Jon Sherman

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Jon Sherman

Jon Sherman

@practicalgolf

Author of The Four Foundations of Golf ➜ https://t.co/E6TgshifK8 I Co-Host of The Sweet Spot 🎙️I PGA Tour Coach I Golfer ⛳️

My best ideas for free Katılım Ocak 2015
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
I spent 10,000+ hours practicing and studying the game of golf. I’ve distilled everything I know into a book, which I’m proud to announce has launched today. This is my life’s work. Enjoy! amzn.to/3nnoqot
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
@TraverseRead Unfortunately I don't, but I'd love to see what you make! Thank you for recommending it to your players
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Traverse Read
Traverse Read@TraverseRead·
@practicalgolf before I make one on my own, do you have any sort of presentation or chapter by chapter breakdown of The Four Foundations? I am a middle school golf coach and the book was mandatory reading over the offseason. Team meeting soon to talk about it.
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
It's insane how many people watched The Internet Invitational on YouTube. TV is slowly ☠️ But I know of another golf video coming out in the next two weeks that is going to BLOW that out of the water in terms of viewership. It won't even be close 🍿🤐
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Dan Drullinger
Dan Drullinger@DanDrullinger·
Good News: I have stepped into a new role as Head of Marketing at Summit Golf Brands. Better News: I’m hiring someone to oversee our roster of athletes as the Brand Ambassador Manager. This person will lead everything from player signings to scripting. applicantpro.com/openings/summi…
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
Most golfers think they’re working on their game. In reality, the way they structure it guarantees they’ll stay stuck. Here are a few common types of players: 1) The “tip chaser” - tries something new every week from YouTube. 2) The “just play golfer” - never practices, then wonders why nothing changes. 3) The “wrong fix golfer” - works on things that don’t even connect to their misses (like trying to change club path when the real issue is strike location). If you want real improvement, you need a feedback loop. Here’s how: 1) Track what’s actually costing you shots. Don’t walk off the course saying, “I hit it bad.” That’s useless. Instead, note things like: • Thin, fat, toe, or heel strikes • Face control misses (left/right) • Mental/strategy errors: wrong club, poor wind judgment, lack of commitment. Try to look for patterns. If it only happened once or twice, then it's just the "variability" of golf. Look for consistent errors. (and don't forget to internalize your good shots!) 2) Build “if/then” fixes for your common issues. You need a toolbox of adjustments you trust. This is why having a laser focus on your faults from your rounds while practicing is so important! You might discover things like: • Shanks: Stand farther, focus on heel contact. • Fat shots: Shift pressure to lead side • Thin wedges: Feel more rotation with the chest, not the hands. • Pulls with the putter: Keep the face slightly more open on the backstroke. The point is to know, "if X miss shows up, then I do Y." Without this, you’ll always be guessing. 3) Match practice to context. Most golfers live in block practice - using the same club and the same target. Sometimes, that hides your ball striking "truth." Add variety: • Random practice: new target, new club every shot. • Simulated games: play a “round” on the range with full routines. • On-course reps: throw extra balls down in problem areas (like tricky wedge lies). 4) Transfer it to the course It’s not enough to fix something on the range. Test it under pressure: Add consequences (don’t leave until you hole three in a row). Track whether your fixes hold up when you only get one chance. The formula is simple: Track → Fix → Transfer Do that consistently, and you’ll avoid the trap most golfers fall into - staying the same year after year and working on the wrong things.
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BitcornKJ
BitcornKJ@kjameson88·
@practicalgolf Talk about a book of totally unactionable advice. “Take dead aim”… ok captain obvious. So overrated if you are actually trying to improve your golf game, worthless
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
Recently, I re-read Harvey Penick's Little Red Book. It had been a long time, and I was struck again by the timeless wisdom. Here are some of my favorite quotes that reinforce many of the topics I enjoy discussing. On Impact Location... “Many average golfers are not sure which part of their clubface is striking the ball. It’s very simple to find out. Take a can of talcum powder with you to the range. Powder the ball. Hit it. Look at the clubface.” “Try conscientiously to hit every iron shot on the toe of the club until you stop shanking.” On Clubface Control... “The face of the club going off the line produces more poor shots than anything I know of” “When teaching or learning what is wrong with a swing, first decide if the thing to work on is the swing itself or the angle of the clubface at impact”​ ​ On Swing Tips... “When I ask you to take an aspirin, please don’t take the whole bottle." On Putting... “Never allow yourself to think about what is riding on the putt.” "I hate the old saying, never up, never in. It's true that a ball that never reaches the cup never goes in, but neither does a ball that goes past it." "Once you adopt a good system for putting, the rest of it is mental. Stay with your system." On competing... “In competition, you must be yourself. If you're the joking sort, go ahead and joke. If you're the serious sort, there's no need to pretend not to be." “You should avoid new or different things that will distract your mind from your normal routine.” Some of my other favorites... “Golfers must make every effort to maintain good physical condition. Walk at every opportunity.” “Keeping the head down prevents a good follow-through because the golfer can’t swing past hip-high with the head still down and not give up something good in the finish to do it.” “The average golfer seldom hit’s a middle-iron approach shot past the pin” “These days there is a growing feeling that high-tech equipment, the juiced-up ball and the powerful swing of the touring pros are making many of our finest old golf courses obsolete.” “Playing golf you learn a form of meditation. For the four hours you are on the course, you learn to focus on the game and clean your mind of worrisome thoughts. Golf has probably kept more people sane than psychiatrists have.” “Get a system of some kind in playing. Any kind of a system beats trusting to luck.” I hope you enjoyed these, and I encourage you to read the book!
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
Most golfers don't realize their score is controlled by one silent habit - the questions they ask themselves during a round. If I asked most players what they're trying to do on each hole, I'd get answers like "well, I'm trying to make a par or a birdie here." Of course, that's what we want! Those are good scores, and it's natural to desire them. So on some level, every decision we make and how we react to each shot is in the context of that question, "What can I do to make a par or birdie on this hole?" But a round of golf is usually never straightforward. Things can change quickly. For example, you might be humming along after 6 or 7 holes and playing quite nicely without any major mistakes. But then one swing changes everything. Your heart rate jumps. Your plans start to disappear. And without noticing, you start chasing the score you wanted, instead of managing the situation you have. For the past 11 years, I've been drilling the same point into golfers... getting to the next scoring level is more about limiting double bogeys (or worse) on your scorecard than it is about making more pars and birdies. So when we get into situations on the course, it's very hard to quickly change our perspective. Our brain still wants that par. But the circumstances are saying otherwise. Here's the better question to ask in these moments: "What can I do to make a good bogey?" It's not glamorous. But it's the most powerful scoring question in golf for many. Golfers who can make that quick shift in their thinking are better at scoring and get more out of their games. They understand the nuance and odds of the situations they're in. And the good news is that you can be that kind of golfer too; it's not a matter of physical ability. It's just making better choices. Give this some thought and reflect on your rounds. I'm sure many of you will start to realize you've been asking the wrong question quite often.
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Will
Will@freewilllyyyy·
@Top100Rick @practicalgolf No comment...😂 We did get to spend lots of time there tho with all the weather delays plus the party on the terrace
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
@VolatilityVIX maybe people can get to those lower scores while understanding many of the concepts that people are chiming in with 😉
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Volatility Trading
Volatility Trading@VolatilityVIX·
@practicalgolf Scoring trends are the only way to know if you are getting better Some might say, hitting more greens, having fewer putts, hitting it longer, etc ALL of those will be directly reflected in the progression of lower scores What did you shoot? NOTHING else matters
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
What's a sign (other than score) that you are getting better at golf?
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stackatoshi
stackatoshi@btc_stackatoshi·
@practicalgolf any favorite instructors in the south shore Suffolk/ Nassau area that you’d send a mid/high handicapper to ? Looking for someone to evaluate my swing to focus on things this winter
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
@BurghyLIVE I am literally about to write a newsletter tomorrow on the value of a "good bogey" Nice timing. It's one of the most important concepts in golf because what most don't realize is that double bogey reduction is the real way to lower scores.
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Burghy
Burghy@BurghyLIVE·
@practicalgolf Maybe not in the same realm of “getting better at golf”, but more golf IQ, is knowing when bogey is a good score. Maybe a bad drive, stuck in the trees somewhere. Punch out to 50 yards. Hit the green and two putt. That’s as good as a par in my “mental score”.
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Jon Sherman
Jon Sherman@practicalgolf·
One of my favorite responses to this question when I've asked it before... "Getting better at golf is like diligently investing your money in low cost index funds while simultaneously playing gas station scratch-offs"
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