"IF YOU LIKE GOLF"

weekly online golf column
by
Chris Dortch

May 13, 2003

It was only a matter of time before the Internet became a vital part of golf instruction. That time has come.

Thanks to technology introduced by the Internet Golf Academy, a student having trouble with his game in California can e-mail his instructor in New York a digital image of his swing. The instructor can then break down the swing, dictate his suggestions into a microphone and send the e-mail back to his student (see examples at end of this article.)

In more conventional fashion, a golfer can take a lesson from his swing instructor, then have a distilled version of the lesson, complete with drills to work on for next time, waiting in his e-mail box by the time he returns home.

It all works through IGA's website, where students have "lockers" where their lessons are stored. With a password, the golfer can download his lesson any time he wants.

Not surprisingly, Chattanooga Golf Center's Zeb Patten was the first area professional to invest in IGA's professional software (a cheaper version is available for non-professionals). Patten has always been on the cutting edge of video and computer technology in his instruction. He saw IGA's presentation at the PGA Merchandise show in Florida over the winter and was quickly sold on the concept.

Click here to register to win this type of golf lesson free from
 Chattanooga Golf Center

"What a great way to get feedback to your students," Patten said. "You just send people an e-mail as opposed to sending them home with a [lesson] tape. It might take you 45 minutes to go through the tape, and you might not always get what you need from watching it. This way, you know right away what's going on with your swing and are reminded what the instructor is suggesting you work on."

As a player dedicated to improvement, I must admit to watching hours and hours of tape. But as Patten said, wading through an entire lesson can be tedious. As much as I want to learn from every lesson, sometimes watching them over again can be counterproductive.

Not so with IGA's new e-mail concept. Eager to try Patten's new toy, two of us from this website went to the Golf Center for a lesson. Mike Jenkins is an experienced tournament player and I'm a 12 handicapper trying to shave off those last few strokes to get into single digits.

That quest has been agonizingly long-don't you just hate it when work gets in the way of your golf game?-but after taking a lesson from Patten and then downloading a four-minute synopsis, I believe my quest has just reached the fast track. I've found it considerably easier to have his instruction reinforced. I've probably watched the lesson file-through Windows Media Player-15 times in the five days since my lesson, and each time Patten's suggestions become a bit more ingrained. It doesn't hurt that we're working on just one simple drill-to ensure a downswing controlled by the big muscles-but there's nothing quite like having your golf lesson sitting on your computer's desktop, available any time you want it. My VCR and voluminous chicken-scratched notes on reams of paper are a thing of the past.

"We've had nothing but positive feedback in the month we've been doing this," Patten said. "A lot of people on tour are already using it, guys like Phil Mickelson [and instructor Rick Smith] and Tiger Woods [with instructor Butch Harmon]. You just can't beat the fact that these e-mails you get are short, sweet and to the point."

"The technology is a great concept," Jenkins said. "Zeb's setup is a real plus. Of course you wouldn't want to take a lesson just because of the technology. You have to go to a teacher who knows what he's doing. Chattanooga is blessed with a lot of good teachers who know what they're doing. And Zeb is certainly one of them.  I was very impressed with the entire process."

Click here to see Mike Jenkins lesson

Click here to see Chris Dortch lesson

Click here to register to win this type of golf lesson free from
 Chattanooga Golf Center

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