What We Don’t Want
Optimum Golf isn’t a place to “just hit balls.” It’s a training environment built for golfers who want honest feedback, measurable progress, and a system that elevates their entire game—not quick fixes or shortcuts.
Why Weekly Lessons Might Be Hurting Your Game
Weekly lessons can feel productive, but they often create pressure to “fix something” instead of reinforcing real skills. True improvement happens in practice — not in the lesson bay. Here’s why fewer lessons and more intentional practice can actually accelerate your progress.
Words You'll Hear in My Lessons (That Your Coach Might Never Say)
Great coaching isn’t just about swing tips — it’s about the language that shapes how you learn. These are the words that show up in every lesson I teach, and why they matter more than most golfers realize.
Stop Rushing Your Practice: Your Swing Can’t Show Up if You Don’t
Most golfers rush into practice carrying the tension of their day hoping a few fast swings will unlock the movement they want. But a tight body can’t produce a fluid swing. Before the first ball is struck, frustration is already baked in. What you think is a swing problem is usually a readiness problem – tight muscles, restricted rotation and patterns that show up only because your body hasn’t been given a moment to settle. A single minute spent waking up your movement with something heavy can change the entire session. When you stop rushing and start preparing, your swing finally has the freedom to show up.
The Way Golfers Improve Is Changing — Are You Ahead of the Curve?
Golf improvement isn’t about guessing anymore. The New Student Assessment at Optimum Golf gives players real data, real feedback, and a clear system for progress — not just another swing tip. Discover your baseline, build a plan, and start practicing with purpose.
From Cop to Sherpa: Rethinking How Golfers Learn
Ever feel tense in a lesson, like you’re trying not to mess up in front of your coach? You’re not alone. Brad shares how coaching changes completely when the coach stops being the “cop” and starts being a guide — helping golfers learn, fail, and improve with confidence.