Greg Norman’s Secret

December 30, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Practice & Training

Greg Norman's Secret

Greg Norman’s Secret — Golf Training Aid Greg Norman’s Secret is an effective tool designed to teach you the short game. Just wear The Secret during putting – chipping – pitching – and sand play – and feel what the pros feel. The Secret’s powerful muscle memory impression will make it easy for you to bring your improved short game to the course. If you have any questions about this product or would like to order by phone – please call us Toll Free at 888-733-8383. We look forward to hearing from you

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Tiger Woods – A Golfer Like No Other

March 3, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Golf for Beginners

There is something amazing about the world’s number one male golfer in this day and age – and it is not just his race, although this makes his biography pretty unique. No, Tiger Woods is remarkable for so many reasons that he transcends race, and makes the curiosity value that surrounded him for much of his early career completely irrelevant. Whether you like golf or not, you will undoubtedly have heard of him, and this is not something that could have been said for most of the people who preceded him in golf’s premier ranking. We have to admit that the Tiger Woods PGA tour 08 was something to remember for a long time.

From an early age it was clear that Tiger Woods was a phenomenon. At the age of two – yes, as a baby – he appeared on American television showing his adeptness at putting and a year later he played nine holes at California’s Navy Golf Club, making his way around in 48 shots. Now if you don’t know much about golf, take it as fact that that is amazing. Many adult amateurs would dream of shooting 48 for a nine-hole round. To do it at the age of three is incredible.

Tiger Woods turned professional at the age of twenty – not especially remarkable in this day and age, but certainly one of the younger players ever to do so. By the time he had turned professional he was already marked out as one of the most exciting prospects the game had ever seen – in fact, probably undeniably the most exciting. There was no doubt that in terms of coverage, he gained some extra attention for being of mixed race. Lots of Tiger Woods pictures invaded the net, taken by paparazzi who make a living out of spying on people’s life and home. But the coverage was far more than anything due to the fact that he just kept winning.

As things stand, with Woods just back in the game after eight months out following surgery on his left knee, he remains the top-ranked golfer on the PGA Tour. Despite the injury – with which he played the entire US Open in 2008, and won – Woods’ place was untouched, and at the age of 33 he has spent 536 weeks (more than ten years) at the top of the world rankings. That is more than the three next most successful men in the rankings put together. Those three men? Greg Norman, Nick Faldo and Seve Ballesteros. I bet that Tiger’s wife must be so proud of her husband and family.