FREE Information Package
|
 |
GOLF TEACHING PRO®

As modern golf teaching
professionals, we may all be inadvertently taking credit for the
popularity and present boom to the incredible growth of the game.
Taking an objective look into the history of our sport, however,
it’s plain to see that the old school really deserves the credit.
Here are just a few milestones in the deep history of our precious
pastime:
● It is assumed back in medieval times that Scottish shepherds were
inventors of the game. They would while away the hours on the
Scottish lowlands hitting pebbles with their crooks.
● 1848 - Golf ball construction in Edinburgh improved to the point
that the gutta-percha ball (or guttie) enabled golf to become
exportable to England, Ireland, France and India.
● 1857 - With the expansion came the first formal golf instruction
from ex-patriot Scots and included the first book of golf
instruction, titled “A Keen Hand,” by H.B Farnie.
● 1900 - The modern wound (Haskill) golf ball made the guttie
obsolete, and golf instruction was advanced even more directly with
the arrival of the touring professional. Soaring popularity and
plummeting travel costs ushered in the barnstorming era, when
golfers such as Harry Vardon could earn a living from personal
appearances, tournament purses and exhibition matches. Vardon racked
up six British Open crowns and the 1900 US Open title.
● 1920s - Although both the first golf magazines and the
Professional Golfers Association appeared early in the 20th century,
barnstorming professionals and Bobby Jones would continue to
dominate golf instruction right up to the Great Depression. Huge
crowds flocked to see Jones and Walter Hagen on both sides of the
Atlantic, learning such secrets as Hagen’s straight-line putting:
drawing the clubface back from the ball in a straight line rather
than the slight arc popular at the time. His innovation was
important in the 1920’s and allowed him to win many tournaments, but
it is even important today with the increased emphasis on fast,
difficult putting surfaces.
● 1960s - The first national golf school evolved. Teaching
professionals, too, found that the golf magazines and their
increasingly visible work with touring professionals brought them
more business then they could handle on a local level. Furthermore,
top touring pros began seeking the advice of golf gurus such as
Gardner Dickenson, Bob Toski, Harvey Penick, and Jack Grout. At the
same time Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, and Gary Player parlayed
their tournament success into an empire of instructional
publications, magazine, articles, television, tips and
ghost-written, handsomely illustrated books.
● 1970s - The groundwork was laid during this time for radical turf
preparation, golf club technology and instructional technique. The
cavity-back iron, the metal wood, the graphite shaft, as well as
revolutionary changes in irrigation technique and turf laying are
all dated to this time.
● 1980s - Video analysis of the golf swing, the influential theory
of connection, and the emphasis of big-muscle leadership date to the
pioneering work of David Leadbetter, Jimmy Ballard, and others. Golf
instruction also became more specialized, as teachers by the mid-80s
began to emphasize their expertise with practical golf instruction
(John Jacobs), short game instruction (Dave Pelz), women's
instruction (Penny Zavichas and Linda Craft), and mental
conditioning (Bob Rotella and Chuck Hogan).
● 1990s and beyond - Golf instruction had boomed to the point that
there are now a multitude of national golf schools offering hundreds
of programs across the country, with a cornucopia of techniques,
price points, regimens and training goals. Virtually all the
national golf schools offer videotapes and books for sale. Harvey
Penick’s “Little Red Book” also became the biggest selling sports
book of all time. In short, golf instruction has expanded into one
of the largest and most vibrant sectors of the substantial golf
economy.
So thanks, old schoolers. We proudly stand on fairways that you have
perfectly manicured for us.
Back
to Main Articles
Copyright © 2011 United States Golf Teachers Federation, All Rights Reserved. Reproduction of this article in any kind is strictly prohibited.
|
|