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On Golf: Lessons from America's Master Teacher [Anglais] [Broché]

Jim Flick , Glen Waggoner

Prix : EUR 11,50 LIVRAISON GRATUITE En savoir plus.
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
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Description de l'ouvrage

1 mai 2001
Jim Flick is the best golf teacher in the world.

Tom Lehman, winner of the 1996 British Open, says, "Jim Flick understands the overall golf swing better than anyone I've ever met." Jack Nicklaus thinks enough of him to have opened the Nicklaus/Flick Golf School, with teaching facilities in Salt Lake City, Palm Beach, Pebble Beach, Scottsdale, and Harbor Springs (MI). The following golfers -- pro and amateur -- all extol his virtues from tee to green: Arnold Palmer, Tom Watson, Paul Azinger, Phil Mickelson, Judy Rankin, Charles Barkley, Byron Nelson, and Chi Chi Rodriguez. Now, Flick has written a book that's inspirational, instructional and entertaining -- and will take five to ten strokes off even the most casual hacker's game.

On Golf
uniquely captures Jim Flick's method of motivational, one-on-one teaching, which emphasizes his belief that one should play golf, not work it. Whether you shoot 100 and are aiming for 90, or shoot 80 and are aiming for 70, On Golf is the best possible way to make sure that when you play a round of golf, your good walk will never be spoiled.

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Extrait

From The Foreword, by Jack Nicklaus

A great teacher in golf is that rare individual who’s able to go beyond the mechanics of the golf swing and take a genuine personal interested in the individual he’s teaching. If Jack Grout hadn’t taken a personal interest in an eager ten-year-old kid back in Columbus, Ohio — an interest in him as a person that went beyond teaching him how to play a game — I might never have become a golfer. It was that commitment to helping a person discover what he is capable of doing, not just teaching some formula, that set Jack Grout apart.

Jim Flick is that kind of teacher.

I first met Jim back in 1961 in Cincinnati, where he was the head pro at the Losantiville Golf Club. While I found him extremely personable and engaging, o paths didn’t cross that much at first. Later, in the 1970s and 1980s, I began to see more of Jim at Frenchman’s Creek in North Palm Beach, where I worked regularly with Mr. Grout. Jim, who by then was a widely respected golf teacher in his own right, would come by and quietly observe us. By nature Jim is a thoughtful, inquisitive person, and I think one of hi s great strengths is his power of observation.

But it wasn’t until 1990, at the PGA Senior Tour’s Tradition golf tournament at Desert Mountain in Scottsdale, Arizona, that I became fully aware of what a keen observer and gifted teacher Jim Flick really is.

The Tradition was my first tournament on the Senior Tour. On Tuesday afternoon, as I was heading out to play the golf course, I ran into Jim, who asked if he could come along with me. I hadn’t worked with anyone since we lost Mr. Grout the previous year, so I was happy to have an opportunity to get Jim’s input. As we walked up the eighteenth fairway, I asked Him what he saw in my swing. He looked me in the eye and said, “What I don’t see is Jack Nicklaus.”

We headed right to the practice range, and that was when I started working with Jim Flick. I went on to win the golf tournament, and I have been working with Jim ever since.
After Jim and I had been working together about a year, Jim approached me with an idea for making sure that the principles and the approach to the game that I had first learned from Mr. Grout — and that Jim had developed over four decades of teaching — were passed on to future students of the game. That idea became the foundation of the Nicklaus-Flick Golf School, which we established in 1991.

As much as anyone I’ve ever known, Jim understands that people have different abilities, different rhythms, and different timing, so one swing isn’t going to be right for everybody. He begins with a simple goal: to help a golfer feel where his club head is and then use it to find the ball. He teaches you to swing the golf club–and not to get tied up by golf mechanics.

Most important, though, is that Jim helps people understand and love the game of golf. His enthusiasm and commitment are infectious. When I talk to people who are repeat students at the Nicklaus-Flick Golf School, I get the feeling that they come back more just to spend time with Jim Flick than to improve their games.

The purpose of playing golf, after all, is to have fun and to enjoy yourself. I’ve never met anyone better at helping people enjoy themselves and have fun on the golf course than Jim. That’s because he brings to his teaching the commitment I mentioned earlier, the hallmark of a great teacher.

That personal commitment is the driving force behind this book and the legacy of a great golf teacher, Jim Flick.

Biographie de l'auteur

Jim Flick, director of training and education for the Nicklaus/Flick Golf School, is one of America's most celebrated golf instructors. He resides in Scottsdale, Arizona, with his wife, Geri.

Glen Waggoner is the editor of Rotisserie League Baseball and the author of Divots, Shanks, Gimmes, Mulligans and Chili Dips. He works for ESPN's Total Sports Magazine.

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I GREW UP IN the huge, thriving metropolis of Bedford, Indiana,smack-dab in the middle of Middle America before anybody ever called it that. Lire la première page
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Amazon.com: 4.6 étoiles sur 5  22 commentaires
20 internautes sur 20 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 Gets to the root cause of good swings 8 juillet 1999
Par Un client - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Relié
I struggled for years without improvement going to mechanical teachers, and watching mechanics-based videos and books by Leadbetter, McLean, Mann and several Tour Pros. I could never understand how teaching to hit a stationary golf ball could be more complex than teaching to hit a 90 mph fastball. The answer is, it's not. The golf teaching industry has looked at the swing and said, "we see how it moves". So that's the way they teach. In a visual mode by positions. But the golf swing is really controlled by feedback (feel). You can't see your own positions. I finally drastically improved after I read Ernest Jones' 'Swing the Clubhead'. Flick's 'On Golf' is a progression of Jones' concept and gives a more indepth look at how to attain and keep a feel-based swing. We are not machines. We cannot accurately repeat positions. But we can repeat feel and Jim Flick understands that.
13 internautes sur 13 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 Get the rest at the library, get this one from Amazon! 1 décembre 2000
Par Drew Ross - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Relié
If you are at the beginning of your golfing experience, go to your local library and check out whatever they have on the golf swing and golf mechanics in general. Then, after you have some knowledge of the swing and have started to understand what you want to be doing during the swing, come back to your computer and buy this book. It teaches the basic mechanics also so you will have that foundation, but then Flick stresses a much under-taught lesson. The lesson of feeling your game. You have to be able to feel the rhythm of the swing, the ability to connect with the ball rather than whack or stab it. It is an invaluable lesson to learn and one that you will continually need to refer to.

If you are a more experienced golfer, you may have read a hundred books and still find yourself reverting or being absolutely baffled because you can't wuite figure out what you're doing wrong. Well, you need to feel your swing. This book will help where the rest have left you standing in the bunker.

I have read countless books on golf. This one is short on pretty pictures but large on the magic that we all who call ourselves golfers are after. It's that moment of impact when you know that you felt the club face meet with the ball so cleanly that you barely felt it. If you know the moment I'm talking about and you want to feel it more often, this book is for you.

12 internautes sur 13 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile 
5.0 étoiles sur 5 Playing by Feel 21 août 2001
Par Adam Markowitz - Publié sur Amazon.com
Format:Broché
I own and have read over 20 golf instruction books (I'm a nut for this stuff!). With the exception of Manuel de la Torre's "Understanding the Golf Swing" (for which I wrote the first Amazon review) it is by far the best golf book I have ever read. Flick's instruction, swing drills, humor and motivational messages are all right on. This book is not only instructive, but funny; it is a delight to read, and to put into practice. I thoroughly recommend this book to anyone wishing to improve their game and have more fun in the process. By the way, the "4-step", "left foot, right toe", and "left hand off after impact" drills have improved my golf swing immeasurably. Thanks Jim!
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