Monday, November 17, 2008

Golf Fitness Goals

Many common movement restrictions in golfers are tight hips, obliques, lats and pecs, weak upper back and glute muscles and poor ankle mobility. These restrictions are usually due to reoccurring muscle damage and the lack of flexibility work. Also, over compensation of more dominant muscles causes weakness in important movement and stabilizer muscles. Injury often occurs because the more dominant muscles get fatigued and the smaller, less dominant muscles cannot handle the stress of the movement. Common injury areas are the knees, hips, lower and upper back, and shoulders. Stability in these joints is very important for a lengthy, productive season! This leads us to the main goals of an off-season golf training program.

  1. Improve muscle tissue quality in the prime movers involved in the golf swing.
  2. Increase joint mobility or stability in joints that do not have proper movement or support from surrounding muscles.
  3. Develop strength and powerful, explosive movement patterns relating to the golf swing.
  4. Increase endurance to make consistent swing patterns through a full round of golf.

These are the areas that can have the greatest impact on your golf game. A well designed golf performance training program should effectively and efficiently target all of these areas.

Friday, November 7, 2008

First Things First!

The main goal during offseason performance training is to strengthen weak points in your movement. This can be done with a golf coach, a golf performance trainer, or preferably both. Getting periodic lesson with a knowledgeable golf coach is the best way to refine habits in your golf swing, however, getting golf lessons alone only goes so far. A golf coach is going to ask you to perform movements and get into positions that you may not physically be able to handle.


Enter performance training. Stay tuned!

Thursday, November 6, 2008

What Happened To My Golf Game?

In the sport of golf, the off-season is usually the time when your game goes down the drain. The cold weather forces you inside. Your dedication to the sport dwindles because there is no opportunity to play or practice. You don’t practice movement and study technique as much. By the time spring rolls around and the greens dry out, your golf game is like a bear coming out of hibernation, wobbling and stumbling as it tries to remember how to walk. The first month or two is spent just establishing the level of play that you went into the winter with. With a new set of clubs as a Christmas present, and your first outing of the season with a potential client, topping and slicing your way through 18 is not exactly the best way to attack the new season.

Visit www.thenewfit.net for professional personal training. Our trainers are experts in golf performance and have a program for you at a price that's right!

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

The Beginning of a Beautiful Friendship

Golf is a tricky sport to train for and it really depends on where you live and play as to how you train. Being as golf can be a seasonal sport or a year round sport it makes it hard to establish a solid periodized program. If you live in Florida, you probably play year round. If you live in New York, you probably only get about 7 months of play. Now for the New Yorkers, it is easy to establish an “offseason” training program because there is going to be minimal play (if any), which leaves only the driving range to work a training program around.

Ever wonder how the pros train to get and stay at the top of their game? Stay tuned to my blog as I take you step by step on how to design and implement an effective off-season golf specific training program.

Tiger's Rehab

Checkout what tiger is doing while he is injured! Are you doing all you can to be the best golfer you can be?