Posts Tagged ‘Golf Lessons Kent’
Become a Great Short Game Player
Become a Great Short Game Player
Long Game is important in golf because if you can’t find the fairway from the tee box you are always chasing and trying to catch up on your second shot.
However short game is also very important in golf and I believe for the best part of golfers worldwide, that improving this part of your game is a must, especially if you want lower scores and handicaps!!
Short game starts from within 100 yards of the green and this is the area we are going to concentrate on in this blog.
There is a lot of misconception when watching the best players on TV, especially as the cameras concentrate on the leaders and players hitting great shots. Of course the Top 10 or so players in the field are playing exceptionally good golf; otherwise they would not be in the chase of winning the event!!
So the big question is “how close do we need to be hitting our approach wedges, bunker shots and chips?”
Firstly let’s take a look chipping from around the edge of the green.
Chip Shots from the Fringe
A top ranked PGA Tour player will on average hit his chip shots from the fringe to within 2 to 3 feet from the hole. They will then proceed to make the putt 95% – 99% of the time which keeps there scores low.
How many of you achieve this from the Fringe?
Greenside Pitching from within 20 – 30 Yards (from the rough)
When a top ranked PGA Tour player misses a green in regulation and has to play from the rough, within 20 – 30 yards of the green, they will on average get the ball up and down to save par 58 % of the time. They will roughly end up somewhere between 6ft to 8ft from the hole from this area.
Are you within this category?
10 – 20 Yard Greenside Bunker Shots
A top ranked player of the PGA Tour will hit there bunker shots from around the green to within 7ft and 9ft of the hole. This is from all types of lies and sand conditions etc. They will then go on to hole the putt 53% of the time.
How good are you from this Range?
Greenside Pitch Shots
Did you know that when a top ranked PGA Tour player misses the green and is left with a Pitch Shot of around 20 – 35 yards, they will on average get the ball up and down 60% of the time?
They will regularly pitch it in to around 8ft of the hole most times.
Wedge Shots from 50 yards to 75 yards
From a distance of 50 yards to 75 yards a top ranked PGA Tour Player will pitch it to within 7ft to 12ft of the hole. If they are pitching from out of the rough then the distance they pitch to on average is within 15ft of the hole as there is less control on the ball. They will go on to hole an average of anywhere between 30% – 50% of their putts from there.
Approach Wedge Shots 75 to 100 Yards
In this distance range a top ranked PGA tour player will hit his shot 75 to 100 yard approach wedge shots to within 12ft to 16ft of the pin consistently. They will go on to hole on average between 20% to 30% of their putts.
From Your Friends at Mark Wood Golf Academy
PS. Come down and tee it up to make some magic moments of your own. Check our website at
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
World’s Greatest Par
World’s Greatest Par!
Imaging a golfer so good that Arnold, Palmer, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods all find him a personal inspiration, (see video clip)
Read, Listen or watch the amazing and inspirational story of Dennis Walters, a professional golfer struck down in his prime in a freak golf cart accident. His response to a paralyzing injury and his journey to becoming the world’s top trick shot artiest and a scratch player, without the use of his legs, is nothing short of amazing!
Listen to story here
Watch video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N12G10T_XT0
From Your Friends at Mark Wood Golf Academy
PS. Come down and tee it up to make some magic moments of your own. Check our website at
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
Pitching – What Technique to Use
Pitching – What Technique to Use
Professional’s and Elite Amateur golfers will all having a Pitching system that they use to pitch with great precision and accuracy. That should be no different from the rest of us!!
In this video I am showing you 3 different pitching systems that some of the world’s best short game artists use, once you have found a system that works well for you, I would like you to practise and practise it until you get to know your yardages.
You will be so much more confident in this area of the game and that only means one thing, Lower Scores!!
Go ahead and make someone’s day share this tip with a friend!
From Your Friends at Mark Wood Golf Academy
PS. Come down and tee it up to make some magic moments of your own. Check our website at
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
Gary Player Week
Gary Player Week
Player is one of the most successful golfers in the history of the sport, ranking third (behind Roberto de Vicenzo and Sam Snead) in total professional wins, with at least 166, and tied for fourth in major championship victories with nine. Along with Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus he is often referred to as one of “The Big Three” golfers of his era – from the late 1950s through the late 1970s – when golf boomed in the United States and around the world, greatly encouraged by expanded television coverage. Along with Gene Sarazen, Ben Hogan, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods, he is one of only five players to win golf’s “career Grand Slam“. He completed the Grand Slam in 1965 at the age of twenty-nine. Player was the second multi-time majors winner from South Africa, following Bobby Locke, then was followed by Ernie Els, and Retief Goosen.
Player played regularly on the U.S. based PGA Tour from the late 1950s. He led the money list in 1961, and went on to accumulate 24 career titles. He also played an exceptionally busy schedule all over the world, and he has been called the world’s most travelled athlete, clocking up more than 15 million miles. He has more victories than anyone else in the South African Open (13) and the Australian Open (7). He held the record for most victories in the World Match Play Championship, with five wins, from 1973 until 1991 when this feat was equalled by Seve Ballesteros, finally losing his share of the record in 2004, when Ernie Els won the event for a sixth time. Player was ever-present in the top ten of Mark McCormack’s world golf rankings from their inception in 1968 until 1981; he was ranked second on those rankings in 1969, 1970 and 1972, each time behind Jack Nicklaus.
He was the only player in the 20th century to win the British Open in three different decades.[6] His first win, as a 23-year-old in 1959 at Muirfield, came after he double-bogeyed the last hole, and broke down in tears thinking he had lost his chance, but none of the remaining players on the course could match the clubhouse lead he had set. In 1974, he became one of the few golfers in history to win two major championships in the same season. Player last won the U.S. Masters in 1978, when he started seven strokes behind 54-hole leader Hubert Green entering the final round, and won by one shot with birdies at seven of the last 10 holes for a back nine 30 and a final round 64. One week later, Player came from seven strokes back in the final round to win the Tournament of Champions. In 1984, at the age of 48, Player nearly became the oldest ever major champion, finishing just behind Lee Trevino at the PGA Championship. And in gusty winds at the 1998 Masters, he became the oldest golfer ever to make to the cut, breaking the 25-year-old record set by Sam Snead. Player credited this feat to his dedication to the concept of diet, health, practise and golf fitness.[7]
From Your Friends at Mark Wood Golf Academy
PS. Come down and tee it up to make some magic moments of your own. Check our website at
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
Happy Birthday Mr Player
Happy Birthday Gary
Legendary South African golfer, Gary Player, was born this week in 1935, one of only a handful of players to win all four majors!
Here’s one of our favorite Player stories…
When Gary Player arrived in the United States in the late 1950s, he was already becoming known as a “world traveler.” His schedule was at first limited; nevertheless, he quickly made an impression on many of the home-grown pros, and soon developed a reputation among them as a “lucky” golfer. As is common when faced with someone who is more successful, many of the regular Tour players decided Player was winning because he was luckier than they.
Rumors of Player’s “lucky play” were circulating in the clubhouse after he had won a PGA tournament, and a less than tactful reporter asked him to comment on the matter. Throughout his career, Player has always seemed to be at his best when the odds were against him, and he summed up his feelings about luck by paraphrasing Thomas Jefferson.
“Sure I’m lucky,” he told the journalist, “and the more I practice the luckier I get.”
Make no mistake about it. The key to dramatically improving your “luck” is practice. Other pro golfers were reluctant to admit, even to themselves, that Gary Player practiced harder than they, hitting thousands more balls as he grooved and fine-tuned his swing. Or that he showed up before dawn and stayed after dusk, then went to bed early, avoiding parties and hangovers. They also ignored the fact that he compensated for his small stature with a rigorous program of exercises and muscle building, long before it became fashionable to do so! Player was almost fanatical about his diet, his body and his physical conditioning, all with the objective of playing better golf. Other pros of the day dismissed his fine performance as “lucky” because it was more comfortable than facing the cold, hard truth. He was better than most of them because he worked harder and tried harder.
From Your Friends at Mark Wood Golf Academy
PS. Come down and tee it up to make some magic moments of your own. Check our website at
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
Getting Lucky
Getting Lucky
When Gary Player arrived in the United States in the late 1950s, he was already becoming known as a “world traveler.” His schedule was at first limited; nevertheless, he quickly made an impression on many of the home-grown pros, and soon developed a reputation among them as a “lucky” golfer. As is common when faced with someone who is more successful, many of the regular Tour players decided Player was winning because he was luckier than they. Incidentally, this epithet would also be hung around the neck of Seve Ballesteros when he burst upon the tournament golf scene.
Rumors of Player’s lucky play were circulating in the clubhouse after he had won a PGA tournament, and a less than tactful reporter asked him to comment on the matter. Throughout his career, Player has always seemed to be at his best when the odds were against him, and he summed up his feelings about luck by paraphrasing Thomas Jefferson.
“Sure I’m lucky,” he told the journalist, “and the more I practice the luckier I get.”
Make no mistake about it. The key to dramatically improving your “luck” is practice. Other pro golfers were reluctant to admit, even to themselves, that Gary Player practiced harder than they, hitting thousands more balls as he grooved and fine tuned his swing. Or that he showed up before dawn and stayed after dusk, then went to bed early, avoiding parties and hangovers. They also ignored the fact that he compensated for his small stature with a rigorous program of exercises and muscle building, long before it became fashionable to do so. Player was almost fanatical about his diet, his body and his physical conditioning, all with the objective of playing better golf. Other pros dismissed his fine performance as “lucky” because is was more comfortable than facing the cold, hard truth. He was better than most of them because he worked harder and tried harder.
From Your Friends at Mark Wood Golf Academy
PS. Come down and tee it up to make some magic moments of your own. Check our website at
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
October Winners
October Tournament Results
Well done to the following clients of MWGA on there Club Tournament results during October 2013.
Danny Berta scored 40 points to win the Tams Stableford and Chris Willett finished 2nd with 37 points at Dale Hill.
Geraldine Harland Fisher won the Ladies AGM Stableford over 9 holes on the Old Course at Dale Hill with a superb 21 points in testing conditions.
Peter Crossfield won the Tams Medal at Dale Hill with a great nett score of 66.
Steve Williamson finished joint first in the Top Dog Trophy with a nett 71 on a very wet and windy day on the Woosie course.
In the Mens Stableford Chris Pugh came in with a great 43 points, Ron Stevens 2nd with 40 points and Kelly Jones 3rd with 38 points.
Danny Berta won the 2nd Tams Stableford of the month at Dale Hill with a great 42 points.
Well done to Ann Bassett on winning the Ladies Stableford at Dale Hill with 36 points and also to Rosie Hockey on finishing 2nd with 34 points.
Mark Packard finished runner up in the Sussex Pairs Professional Matchplay Championship at Mid Sussex golf club. Mark also finished 2nd in the Sussex Pro’s Autumn meeting at Dale Hill with a score of +3.
A big well done to Simon Wooder on winning the Silver Salver at the London Club with a good solid 38 points.
Well done to all my clients on there recent successes.
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
Great Golf Trivia Question
Ultimate Golf Trivia Question?
Here’s an awesome trivia question, Which player won more PGA tournaments in the Mid 80’s? Now that’s a tough one as you had Nickalus, Watson, Faldo, Seve and Norman…
Think hard before you hear a truly amazing tale of golfing success one that ought to give us all hope and get an answer that will astonish you!
A diamond in the rough
As we have seen, champions aren’t invariably the product of elite country clubs, as was Nicklaus. They don’t always appear from behind the caddie shack, as Zembriski did. They aren’t all schooled in the pressure of gambling at a fast paced municipal course, like Trevino, and they don’t all start at the age of three, like Sandy Lyle, or even two, like the latest phenomenon, Tiger Woods! Sometimes champions have their origins in places you would least expect, but the traits and qualities that enable them to convert their talents from raw coal to fine diamonds remain the same.
Calvin Peete was born in Pahokee, Florida, one of the poorest, least attractive, beat up little towns on the planet! Surrounded by swampland, Pahokee is the reason that the State bird of Florida is the mosquito. There were no less than, count them, 19 children in the Peete household. With very little option, Calvin dropped out of school in the 8th grade to pick fruit and bring in a little more money to help the family survive. At 18 he bought an old station wagon and went into business for himself. He drove up and down the rural areas of the East Coast, selling clothes and a variety of other goods to migrant farm workers. In an effort to express his individuality, Peete had diamonds inserted into his front teeth. The people with whom he traded knew him simply as “the diamond man.”
At the age of 23, never having played or caddied in his life, and with no desire to learn, a couple of friends coerced him into playing a round of golf with them. He was instantly hooked on the game and although he seemed initially to have no real aptitude, he decided he was going to become a golf pro. For the next five years he practiced every spare minute he could find, continuing to hit practice shots each night, after dark, on floodlit baseball fields.
It took Peete less than two years to become a scratch golfer, and he turned pro three years later. Not content with teaching others or looking for a club job, he decided he wanted to play on the PGA Tour. It took him three attempts to make it, but eventually, at 32 years of age, he graduated from Q-school and received his player’s card. For three more difficult and discouraging years, Peete didn’t win enough money to meet his travel expenses. His wife, a teacher, supported both of them and their family of four children. Finally, in 1979, he entered the ranks of tournament champions by winning the Milwaukee Open. He followed with three straight years of earnings in excess of $100,000. Although he was never renowned for his power, he led the PGA Tour in driving accuracy, and, in 1984, won the Vardon Trophy, awarded to the player with the lowest stroke average for the season. Before long he had joined the elite group of players with over two million dollars in career earnings and at least 10 Tour victories — 12 to be exact. 11 between 82-86!
This notable level of success was achieved by a man born into abject poverty, who broke his left elbow in a fall as a boy and was partially crippled as a result of poor corrective surgery, which caused his left elbow to be permanently locked in one position.
Follow your dreams; they may come true!
From Your Friends at Mark Wood Golf Academy
PS. Come down and tee it up to make some magic moments of your own. Check our website at
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
High Soft landing Greenside Bunker Shot
High Soft landing Greenside Bunker Shot
Mark Wood PGA Advanced Professional, has a very easy and effective way in playing a very high soft landing greenside bunker shot. All you have to do is weaken your right hand grip so that the ‘V’ of the right hand is pointing up towards your left collar bone. Keep your left hand as normal but just make this slight alteration in the right hand and watch the results.
Make sure you set the face open a little to add some loft but to also engage the bounce.
Keep your bunker shot swing as normal, coming into the ball nice and shallow, utilising the bounce of the wedge.
Keep the swing nice and aggressive and watch the ball spin.
You can watch the video of the tip here
Go ahead and make someone’s day share this tip with a friend!
From Your Friends at Mark Wood Golf Academy
PS. Come down and tee it up to make some magic moments of your own. Check our website at
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent
Rory McIlroy
Could be the start of Rory’s comeback
Rory McIlroy earns a staggering £31,000 a day from his Nike deal and is set to earn another £1M in appearance fees this week when he tees it up in Seoul. He will play in China for two weeks and also play an exhibition round with Tiger Woods.
A lot is happening for Rory this week as he has split with Caroline Wozniacki, 23, a former world number one in her own sport, and McIlroy, are no longer an item. An unflattering picture posted on Twitter showing McIlroy fast asleep is alleged to have played a part in the break-up.
He is also suing the management company that helped bring him the most lucrative endorsement deal in British sporting history. Court papers that are lodged in Dublin state, Ireland, that the County Down golfer also wants to end the contract he began in 2011 with Horizon Sports Management and two other companies.
It comes as no surprise after he has slumped to 6th in the world and he has not won a thing all year. He has had only one top 10 finish in his last tens tournaments, so I guess he is now going to re-focus on what he wants.
Would love to hear your thoughts and comments.
Mark Wood
PGA Advanced Professional
UK’s No1 Golf Coach
The Best Golf Lessons in Sussex and Kent





