begin to worry about retaining his position in the game.

Golf instructors usually have some sort of playing background.  And if they have been tabbed by a Tour player to be a coach it is for a good reason. It is vital to remember that no instructor can be on the range at a Tour event unless they are invited to be there. The player has to request credentials for the teacher, and the teacher cannot be on the range without the player. In other words, instruction is entirely voluntary.

Kevin Streelman.

I was hired by Kevin Streelman last June when he was unhappy with his game and the look of his swing. He had missed four straight cuts and was frustrated enough to seek different advice.

No teacher or player has all the answers to the game of golf. Golf instructors have preferences, and players who like to look at or measure their swings develop their own preferences as well. My vision of the swing is readily available on my website, and Kevin liked what he saw, so he contacted me. He wanted to change a swing pattern that had bothered him for years and that he felt he was not making progress on.

Players know their deficiencies. They also know that if they are not among the top players, a small retreat in performance will mean a loss of playing status. You can imagine the angst that exists after an extended slump. My point here is that while the players on the Tour are certainly good enough to get there, they may not be good enough to stay there, and they may not be able to improve enough to move up into the top echelon of players.

All other sport disciplines have coaches. Why not golf?

Who is going to offer them better direction or an answer to the problems they encounter? Every great tennis professional has a coach. All the major team sports have instructors for every aspect of their game. They all use video obsessively, and a coach analyses movement in super slow motion to correct technique flaws. Hitting, pitching, fielding, blocking, tackling, covering Record every play and practice, and the whole team spends huge amounts of time watching and going over technique.

Why has it been decided that to do that in golf is such a horrible thing?

Compare my job to that of a NASCAR mechanic. I don’t drive the car and I’m not going to tell the driver how to drive. I just get the car running as well as I can so that the player doesn’t have to worry about it. How to organize the information and simplify the thought process is ultimately the job of the player, because he is the car and the driver.

Golf Commentators.

It is ironic that just about every golf commentator is a former player who is not playing anymore. They have all lost their status for one reason or another, and now it seems that all of them have forgotten where they came from. No one wants to stop playing the Tour. There is no top-100 player who would trade their status for a spot in front of the Golf Channel cameras. You would have to think that every commentator who lost their card sought some sort of instruction in order to avoid their eventual demise. Instruction that obviously failed. Such an experience would definitely color how they view instruction now.

Again, it is important to remember that the players control who instructs them.  Or whether they get instruction at all. This is true from the club level all the way to the Tour. No one forces a player to take a lesson.

My lesson book is open to whoever wants to sign up. If Kevin hadn’t sought out my advice, you wouldn’t see me on the range at Tour events.  Just like you wouldn’t see Butch Harmon or any other teacher of Tour players you can name.

Fire the coach if the results aren't good.

No teacher is seeking to fill up a student’s mind with information that the player doesn’t ask for. Teachers use different methods to be sure, and some use more technology than others. But in the final analysis, fire the coach if the results aren't there.

Players hire teachers to help them. Almost every player has someone they look to for help and advice. What prompted this article?  The television media’s decision to focus on the players who have suffered a loss of performance under the tutelage of an instructor.  While ignoring the success stories. Meanwhile, Michael Breed is ever present on the Golf Channel, with, you guessed it, golf instruction.

Go figure.

Source: golfwrx.com    Wayne DeFrancesco  Mel Sole Golf School

Pictures: Tour Pro Golf Clubs    Keith Allison

Thanks for reading - Are Instructors necessary on Tour?  What do you think after reading this?  I would love to hear your comments!

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