Friday, December 10, 2004
School of Chipping and Pitching 12/11/04
The area around the green can be as frustrating as getting your pant leg stuck in your bike chain. Veteran PGA Pro Ernie Barbour and I hope to remove your frustration, and teach you the sound FUNdamentals of the chip, pitch, and bump and run.
We know the short game is important. Stats indicate that even PGA Tour Players miss 6.5 greens per round. And the average PGA Tour Player has a scoring average of 71. It doesn’t take an actuary science degree to figure out that the greatest difference between amateurs and professionals lies in the short game.
The area around the green can be as frustrating as getting your pant leg stuck in your bike chain. Veteran PGA Pro Ernie Barbour and I hope to remove your frustration, and teach you the sound FUNdamentals of the chip, pitch, and bump and run.
We know the short game is important. Stats indicate that even PGA Tour Players miss 6.5 greens per round. And the average PGA Tour Player has a scoring average of 71. It doesn’t take an actuary science degree to figure out that the greatest difference between amateurs and professionals lies in the short game.
Saturday, 12/11/04
2 hours of instruction
10:00am - 12:00am
4:1 student:instructor ratio
What’s My Lie? Where is the Pin?
We will discuss situations for chipping, the bump-and-run, and the high pitch. In this small group setting, you will have the opportunity to learn by observation, discussion, and hands on instruction.
Sign-up early, limited space available!
Cost: $95 per player
Sorry!! This school is Full!!