Reviews of dave pelz short game schools




















Private Lessons. Focus on what your Scoring Game needs most. Find Your Pelz Golf School. Program Location Golf Club Golf Brochure. Pelz Golf Institute research has proven that golfers lose almost 80 percent of their shots to par within yards of the hole. So we focus Putting Tutor Review: Dave Pelz We have reviewed a number of them on our golf blog. Today we're reviewing the Pelz Golf Putting Tutor which is one of the best putting alignment training aids we've.

Pelz Golf Official website of golf researcher and coach Location Month. What i learned at a 3-day Dave Pelz short game clinic : golf Save www. Very interested to hear what others think about these methods. Also happy to answer any questions. It seemed to me that it would be more helpful to the higher handicapper who has not given the short game much thought. A lot of the stuff was a little too basic for me I'm about a 9 , but there were one or two things that I learned that I have added to my game which have helped Focus on what your Scoring Game needs most.

You learn how to perform the shots and how to build on your improvement. Call Us Email Us. After 36 years of golf, this opened my eyes to a better way to approach the short game. The school exceeded my expectations in every way. I can hardly believe how much my game has improved.

The most helpful golf school I have ever experienced. I would recommend this school to every serious golfer. I would recommend this school to anyone who seriously wants to improve their game. I thoroughly enjoyed the school with my grandson and I lowered my handicap significantly.

Give the Gift of Lower Scores! Order Gift Certificates Here. Videos by Dave Pelz! Learn More. Own every distance yards and in. The more greens you miss, the more you need a great short game. Learn three swings with each wedge. The better your wedge game, the shorter your putts. The average golfer needs to play twice the amount of break he sees.

Long strokes for long putts, short strokes for short putts. A lot of the stuff was a little too basic for me I'm about a 9 , but there were one or two things that I learned that I have added to my game which have helped me out.

Hopefully I can give you some advice. We actually host the Dave Pelz Academy at our facility every year. I have attended the academy twice now. As an instructor, I attended to learn how they teach and communicate information.

I thought it was very informative and well presented. A good teaching professional should be able to help you with your short game however. My two cents worth. I was less than blown away. My personal opinion and it's worth exactly what you paid for it is that if you have read his books you will not learn anything new.

If you are a single digit or low two digit handicap, save your money. The putting session was the main reason I went. The entire session was spent using Pelz gadgets.

Only SBST stroke was discussed. After lunch, we spent two hours indoors using ALL of the Pelz training aids.

It was just a live infomercial. They did a putter fitting which was nothing more than telling us we needed to have our eyes over the ball. If your eyes weren't over your ball, you needed to have your putter adjusted till they were. I don't mean to sound negative. I was just not impressed with the clinic. I honestly feel like the Pelz system as it was taught is geared to players that don't practice very much and are better served with mechanical techniques as opposed to feel.

All day the instructors kept mentioning how much more detailed the week-long courses would be as if they were apologizing for how little information we were getting. Like I said, this is purely my opinion and your mileage may vary. In the interest of full disclosure, I have since found a short game instructor in Dallas. The instruction I get from him is vastly more useful and personal.

I've attended both the one day clinic about 5 years ago and the 3 day school last summer. My honest opinion is that based on your disinterest in practice you should not do either or only go to the 1 day clinic. The Pelz stuff I think is very good, but requires a tremendous amount of practice and dedication. I think if you're uncertain whether you can commit to practice at least a few day a week, that you'd be better off buying the books and practicing what is in them at your leisure.

Here are the Pelz books I recommend in order:. Works with tonnes of PGA pros and wont break the bank like Utley. I checked on both websites but couldn't find any prices. Some may scoff, but it doesn't get any simpler or more effective than Monte.

Ask any of the guys who have been to his clinics or has seen his video. Look what he did for Jason Gore. My own short game has improved tremendously since his lesson.

My short game has improved as much as my long game with his lessons. His videos are amazing. Go to his website and check it out. Are Monte's method and James Sieckman's method the same or at least very similar? Even though I've never tried it, using the bounce makes since in my mind. His method differs from Monte's. From reading about each they seemed similar. Lots of different ways to "use the bounce". The how can very greatly even though the what is similar.

OP should look at both methods and decide. The instructors were great and it was led me to go with the moniker DP4 as in a Dave Pelz par 4. Miss the green and get up and down. Dan C Iteach or Monte's short game videos Top notch instruction and simple to understand. I did a 1 day Pelz school about 5 years ago Watched the Monte short game video last night. I like the concept. Need to get out to the chipping green and give it a whirl. Got the Dan C Iteach videos a couple of weeks ago and they are great.

I still have a ways to go but my below average shots are now where my good ones were and most importantly I have heaps more confidence to build from. I just did an hour lesson with James Sieckmann on Sunday. All I can say is: Wow. I will post some video soon. The short game has never felt so effortless. I was always a "handle dragger," who played most shots center to well-back of center, which made my short game quite one dimensional even though I didn't want to believe it.

Tom Pernice, Jr.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000