
The secrets to using technology to transform your game – Chase Cooper #210
nardos
Description
<p>Today on the Brain Booster we are joined by one of the brightest and best upcoming coaches is the USA, Chase Cooper</p> <p>Chase works alongside Hal Sutton at his academy in Texas</p> <p>Together they are building a special reputation for making a BIG difference to the way students play and enjoy their game.</p> <p><a href="http://www.halsuttongolf.com" target="_blank" rel= "noopener">www.halsuttongolf.com</a></p> <p>Alongside Hal he hosts the wonderful podcast ‘Be the right club TODAY’ which has had a whole host of some of the best players to ever play the game of golf such as Tom Watson, Hale Irwin, Jim Furyk and Paul Azinger</p> <p>They work together in a quest to get the best out of each player’s ability.</p> <p>We discuss how Chase evolved as a coach</p> <p>The influence of Jim Hardy and Chris O’Connell</p> <p>How incorrect concepts held him back as a player</p> <p>The challenges of being a 6ft 7inch golfer and how he needed to work with key understandings to get the best from his game</p> <p>How to best use technology</p> <p>How to reduce the numbers to the CRITICAL variables</p> <p>How your numbers should be matched to SHOTS</p> <p>How to take swing changes to performance</p> <p>Why you should collect your data when you are playing WELL</p> <p>The importance of FACE CONTROL</p> <p>How you can better control the club face</p> <p>The myth of using ‘Big Muscles’ to control the club</p> <p>The ball only knows what the club face is doing at impact</p> <p>How the arms create speed and the body should support that</p> <p>Asking the key question ‘What do we know for CERTAIN about the shot you have just hit’</p> <p>How you can fix your game with opposites</p> <p>Understanding the role of ACCEPTANCE and what it can do for your game</p> <p>The many elements of acceptance and how to find which keys are personal to you as an individual</p> <p>The great story about how Tom Watson won the US Open in 1982 at Pebble Beach</p> <p>When in the first couple of days he had no idea where the ball was going</p> <p>What he did