Showing posts with label Golf Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golf Tips. Show all posts

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Dave's Forsgate Fitness Tips

Dave Kopf
Q and A about Golf Fitness and Training 

What is a Certified Golf Fitness Instructor?
A Certified Golf Fitness Instructor (C.G.F.I) is someone who has attended the Titleist Performance Institute comprehensive workshop/ seminar and who has successfully completed and passed its rigorous certification requirements including a comprehensive cumulative test.  A Certified Golf Fitness Instructor will work one on one with their client to improve range of motion, rotational power, core strength and stability, as well as improve flexibility through proven sport specific exercises.

What does the Titleist golf screening provide?
The Titleist golf screen is a 13 point evaluation process that your C.G.F.I will use to diagnose, and treat any muscle imbalance or weakness, as well as any range of motion limitations that could translate into major golf swing faults.  For example, casting, over the top, or reverse spine angle just to name a few.

What can one look to gain through working with a C.G.F.I ?
Improved muscle strength as well as muscle balance, increased range of motion, as well as an increase in their flexibility, thus leading to a more consistent swing, more energy, and extra “pop” on the ball.

How long does the Titleist screening take?
A thorough screening should take anywhere from 30- 45 minutes depending upon your level of fitness and ability.

How long are the Golf Specific Training sessions?
Each training session will be an hour.  Within that hour there will be a 7-10 minute cardiovascular / muscle activation warm-up, followed by corrective exercises based upon the information the golf screening provides, there will then be a cool down, followed by passive stretching.

Dave's Forsgate Fitness Tips


Dave Kopf
Core Training Class

Core Training is a total conditioning program that works your body "from the inside out" by focusing on "core" muscles – mostly those in the stomach and back.  It's also a mind-body exercise, which, like yoga, stresses proper breathing while you do very precise body movements. The core muscles are the basis for everyday movements in life: lifting, bending, turning, pushing, pulling, and twisting.

Core Training can help you enjoy all forms of exercise, and daily activities with greater ease and decreased risk of injury. It conditions your entire body, stretching and strengthening muscles uniformly, promoting balanced musculature, core control, flexibility and agility. The "Core Conditioned Body" features an erect vibrant posture, toned thighs and calves, a resilient back with increased bone density, and firm abdominals.

Call to set up your personal training session with Dave at 732-521-8049.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Some Words About Golf Chris Schiavone

Some “Words” About Golf…


By Christopher Schiavone


This column first appeard in the Spring 2012 issue of Golfer's Tee Times





Being both a cruciverbalist (a lover of crossword puzzles) and a “golf-o-phile” (or perhaps “golfaholic” is better), I was pleasantly surprised recently when the Sunday New York Times crossword puzzle contained a golfer’s theme, mostly of double entendres using common golf terms.


It caused me to look into the some of the more interesting words and terms in the game of golf. For example, did you know that …

“Sabbath Sticks” were golf clubs designed to look like walking sticks, so that players could surreptitiously play on Sundays, when the Church frowned upon engaging in sport.

A “Biarritz Green” is a putting surface with a large gully through the middle of it, named after the Biarritz Golf Club in France, from where the original green of this style is copied.

“Caddie” likely comes from the French word “cadet” -- a boy or youngest member of the family.  (It is not surprising that the Scots derive words from the French, as the two countries were often allies, including at the time golf first came into “vogue” in the 16th century.  Mary, Queen of Scots was both a golfer and fluent in French.)

“Dormie” – the term used to describe the status of a match-play contest, when one is leading by as many holes as are left to play – also comes from the French.  “Dormir” is French for “sleep,” and the leading player can rest knowing he can’t lose when the match is dormie.

“Fore” probably came from “fore-caddie” – the boys (usually male, anyway) often sent before the golfers to track golf balls.  Calling to these helpers likely shortened from “Fore-caddy!” to just “Fore!”


The term “Birdie” for a score of one under par is said to have its origin locally.  Players at the Atlantic City Country Club apparently coined the term.

While there is no definitive story about how “Mulligan” came to mean a “do-over” in golf, but some believe it is also of Garden State origin.  A gentleman named Mulligan was said to be known for his errant and often-replayed tee shots at Essex Fells Country Club.

The “Nassau” – probably the most common form of golf match played by average golfers – is said to have originated at the Nassau Country Club on Long Island.

And in case you are playing a round one afternoon with your old high school English teacher, remember that in bragging about your multiple aces, say “holes-in-one” and not “hole-in-ones.”  (If it’s your old civics teacher, remember “Attorneys-General”…)

Of course, with my game, cross words – the kind not suitable for print -- and golf often go together.

Christopher Schiavone is the President and Chief Executive Officer of RDC Golf Group Inc.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Quick Tip for Golf Players

Trevor Alexander


Early spring in the northeast can bring a plethora of weather. Temperatures still drop and the wind will gust making the already challenging game of golf even more difficult. My advice is to attempt to simplify what we are trying to accomplish. Below are a couple points that will hopefully help during these spring months.





  • Get to the course 15 minutes earlier than normal; warming up is key when temperatures are low. Hitting a few balls before jumping on the tee will also help prevent injuries. 
  • Use an extra club; this will allow you to swing a little easier and also the lower loft will keep the ball down out of the spring winds.
  • When putting use less break and hit putts with slightly more pace. Greens in the spring can be inconsistent due to the weather, be more aggressive on bumpy greens.
  • Try not to think that it is July already; it is not 90 degrees and sunny, plus we have not had a chance to home in our games yet. Keep realistic expectations such as aiming for the middle of fairways and greens and not at small targets.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Spring has sprung at Forsgate

Carolyn McKenzie Andrews,
Director of Golf
Spring has sprung at Forsgate!


How many of you put your clubs away for the winter? How many of you rushed out the other day to play when it was in the 70’s? I bet a lot of you! Did any of you feel sore or tight the next day?  Here is a quick tip to get you ready for this season and shake off the winter.


It may seem silly and unimportant but you have to warm up your body before you go out on to the course. It may not always be possible but you have to give yourself at least 15-20 minutes to loosen up that body. Touch your toes, take practice swings. Begin your warm up by hitting half shots with your wedge. Then work yourself up to your driver.  When I see someone grab the driver for the first swing….  I think to myself, OUCH! (unless you are a  9 year old).
If you go straight to the first tee and begin playing, it may take you two or three holes to warm up. Don’t make the mistake of starting your round with an 8, and blaming it on “warming up.”


So get the season and your golf game off to a positive start.  Get on the range to warm up before you play! Good luck and let me know how it goes!!


Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Turf Talk With Tom Saunders

The weather is still amazingly temperate for January.  We have been edging bunkers and pruning up low hanging branches since there is no snow cover.


We also are continuing to move hole locations regularly and, believe it or not, have been hand mowing greens.  The guys mowed the Banks course greens last week and we removed 3 utility vehicles full of grass clippings so obviously the turf is still healthy and growing.


Take a look around the club next time you visit.  My staff has been painting many locations and new carpeting is being installed downstairs in the Gallery, near the ladies locker room and in front of the Edinburgh room. New furniture and area rugs are in the Great room also.  I think it all looks fantastic.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Zerny and “the Dog”

Over the past two years, RDC Golf Group Chief Executive Officer Chris Schiavone has been a regular columnist for New Jersey's Golfer's Tee Times newspaper offering insights and anecdotes about his passion and ours...GOLF. Enjoy this column highlighting his experiences with the game's most colorful characters...caddies!





What other sport has a competitor’s assistant following you around while you play, carrying your equipment and giving you advice, but not directly participating in the game itself?  While I am not familiar with every sport practiced around the world, golf seems unique in this regard.  It also results in some wonderful anecdotes told amongst golfers about this often-unusual bag-carrying bunch.

About 15 years ago, I and three friends played at Royal Dornoch in the Scottish Highlands.  Our foursome was provided two caddies, both about age 60 it appeared, who did an excellent job of reading greens and selecting clubs.  They were so well attired that one of our group remarked to them on the fifth or sixth tee that they “dressed better than most members, much less caddies!” 

“We are members!” they replied.  (In fact, this is not unusual over there.) 

We joined them for lunch after our morning round, and when we inquired about whether they would go out with us again in the afternoon, they told us they were playing in a tournament down the road at another club!  I don’t imagine that at 60 years old I would be physically capable of “double-bagging” in the morning, and playing in a 18-hole match that afternoon, much less willing!

But as physical feats go, my caddy experience in West Virginia is the most impressive.  Twenty years ago my wife and I, along with another couple, traveled to the Greenbrier resort.  On the first morning we awoke to a steady, soaking rain, which showed no sign of abatement after breakfast.  The ladies didn’t mind the weather; they had a day of spa treatments scheduled and displayed no concern for what me and my buddy were going to do with ourselves, as if to say “you’re the one-trick ponies addicted to golf…don’t look at us.”

So we looked at each other instead, and thought the same thing without needing to utter the words.  “Let’s play in the rain.”  We went to the pro shop and told the man behind the counter of our intention to play. 

“We’ll try to get you out as soon as it lets up,” he responded. 

“That’s alright,” we countered, “we’ll play now.” 

“I’m sorry, but we aren’t letting carts out,” he rejoined. 

“We’ll take caddies,” we replied, undeterred.

“I don’t know if any of them will go out in this weather,” he said.  “I’ll call down to the caddyshack and check.”

The Greenbrier has 54 holes of golf and a large retinue of caddies, many of whom are young.  Only two were willing to work in that weather, but two was all we needed.  The younger of these two, Al, was 73, and carried my friend’s bag because it was bigger than mine.  My bag went onto the shoulder of Zerny Wykle, age 87. 

So we started playing golf in a heavy rain, and the four of us -- two rather stupid middle-aged golfers, and two elderly, gritty, bag-toting Mountaineers – were drenched before we reached the first green. 

But by the third hole, the sky cleared, the sun shone, and we had the Old White course at Greenbrier all to ourselves, or at least it seemed that way.  Zerny was a good caddie for any age, reading putts with acumen, recommending clubs, and describing aspects of the course not easily discerned by the view from the tee or fairway.  He also imparted other information, such as how to cook possum (“Boil it until the pot rattles.”).  Some bits of information were more helpful than others. 

We talked and walked, and Zerny informed me that he had been caddying for decades, but had given up carrying two bags (at a time) when he turned 80.  When I inquired as to the key to his health and stamina (wrongly expecting to get another reference to possum-eating), he said simply, “Milk.”  At the halfway house I asked him what he would like to drink (it was hot and sunny by then) he looked at me curiously, as if it were a foolish question, and again said “Milk.” 

Zerny provided me with the best caddy experience of my life, and to top it off, he was ready bright and early the following morning, and carried for me again.  He remembered my shots from the day before, even to the point where he re-clubbed me on the 10th hole to keep me from landing in the same creek I had found the round before.  Perhaps milk is also good for your memory.

A year or so later, at Pebble Beach, one of the caddies in our group was called “the Dog.”  You had only to look at him to understand.  Our foursome was hungover from a late night, and we walked slowly to the tee for our 6:45am start time.  But we looked well-rested compared to “the Dog.”  Clearly a hard drinker, he looked as if he had been mugged between the pro shop and the tee box. (The golfers at Pebble are mugged in the pro shop with the cost of a souvenir hat or shirt.)

On the fifth hole, one of the assistant pros drove up to our group to ask how we were enjoying our round.  After we chatted, he turned to “the Dog” and asked him if he needed anything.  “A red, white and blue,” he answered in a voice that went well with the chain-smoking he was doing.  By the time we got halfway down the par-5 sixth hole, there was a can of Budweiser (I did not understand what “the Dog” had asked for until I saw the colors on the can.) waiting for “the Dog” on the edge of the cart path.  The other caddy with us, a young kid, said that the caddy rules prohibiting drinking while “looping” were waived for “the Dog.”  I thought of telling him about Zerny’s beverage of choice, but then, you can’t teach an old “Dog” new tricks.

Zerny would be about 108 now, so I assume he has left us, although he was a robust 87 back then.  “The Dog,” though younger, probably didn’t make it to half of 108.  Both, however, along with others like them, live on in the memories of those who love the game of golf and the colorful characters that populate it.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Turf Talk With Tom Saunders


Tom Saunders
The weather has been very mild for late December and early January due to the position of the North Atlantic Oscillation (NOA).  Last year the NOA was sitting over Greenland and we were getting hammered with snow storms and frigid cold weather.  This year it is positioned farther South, so the clockwise circulation of the NOA is keeping the cold air and storms in Northern Canada. 

YEA !!!!!  The last thing the crew and I are looking for after working long hours all golf season is having to come in before dawn and on weekends to plow and shovel snow in the winter. Believe me we are very happy working a 40 hour work week.

Due to the temperate winter we have done some unusual maintenance on the course.  We hand mowed greens on the Banks course last week, we mowed 1 and 18 fairways on the Banks course also and we finished trimming all the sprinkler heads on both courses. 

Incredible!  Last year as you recall, we got snow cover by the middle of December and a blizzard the day after Christmas that dumped 18 inches on us.

The forecast for, January 6th, is clear with a high around 48.  (Believe it or not we mowed the clubhouse lawns that day.)  Saturday, January 7th, they are predicting a daytime high of 53.  Wow.  It sounds like a great day to break in those new sticks you received for Christmas.  We are going to try and cut new cup locations today if we can break through the frost layer in the ground.

When you are on the course check out the bunker renovations we completed on:
  • 1 green left bunker
  • 3 green back bunker
  • 4 green both bunkers
  • 5 tee bank
  • 8 green left bunker and partial right bunker
  • 11 fairway bunker and adjoining rough
  • 16 green all 4 bunkers
  • 18 green left bunker

We will continue with a few more bunker renovations in the early spring as soon as our supplier can resume cutting sod.  We also cut down some of the natural areas on the course.  We do leave some areas that you can see from the club until spring because I think it adds a little visual winter interest. We also left the large areas behind 2 green and right of 7 for our local wild life. 

Speaking of wildlife keep your eyes open when on the course to see our resident foxes, I saw 2 on the range tee this morning, which seem to be flourishing and our winter migrant raptors who have made FCC there winter residence.  I have seen Redtail Hawk, Sharpshin Hawk and Coopers Hawk so far. 

Unfortunately, we have our “not so welcome migrant Canada Geese as well”.  We will do our best to clean up their debris and harass them so they move on.

I look forward to sharing our experiences with you so check back as often as you can.

CONTACT INFO: Tom Saunders

Monday, November 14, 2011

PGA Professional Golf Tips For Beginners


Mark Mazzolo, Head Golf Professional

One of the most commonly requested improvements is “consistency”. You gain more consistency by striking the ball rather than scooping the ball. If you use the golf club how it was designed to be hit, your game will get more consistent.
Golfers come in different shapes, sizes, abilities, and talent levels that make every golf swing unique. For as long as I have been teaching this game I have not seen the same swing come from two different golfers but every good golfer is using the club correctly.
The golf club was designed to be hit in the most powerful position, slightly in front of the ball with forward shaft lean. If the sole of the club is lying flat on a surface the shaft of the club will always lean toward your target. With this fact in mind it is imperative that you use the golf club this way to consistently strike the golf ball.
The most effective way to accomplish the goal of using the club correctly is to combine a circular motion around your body with balance and limited extra movement making sure that your hands and body are in front of the ball when you are making contact.
There is no right or wrong way to swing a club there is just a right or wrong way to use the club!


Find more golf tips at Golf For Beginners

 We want to remind all the golfers at Forsgate that they can maintain their consistency throughout the winter by continuing to practice their game at Forsgate. The indoor practice facility will open at the end of the month.