Jude Read is a PGA Professional at Manston Golf Centre. With over 25 years of experience, Jude offers a unique coaching program, The Pathway Program, this program helps golfers that have the passion to do whatever it takes and follow a personalised plan to play better golf and feel proud on the golf course.
…and Norman showed his true colors over time as a lying cheating narcissistic jerk who now helped to bring about the abomination that is LIV. II could watch him get humiliated all day every day,k a total jerk.
@deantaylor5614 Thank you! My Monday morning coffee is now tepid, so that your comment sent it shooting out my nostrils caused me no pain. It’s rainy and cold in Minneapolis today, but the Great White Shart just warmed me from the inside-out with cackling laughter. Great way to start the week. 🙏🏽✌🏽💙 from Minnesota
not when you're supposed to be number one golf pro in the world and playing at the top of your game. Jack Nicklaus would have never given up a six-shot lead on the final day of a major. Most great players never even get the chance to blow a lead that big.........Norman is a choke. always was and always will be. it keeps him awake at night.
Now with new modern phone scoring systems,once the pro has set up comp in computer, player just enters gross score and phone app calculates the stableford score.. So so easy.
For many many reasons Norman has a chip on his shoulder. Someday, when he looks back , he might realize the chip is LIV. And nobody likes it , nor him now.
Used to be a norman fan. This gutted me at the time. Now, the soul seller that turned his back on the tour that paid his millions so that he could have his toys and his lavish lifestyle is nothing more than a soul selling traitor! Long live Faldo, and I'm sooooo glad that the traitor doesn't own a green jacket! And I chuckled that he had to buy his own ticket just to get into the Masters this year.
How do I get the feeling of the clubhead “overtaking” my hands at impact? Also…the baseball grip is interesting…..how does that help and could it be used on all shots? Many thanks 🤗
I saw a Faldo interview about this Masters where he said he thought a 67 in the final round would win the tournament - thstvis a 5 under round, he trailed Norman by 6 after the 3rd round. In other words he KNEW Norman would choke....which he did.
This has become my favorite masters to watch. Why, you ask? Because Greg Norman has shown himself to be a golfer, a millionaire golfer, who would rather take money from the blood thirsty Saudi’s, people who would kill you just because you have different opinions, and in the process destroy the PGA tour, that win a green jacket.
Yes Nick Faldo played a great round, but Greg Norman completely disintegrated on Sunday, causing an ELEVEN SHOT SWING! That’s what is known as CHOKING, especially considering how highly experienced Greg Norman was at that stage of his career. I think the other contributory factor was that Greg has had so many big tournaments snatched away from him by some miraculous golf shots!
Agreed, but good players do still choke. Rory led by 4 into the final round 2011 Masters & tied for 15th, 10 shots back, or a 14 shot swing. Retief Goosen led by 3 shots going into the 2005 US Open final round, shoots 81 to lose by 8 in an 11 shot turn-around. Unfortunately for those players, it happens but at least they have been major winners anyway.
@@Tigerwoods663 Choking/nerves happen in the final round, when the tournament is on the line. Is there an occasion where a player has shot 77 & won a Major? They would be most likely missing the cut.
I was waiting on your comment . 😜 yes I wanted to show how keeping a level head will help consistency. So when you make a birdie on the course try not to get too excited as it could affect your mental game on the next few holes . Try and stay focused 😜
Faldo did shoot 67 (-5) that day. So I mean assuming everything played out like it did, Greg still would have have to shoot 72 (E) to beat him outright. Shooting even par on the last day of a major isn’t necessarily the easiest thing to do.
@@Kevin-lf4xx Yeah I think it’s not so much the “collapse” that people remember so much…well he he did collapse to a point, but it was more the fact that Faldo beat him by by 11 shots that day. Greg shot 78, so he started up by 6 and ended the day losing to Faldo by 5. Faldo did make a meaningless birdie putt on 18 when the pressure was totally off though, but still.