Golf Stretching Exercise For Golfers Lower Back
For more information, visit www.performbettergolf.com Mike Pedersen Golf Fitness Trainer shows simple effective golf stretching tips. These golf stretches are very effective in eliminating golfers low back injuries. Golfers can play pain-free golf doing golf flexibility exercises like this one. Simple golf-specific stretches can transform your golf swing and game.
Perfect Solutions Golfer’s Break Reader
February 12, 2010 by admin
Filed under Golf Training Aids
- Bubble indicates break-or slope-of green
- No more guesswork. No more misreads. With the Golfer¿s Break Reader you¿ll always know which way the green breaks
- Place the reader an equal distance between your ball and the pin. Then, check the bubble for the break direction.
- Repeat with the reader about 6-inches from the cup to see if the break carries through or if there¿s a double break.
Product Description
Read green breaks like a champion…and take strokes off your putting game. Just place the reader between your ball and the pin. Then, check the bubble for the break-or slope-direction. Built tough in rugged stainless steel and acrylic. Complete with protective carry pouch.
Perfect Solutions Golfer’s Break Reader
Interpreting Golf Terminology – A Thankless Task
If someone came back from the golf course and told you that they had “chunked an approach that left them having to take a Mulligan, and then ended up on the apron, before lipping out and relying on a come-backer to save par”, you would be entirely within your rights to assume that they had spent too long at the 19th Hole. But the actual fact is that they would be describing something that happens every so often to most golfers. They would be couching it in dense terminology and making it almost impossible to understand for anyone but other golfers, but they would not be lying or, necessarily, drunk.
To “chunk” a shot is to drive your club into the ground before, or in (accidental) lieu of hitting the ball. Coming from the sound that such an impact makes, it is something horribly familiar to a great many golfers. And it could lead to a Mulligan, which is a replay of the shot without any stroke being counted. This is not allowed in competition golf, but is allowed to pass in most casual rounds. From your Mulligan, could you end up on an apron? You certainly could. Assuming you were aiming for the green, if you ended up on the slightly rougher patch of grass around it, that’s exactly where you would have ended up.
From such a position there would be two options. Firstly your sober friend could try to chip the ball from the “apron” towards the hole, or secondly they could attempt a putt. If the ball rolled around the outside of the hole and stayed out, this is described as “lipping out” – from where the ball can go anywhere, sometimes heart breakingly a few feet past. When the ball rolls past the hole, you must rely on a putt coming back the other way – or, as the terminology has it, a “comebacker”.
There are a great many other golf terms which may be considered impenetrable and arcane to the uninitiated. The best advice that one could possibly pass on to a novice trying to get a handle on the terminology for the sake of a relationship is to watch with a notepad and learn as you go along with some help from the Internet.





