Seve! - LynnBlakeGolf Forums

Seve!

The Scoring Zone - 100 Yards and In

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 02-12-2006, 05:46 PM
vj vj is offline
LBG Pro Contributor
 
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 246
The creativity is created by the practice of the necessary components........not the other way around.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 02-13-2006, 12:42 AM
birdie_man's Avatar
birdie_man birdie_man is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Canader
Posts: 1,092
I agree with you VJ.

When my technique is way off I don't care how much imagination I have I won't be able to hit any dramatic recovery shots- flop shots, etc. Put a club in Picasso's hands (creative guy I guess) and he won't be able to do it either w/o technique....

You have to be able to control that clubface/clubhead/clubshaft....

I don't like all the talk about "creativity"....no offence....but that word gets tossed around so much.....I personally don't even know what it means....or how it relates to golf.

Same with "imagination".....everyone says it's so important....I dunno....what's there to imagine.....? Maybe if they mean visualizing the shot??? I dunno.....I just think there's more to it than having an "imagination"....that just sounds too vague to me.

Maybe if your technique is perfect....then maybe creativity (whatever the hell it really means) makes the difference? Somehow....? I dunno.

Still sounds sketchy to me....don't know what it means.....

I think if you're skilled enough you can do whatever you want....skill=technique=confidence. Although, under pressure is prolly a different story....in which case I guess you'd need to know how to manage yourself and your anxiety.

Last edited by birdie_man : 02-13-2006 at 12:47 AM.
Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 02-13-2006, 01:10 AM
Homerson Homerson is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 52
How did Seve get to be so good? Do you really think he had a silent stash of Yoda's notes and read them all by the time he played the British Open at age 17?

For that matter, how do most kids under the age of 14 learn? How could anyone under the age of 21 achieve anything without an encyclopedic command of technical instruction????
Break down the words creativity and imagination, and you might have an answer!

I haven't taken any offence...I do think it is a little one dimensional to diminish how 'prolly' 9 out of 10 PGA tour guys would have acquired their skill sets.

I find it interesting how one of the top instructional web sites devote as much time to a brilliant dissertation on Steve Elkington's flop shot can then write (off) Seve's brilliance in three lines(one post), and one line(another post)!

I am still interested in Annikan's opinion since, I believe, Seve's short game was modeled by Mac O'Grady...
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 02-13-2006, 01:18 PM
birdie_man's Avatar
birdie_man birdie_man is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Canader
Posts: 1,092
Originally Posted by Homerson
How did Seve get to be so good? Do you really think he had a silent stash of Yoda's notes and read them all by the time he played the British Open at age 17?

For that matter, how do most kids under the age of 14 learn? How could anyone under the age of 21 achieve anything without an encyclopedic command of technical instruction????
Break down the words creativity and imagination, and you might have an answer!

I haven't taken any offence...I do think it is a little one dimensional to diminish how 'prolly' 9 out of 10 PGA tour guys would have acquired their skill sets.

I find it interesting how one of the top instructional web sites devote as much time to a brilliant dissertation on Steve Elkington's flop shot can then write (off) Seve's brilliance in three lines(one post), and one line(another post)!

I am still interested in Annikan's opinion since, I believe, Seve's short game was modeled by Mac O'Grady...
I dunno......I guess some would call it imagination....I just don't know what that is really. "Imagination." I just don't like it. Everyone talks about it so much.....no one explains what they think it is. I guess "it's" a hard thing to explain....prolly means different things to different people.

It just sounds like a vague thing to me....and I guess that's what it would be....it's such a feel thing.

I just jumped on that fast because imagination is always seemingly pegged as the universal answer to everything in golf.
Maybe I came out too strong.

...

I guess it's how Seve learned....how most PROS learned....and that's great I guess...

But you can't just take someone who can't hit the ball and tell him to use his imagination....it worked for the pros sure, but it doesn't work for 90% or everyone else....and I'm not sure one could say that people can't hit the ball because of a lack of imagination either.

...I suppose it's how you should execute....with feel, imagination, w/e you wanna call it. "Feel from mechanics."

I'm not so sure it's how EVERYONE should PURELY LEARN though....(not EVERYONE I said...some ppl do it well) I don't think that's what you were getting at....but I wanna say it.

Last edited by birdie_man : 02-13-2006 at 01:54 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 02-13-2006, 02:27 PM
danny_shank danny_shank is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Brighton, UK
Posts: 113
I think there's deinitely a lot more to creativity than just technique.

I've always thought being creative is about having the ability to accurately produce a wide variety of shots. I think imagination is interlinked with this as it is needed to decide the best shot for the situation.

For example an uncreative player might have great technique but might see every shot as a lob shot. I think a creative player is a 'thinking' player they don't just hit shots because thats what they did last time, they analyse the situation, they visualise the shots they could hit and use this to aid shot selection. Having decided on the shot they want to play they can then produce the shot that was in their minds eye. They might not have perfect tecnique but they need a consistant execution, so good technique obviously helps. I also think a lot of attention has to be paid to the feels during execution and watching exactly the path of the ball. All this feedback can be used to bridge the gap between visualisation, execution and the result.
Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 02-13-2006, 02:38 PM
Homerson Homerson is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 52
I agree on your last statement, Birdie Man! Many people are indeed better served through learning feel through mechanics, or some such approach.

I disagree about the figure 90%. I am not sure of any number to replace that. Why? Because if the pros can get to the highest level, by that route, then would possibly suggest and imply that they have gotton there by the most efficient means and therefore there is at least some merit in the approach.

Imagination lies for me in the realm of pictures and feelings rather than words. An example might be teaching someone in a bunker how to hit it higher. Would you say move it more to low point, more of an open/open proceedure, with a little vertical hinge rather than angled? Or would you get them to visualize hitting it higher, and let their body react and adjust.

Can one learn mechanics from feel?
Can you say after the learning experience, "This is what you did", possibly for future reference, or simply such that that person has more associations with that learning experience, and therefore has 'learnt' more conclusively?

Stan Utley gets a lot of positive press around here. At the last PGA Teaching and Coaching Summit he stood in front of 1000+ teachers and said that he doesn't know much, but someone recently told him that his action was a TGM hitting proceedure. Does he not know much? Or can he more easily relate to pictures and feelings than the spoken or written word?

Surely there is room for other approaches?

I'm still interested in Annikan's opinions?

Last edited by Homerson : 02-13-2006 at 02:42 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #7  
Old 02-13-2006, 02:52 PM
Yoda's Avatar
Yoda Yoda is offline
Administrator
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Atlanta, Georgia
Posts: 10,681
Principles, Mechanics and Artistry
Originally Posted by Homerson

How did Seve get to be so good? Do you really think he had a silent stash of Yoda's notes and read them all by the time he played the British Open at age 17?

For that matter, how do most kids under the age of 14 learn? How could anyone under the age of 21 achieve anything without an encyclopedic command of technical instruction????
Break down the words creativity and imagination, and you might have an answer!

I haven't taken any offence...I do think it is a little one dimensional to diminish how 'prolly' 9 out of 10 PGA tour guys would have acquired their skill sets.

I find it interesting how one of the top instructional web sites devote as much time to a brilliant dissertation on Steve Elkington's flop shot can then write (off) Seve's brilliance in three lines(one post), and one line(another post)!
I have long maintained that the Uncompensated Stroke as revealed and taught by Homer Kelley in his book, The Golfing Machine, is the simplest, most efficient move in Golf. I have also maintained that I, or anyone else adequately trained in his Star System of G.O.L.F., could teach it to a six-year-old without once mentioning the terms Geometry or Physics, much less any specific application of the two. At bottom, all that is required is that you keep your Left Wrist Flat and swing On Line through the Ball. And with training, that can be done reasonably well whether you are six or sixty-six and whether you have yet to graduate from grade school or hold a doctorate degree in physics.

The language of TGM facilitates discussion of the Golf Stroke, particularly by adults with an inclination toward such things and, also by those who wish to 'talk golf' through mediums that do not enjoy the visual and kinesthetic benefit of 'hands-on' demonstration. However, it is not at all required by adults not so inclined or children not yet mature enough for a detailed explanation of the concepts involved, but who do have the benefit of competent one-on-one instruction. As Homer used to say, "Most people don't want to be mechanics. They just want to be good little car steer-ers."

Regarding my Elkington versus Ballesteros posts...

In the Elkington post, I responded to a request to analyze a specific short Pitch Shot in TGM terms. And that is exactly what I did.

In the Ballesteros post, I was asked to "classify...in a golfing machine context" the principles Seve uses to perform his short game artistry. And, again, that is exactly what I did. Despite its brevity -- and remember, it takes time to be brief ("I would have written a shorter letter, but I didn't have the time." ) -- that post was comprehensive and quite specific as to the mechanical G.OL.F. principles involved.
__________________
Yoda
Reply With Quote
  #8  
Old 02-13-2006, 05:24 PM
Homerson Homerson is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 52
Thank You Yoda!
Reply With Quote
  #9  
Old 02-14-2006, 06:13 PM
tongueblabberer tongueblabberer is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 15
Seve was 19 when he gave Johnny Miller a scare at the British Open in 1976.
He was/is the youngest of several golf professional brothers, and the nephew of Ramon Sota, probably the most successfull Spanish pro before him.
Manuel Ballesteros in particular was tipped for great things, that almost, but never quite materialised.
But their experience played no small part in grooming Seve for greatness.
He was told by them all from an early age that he was the best, yes even better than his hero Nicklaus.
Now I think if your brothers, especially Manuel, are near the top of the game in Europe, and they are hammering that into you from childhood, you are more than one up already.
Children love INVENTING, especially while PLAYING.
Maybe Seve's short game genius was learned while inventing and playing rather than WORKING at his short game.
Subconsciously rather than consciously.
I think Mac O'Grady did a great job with him, but by then doubt had already crept in. The '86 Masters, I think it was, was the beginning.
Musings of a Seve fan.
Reply With Quote
  #10  
Old 02-14-2006, 07:00 PM
Homerson Homerson is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 52
Children love INVENTING, especially while PLAYING.
Maybe Seve's short game genius was learned while inventing and playing rather than WORKING at his short game.
Subconsciously rather than consciously.

This pertains to my persistance with this subject. Can we get to a masters level short game (Yes, TGM Masters level), without a step by step approach. Is a 'subconscious' approach quicker, better, the same.

Sometimes, other 'methods' are derided. What do you guys think are the benefits of Seve's approach v/s TGM approach? Are they combatible? Different?

What are your thoughts on Seve, V.J? From a playing and teaching standpoint you have proven your excellence and understanding with TGM. Have you studied Seve? Is it (his approach) incombatible with TGM?

Cheers,
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:32 AM.


Design by Vjacheslav Trushkin, color scheme by ColorizeIt!.