Tiger Woods 2010 Masters – Hole #2

October 29, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Golf Tips


Tiger Woods Golf Swing at 2010 Masters Monday Practice Round – hole #2

Jack Nicklaus 13th Hole 1986 Masters

September 1, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Golf Tips


Second shot to the par 5, 210 yards to the green

Amazing Golf Trick Shot Hole in One

July 21, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Golf Tips


Get your free golf swing report: golfanatic.site50.net Sometimes it’s just better to be lucky than good

RdB Golf Tips – Jon Lovitz Joins Ron del Barrio – 19th Hole

June 7, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Golf Tips


Course Managment Ron’s Passive Golf Method is about rotating the core of your body and following the eye line through the swing. This is the same swing method Tiger Woods has been talking about converting to due to the stress of his heavy tourqing. This is also the same swing that Ana Sorenstam has been using for the last few years. Yes, rotating the head with the turn of the right shoulder along with a passive grip as well as a loaded left side (irons and fairway woods) is what Ron del Barrios Passive golf swing is all about. Stack and Tilt or Stack and Blast?

Three Hole Green – Portable Putting Green

December 2, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Golf Putting Greens, Golf Training Aids

  • 3′ x 9′ kidney-shaped golf green.
  • Ships UPS
  • Clubs and balls not included
  • **Note this is a 3-Hole Putting Green***
  • ***The lakes and sandtraps are cardboard that you cut out from the box**

Product Description
Practice your chipping and putting on our 3′ x 9′ kidney shaped golf green…If ball does not fall into cup the foam incline mat returns ball to golfer…Poly grass surface simulates Bermuda Grass to give authentic feel …Green has four holes to create a one to four hole golf course… Backstop to keep balls on green…A 3′ pole and flag are included…UPS. Clubs & Balls Not Included.

Three Hole Green – Portable Putting Green

Golf Watch From Birdie to Eagle

March 3, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Golf Training Aids

When was the last time you’ve attended a golf watch? I have to confess I’ve never done this: it’s either I play golf or not. I can’t just sit there and watch the others playing. Watching golf can be a very confusing way to spend time if you are a novice to the sport. Like any sport, it has its own scoring system, but that is a little idiosyncratic in itself. Then there is the way the players dress, which in some cases is enough to confuse anyone in possession of a working pair of eyes. But perhaps the most confusing element of watching a game of golf is the seemingly arcane terminology used to refer to different elements of the game. This can make the whole sport seem like some sort of prank being played on an unsuspecting novice. So maybe some of the terms need to be explained better.

Firstly, what is with those terms used in the scoring system? Well, “par” had been used for anything that was considered an acceptable standard for years before its application in golf. So in this respect, it was a new application of existing terminology. But why “Bogey” for a bad score? Well, the story goes that a song of the late 19th Century had the lyric “I’m the Bogey Man, catch me if you can”. This led to people seeing the “bogey” on the golf course as something to be aimed for – and among amateurs, who still tend to play off a handicap, it still is. But the term was used interchangeably with “par” for many years, only adopting its current meaning in the early 20th Century.

As for “birdie”, this comes from further back than “bogey”. Early in the 19th Century, the word “bird” was used in much the same way as people nowadays would say “cool” – something that really stands out and impresses. Playing a hole in one shot fewer than is expected – now that is cool, surely? Hence the term “birdie” came to be used in reference to people doing just that. So why an “eagle” for someone playing a hole in two shots less than the par? Well, it’s obvious, is it not? It’s a kind of birdie, but it is bigger. And as you may have guessed, the use of the term “albatross” to describe playing a Par 5 hole in two shots is simply a continuation on that theme.