>2009 Junior Amateur Championship

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After coming close to a win last year, Jordan Spieth from Dallas Texas won the 2009 U.S. Junior Amateur at Trump National G.C. He took the lead on Jay Hwang of San Diego in the final match, after tying on the 33rd hole with an 8 foot putt. This win couldn’t be bestowed upon a greater junior. Spieth is a low-key, focused and driven player. With the help of his coach Cameron McCormick, Spieth has reached a level of maturity scarcely seen in a 15 years old player. His natural talent is matched by rigorous training, including physical and mental fitness. At the range, Spieth warms up with Tempo Tunes playing in his iPod to even out his pace. His practice certainly paid off this year, as he is now ranked #1 U.S. Junior. For more coverage on his Junior Amateur Championship win check the USGA website.

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>Improve Golf Swing

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Improve golf swing… Like a mantra…Improve golf swing… Ah, the search for the perfect swing… It seems to be a never-ending quest! Is it my alignment? My grip? My hips? My rhythm? My lack of focus? The list goes on. Well, there are for sure 3 elements to consider: 1) Good mechanics 2) Smooth tempo 3) Mental fitness. You will find these three building blocks in all great golf pros. Tiger Woods certainly epitomizes the mastery of all three. His coach Hank Haney champions rigorous mechanics. If you take lessons in any of his teaching centers, your golf swing will be totally reconstructed from the ground up. But jerking – or stopping in mid-swing like Charles Barkley – can still be a problem. Tempo is the hardest thing to teach, they say. At Hank Haney CityPlace in Dallas they now take care of it by using Tempo in Motion to fit you to your right golf swing tempo. Off you are with good mechanics and a smooth tempo! As for mental fitness, this is a whole other subject that we will soon address in this blog.
Check PGA Pro Brian Mahon, director of golf at Hank Haney CityPlace in Dallas in this video tip:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQ3ayoB7pGo

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>What music should you listen to while hitting golf balls based on tempo?

>In a recent post on the blog Helping Us With Golf, a high school student asked for advice on what music to listen to while warming up at the range. Here is the answer:

You should use Tempo in Motion, like top Junior players, such as #1 US Junior Jordan Spieth (Golfweek) and Doug Gribin from Hank Haney’s School of Golf.

Tempo in Motion soundtracks use music to give you drive and focus and beat patterns to guide you through a good swing sequence. The music puts you in the ‘flow’, while the beat patterns improve consistency through muscle memory (‘Flow in Sports’, by Susan A. Jackson and Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi).You’ll be able to choose from different styles of music from pop/rock to ambient and build a training music library.

A conservative approach to golf practice suggests that music is a distraction. However, research proves that music is highly beneficial, provided it is the right kind. Golf psychologist Dr. William Chandon advises to practice with instrumental music to engage the right brain, which is responsible for true performance.

It is critical to use tracks that are appropriate for your tempo. Tempo in Motion tracks are specifically designed to fit different tempos and to train your golf swing. Many PGA Pros have adopted them, such as NTPGA 2007 Teacher of the Year Cameron McCormick, #1 teacher in New Mexico Todd Kersting (Golf Digest) and Brian Mahon, director of instruction at the Hank Haney CityPlace Golf Center in Dallas.

Here you are. Just load your MP3 player and have fun!

Any questions? Contact us at info@tempoinmotion.com.

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>Tempo in Motion Adopted by Golf Digest Top Pro

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Voted No 1 teacher in New Mexico by Golf Digest, Todd Kersting loves and uses Tempo in Motion with his students, and getting great results! Our new host Tanya Lopez interviews Todd at Bullseye Golf in Albuquerque:

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>Mike Boyko and Tempo In Motion Really Moving Along!

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I don’t know why it took 400 years for people to realize that musical rhythms could help groove a smooth golf swing, but this summer MP3 players have proven as lethal to a golfer’s arsenal as a good gap wedge. With scientific breakthroughs like rock drummer Mike Boyko’s Tempo In Motion and other sonic golf aids such as the one Vijay Singh has used to surge to victory in this year’s FedEx Cup, players from tour caliber to beginner are improving their golf game and enjoying the sport more than ever: all because of music.

If it’s at all possible, Vijay Singh made as much news in claiming that a sonic driven swing aid powered his late season drive to win the FedEx Cup, than actually winning the actuarial formula, cryptically-scored, slow motion points race in the first place. “I remember a humming sound in my head,” Singh explained, describing how a receiver playing musical notes though Singh’s headphones tells him when his swing is optimally in sync. “Then, I hum to myself on the golf course.” According to reports, listening to music made Singh’s already fluid rhythm more consistent through the bag.

Singh isn’t the only golfer grooving to music and humming their way to lower scores. “Tempo In Motion is a dynamic swing aid that transformed my golf swing,” explained a grateful Craig Cassano, Ice Hockey Director of Coaches at the Winter Club in Huntington, New York, who has shaved at least five strokes off his handicap this season by trying the new swing aid. “The great music not only puts me in the “Zone” while practicing, but has raised my concentration by canceling out the distractions at a busy range.”

Tempo In Motion is musician Mike Boyko’s contribution to the game he loves. It’s derived from his other true love, rock and roll music. Fresh off his stints with 2 Skinnee J’s, Scatterbrain, Smashmouth, Ram Jam’s Howie Blauvelt, and guitar virtuoso Steve Vai, Boyko – whose favorite album is Pink Floyd’s classic Dark Side of the Moon – was sick of playing to a pedestrian fifteen handicap. “I realized that by grooving to music, your body naturally mimics the beat. You find your natural tempo,” Boyko says. “The golf swing is no different. So no matter what musical style fits you – metal, rock, ambient, jazz, crossover, country – we’ve got a track for you and your swing.”

The process couldn’t be easier. Visit www.tempoinmotion.com and download the track that seems the most natural for your golf swing. Then go hit the range armed with your iPod, MP3 player, or cell phone. “Tempo in Motion got me to hit the ball with more power,” said Janet Lewis of Laguna Beach, California. “The music and beats [called “beat patterns” in the lingo] gave me a smoother swing, while the music adds drive to my game. I love golf so much more now!”

With all these glowing tributes and success stories, and once I learned that both the University of New Mexico and Texas A&M are doing trial studies on the product, I had to give it a try. While on the range I just looped the Tempo In Motion track I downloaded off the Internet, then just let it play in my headphones while I hit balls.

The results? There’s no question that Tempo In Motion grooves your swing to repeat at the same speed – and a repeatable swing is the cornerstone of a solid golf game. I found I get the club back easily to the top, pause properly for some lag, then drive through the ball with both improved power and, more importantly, better balance. Since I’m more relaxed, I’ve also inadvertently – but happily – cured my reverse pivot and flying elbow.

How about that? I cured a flying elbow without having to stick a towel under my arm. Take that, David Leadbetter!

Now let’s be clear. You still need to practice, and practice hard. The golf swing is not just tempo, but timing as well. Tempo is crucial, but one also needs to create power through a proper coil and tension between the shoulder turn and the hip clearance. Tempo in Motion helps you get the right speed at which to perform these maneuvers, which means the rest just got a lot easier. I can say this much after two months of working with the Tempo in Motion tracks on the range: I’m hitting a few more fairways and my ball striking has become more consistent.

Others agree. “I was amazed at the difference Tempo in Motions swing system made with feeling the individual parts of my golf swing,” said Sascha Burland of Santa Fe, New Mexico. “I was relaxed and felt the rhythm in my body. It gave my swing an entirely different character.” Sascha shaved three strokes off his handicap in one season.

“You do have to practice with it,” explains Bokyo. “But you don’t have to use it only on the range. It’s great for practice rounds on the course as well, although I don’t know if your foursome would like it on the weekend, unless, of course, they were using it too. Could you imagine four guys in headphones all grooving separately with headphones on coming up the 18th fairway? That be the strangest thing I’ve seen in golf.”

Nevertheless, sometimes you have to think outside the box. Golf is as much witchcraft as it is science. I’ve seen guys sleep with their putters, make little cooing sounds to their drivers, imploring them to “please please please land in the fairway,” and get so flustered by this game that they threw their clubs, shoes, and hat into a reservoir.

That guy actually forgot he had to walk several holes back to his car in his tube socks, but I digress.

Tempo in Motion solidifies the physical side of your game by grooving your swing, then strengthens the mental side of your game by giving you much more confidence over the ball. We’ll revisit the issue at the season’s end to see how well all the product testers are coming and I’ll give more updates form my practice session as well, but for now, watch out. It used to be you looked at a guy’s calluses to see if he was a ringer. Now you may just have to look for the headphones. It might be a dead giveaway.

Update: Using my T.i.M, I hit 11 out of 14 fairways last week at Eisenhower Red. I also survived Winged Foot! It works. Hot chocolate! Does it ever!

Written by golf writer Jay Flemma

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>Vijay Singh: He Knows How To Work His Golf Swing!

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As many of you know, Vijay Singh will try anything to improve his competitive edge. We have seen him endorsing the Speed Stik, which I personally love. It has given more mph to my swing and has improved my distance with all clubs. Lately, Vijay was seen wearing a device he says has helped him with his tempo. Well, he shot a stunning final round of 63 at the Deutsche Bank Championship in Massachusetts. It shows that some training aids do help players achieve amazing results. Tempo in Motion is one of the best swing transforming training systems. Not long ago, at a “Play Golf America” event, David Mobley, the 2004 REMAX World Long Drive Champion, stopped by the Tempo in Motion booth to hit some 400 yards drives. You know, the kind of shots you can change your oil and still have time to make a call before it hits the ground. We fit him with his optimal tempo (T29) and turned the sound way up! In his own words, “distance is all about rhythm”. It doesn’t have to cost you hundreds of dollars to work on your tempo. For under $10, you can get a couple of soundtracks for your specific tempo and like Vijay Singh improve you game, while having a great time.

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>Michael Phelps – Is Music Sports Doping?

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Music is now widely accepted as a sports performance enhancement, and Michael Phelps made it clear by listening to his iPod right up to 2 minutes before the races. His victories are so linked to the use of music that Dr. Alexei Koudinov, editor of the Doping Journal Website, questions the validity of Phelps world records. Dr. Koudinov backs his position with plenty of medical and scientific evidence. Biofeedback mechanism, increase of blood oxygen capacity, relaxing effect, yes indeed, music has a powerful impact. However, calling it doping is simply ridiculous. We like to call it the next training tool. We just can’t wait to see similar results in golf, now that golf tempo training soundtracks are available.

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>Fred Couples "Effortless Power"

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Freddy Couples, the guy that makes golf look easy. 
Here is a clip from the 1992 Skins’ Game. If you were to compare this clip to how Fred swings today (barring the bad back), you would see little or no change in the tempo of his swing. That sirupy fluid motion seems easy, but does truly pack a knockout punch. Fred was and still is one of the longest hitters on tour. With his controlled take away and his signature loop at the top, the magic transition move generates a massive amount of club head speed. He allows the club to build speed gradually. Just before impact, he fires his hips, creating a solid strike. We can learn from watching Fred Couples, a pure swinger of the golf club. I personally began to emulate his swing when I first started playing. It takes practice to trust and feel that you have plenty of time for your swing sequence to unfold. Bobby Jones would say, he liked to feel the club head throughout the swing. That’s a great way not to rush your golf swing. Still nowadays, I’ll watch a clip of Freddy to inspire my golf game. May he inspire you too…
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>Play Golf America!

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Have any of you gone yet to a PGA Play Golf America Day? If you have you know what a great way it is to not only try the new club technology but also learn all the basics from swing mechanics to tempo and rhythm. PGA professionals offer free clinics and free lessons. Contests, such as putting and long drive events fire up the competitive spirit. Lots of golfers and juniors – in 2007, PGA Play Golf America Days saw its attendance rise to 34,000 consumers!
Tempo in Motion is happy to announce its affiliation with the Play Golf America events. T.i.M.s first event was a couple of weeks ago at the Sandia Resort golf course, NM. What a great day! Try a club from one of the club makers, such as NIke, Callaway or Taylor Made. Then come find your tempo at Tempo in Motion Booth.
The Sun Country section in New Mexico puts together a great event. If any of you are in Albuquerque on the 16th of August please come and see us at the Isleta Resort and Country Club from 10 to 1pm. See you soon at other events around the country.

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>Tempo In The Wind

>Tempo in the wind. No, It’s not a movie classic from the nineteen thirties with 

Scarlet O’Hara.
But a very similar drama that happened recently across the pond at the
British Open Championship. If you ever played golf in 30 to 50 mile per hour gusts, you know. You must hang on and go for the ride. There is no doubt that all the players were feeling the extra pressure from the elements and hats off to Padraig Harrington for keeping his composure and having the will to win…
Playing in the wind… This is the time to allow for more focus and trust your tempo.
Here are a few ways I like to approach wind play:
1. Hit the ball solid. With a solid strike and a low follow through the ball tends to stay under and bore through the wind towards your target.
2. Try to stay in play. Even if the shot comes up short that’s O.K, there is still a good chance at chipping or pitching it close.
3. Get creative with each shot. Into the wind, I like to keep it low.
Left to right or right to left, I try to ride the wind like a wave. Of course we all love the par 5 down wind tee shots!
To be a good wind player we need to have good tempo and proper mechanics.
That’s the great marriage for a sound swing. Working on these points do take
some work and effort but when it all clicks together Wow! What a feeling.
Enjoy the wind! Instead of it being a drag it could turn into a chance to be creative!   
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