Editor's Blog

Thanks to Hank

Following up on yesterday's reader comments about the hefty fees charged by some of instructors on Golf Digest 50 Greatest Teachers list, here's the other side of debate.  Tim Schoch of Scotch Plains, New Jersey says his work with Hank Haney two decades ago made all the difference:

Maar01_50greatest_haney07

My high-handicap buddies recently grumbled that a PGA teaching pro is overkill for their game.  Is it true?  Won't it take forever before the new swing changes "stick"?

I'm just the hacker to answer that, and I’ll travel back 20 years to do it.

In 1987, Hank Haney spent a week teaching me, a nobody with an over-the-top swing and a handicap with an exponent.
Back then, editor Al Barkow ran a contest in his golf magazine [the old Golf Illustrated] called "Ask Hank Haney's Help." Readers were encouraged to write in and explain creatively why their game needed Hank's help. The best letter would receive one week of Hank's instruction at PGA West.

My letter won out of more than 950.

What I expected from Hank were swing-plane lectures and one-footed drills. What I received was an hour a day with a gracious Hank Haney who patiently and brilliantly began to anesthetize my flailing mess of a swing with logic, examples, praise, and joy. By improving my understanding of the golf swing, I soon began to see something brand new: hope! Following each inspiring lesson, I'd gleefully work for hours practicing what he preached. Then, I took it to the course. Before I left PGA West, I shot 84, 10 strokes lower than my best score of the previous two years. Also, I appeared on the magazine cover with Hank, and my diary of the experience was published. My best prize of all is one that all high-handicappers can easily receive from their PGA pro: a lesson in how fulfilling it is to understand better golf, then play it. 
Because of "my" PGA teaching pro, I've had 20 years of hope, instead of 20 years of hacking.

Well said, Tim. And despite a bit of struggle at Carnoustie, I think a fellow named Tiger would happily co-sign your letter.

--Bob Carney

(Illustration: Apple, Chris Riley)

Comments

Archived Comments (2) Click to expand

I just want to say that I've been listening to the golf channel for the past hour and I'm sick of the comments from Brandell Chamblee regarding Sergio's press conference and performance. Brandell has had multiple comments regarding Sergio's development, maturity, being dissapointed at having lost, etc. I think Brandell Chamblee should take a good long look at his own accomplishments before he decides to cast stones at someone who played with passion, enthusiasm, and fire this week. Sergio gave us the first Open Championship to be excited about, not involving Tiger, in many years. Brandell Chamblee (a name that sounds like a product line of furniture at Ethan Allen) hasn't done anything I can remember other than providing a number of mindless comments on the Golf Channel for which I can't believe he gets paid. I offer.... Brandell... At least Sergio's been there and is someone we all root for. Johnny Miller's comments aren't always well received, but at least he's been there. Competed. Won. What have you done? Sergio was great, handled his loss with a lot more dignity and class than many would have, including you. Just a thought...

Posted by Mbriganti July 22, 2007 7:05 PM

About the Brandel/Sergio/Miller stuff. I don't think announcers have to earn their right to criticize or voice an opinion based on how well they played professional golf. They are broadcasters, paid to inspire discussion. As usual, the controversy is about perception vs human reality vs hype. Viewers watch for different reasons, but how can anyone complain about watching Tiger win? Good gawd. When Vijay was winning, the big complaint was that he wasn't fiery enough. Phil's not fiery, yet people love his galunking style. Frankly, I'm confounded by it all, but I wouldn't blame Brandel (even if he does it on phone books). I think the underlying gripe is that some viewers just want to be entertained by fist-pumping and club-throwing. Next time, turn off the TV and pop in an "Outlaw Golf" CD.

Posted by TimSchoch July 23, 2007 8:32 AM
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