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-   -   Jay Williamson Wins (http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=4684)

golfgnome 05-06-2007 04:22 PM

Jay Williamson Wins
 
Jay williamson posted a 7 under par round today to capture the Nationwide Event in Ft. Smith, Arkansas by one shot. Congratulations to Jay:salut: . I know that Lynn has been working with Jay so obviously Lynn must be proud as well.

mrodock 05-06-2007 04:30 PM

That's fantastic! Congratulations Jay and Lynn!

Matt 05-06-2007 04:39 PM

Great bogey-free round today!

bambam 05-06-2007 04:39 PM

Awesome! Congrats Jay and Lynn!

alex_chung 05-06-2007 05:32 PM

Great news!! Well done Jay and Lynn.
Alex

Burner 05-06-2007 05:46 PM

It had to happen and sooner is better than later.

Jay Williamson - an LBG Staff player.:salut:

bambam 05-06-2007 08:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Matt (Post 41438)
Great bogey-free round today!

...and yesterday, and the last 17 holes on Friday! No bogies in the last 53 holes of the tournament.

YodasLuke 05-06-2007 09:32 PM

we all knew
 
We all knew it would happen. When the information is given as Homer intended (not as a method), to someone with that kind of talent, it was just a matter of time.

Congrats to Jay for absorbing and applying. :salut:

Congrats to Lynn for informing and explaining. :salut:

Congrats to Homer for teaching us all. :salut:

6bmike 05-06-2007 10:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by YodasLuke (Post 41447)
We all knew it would happen. When the information is given as Homer intended (not as a method), to someone with that kind of talent, it was just a matter of time.

Congrats to Jay for absorbing and applying. :salut:

Congrats to Lynn for informing and explaining. :salut:

Congrats to Homer for teaching us all. :salut:

Exactly. Can't improve on those words.

12 piece bucket 05-07-2007 08:47 AM

Domino number 1 . . . .

neil 05-07-2007 09:21 AM

Well done Jay!:occasion:

Collin Neeman 05-07-2007 10:54 AM

congrats jay

EdZ 05-07-2007 07:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by YodasLuke (Post 41447)
We all knew it would happen. When the information is given as Homer intended (not as a method), to someone with that kind of talent, it was just a matter of time.

Congrats to Jay for absorbing and applying. :salut:

Congrats to Lynn for informing and explaining. :salut:

Congrats to Homer for teaching us all. :salut:


Great playing Jay! =D>

:occasion:

Cheers Yoda! :martini:

bambam 05-07-2007 09:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EdZ (Post 41464)
(Bambam - we need a 'martini' icon for Lynn!)

Try this :martini:

Toolish 05-08-2007 06:24 AM

Nice work Lynn and Jay...

Not trying to sidetrack the thread but nice final round by Jason Day, one to watch for sure!

bray 05-08-2007 09:11 AM

Congrats Jay and Lynn........Now go win 2 more and get that battlefield promotion back to the tour!!!

Sorting Through the Golf Nut's Catalog.
B-Ray

Yoda 05-08-2007 12:32 PM

Jay Williamson -- Champion
 
In 279 PGA TOUR events over the past 12 years, Jay Williamson made 137 cuts and $3,677,453. He had finished 3rd, but never 1st. In 59 Nationwide Tour events, he had made 31 cuts and $189,837. He had finished 2nd, but again, never 1st. Knee surgery caused an abbreviated 2005 season, and when his Major Medical Extension status on the PGA TOUR expired in 2006, things were looking bleak.

Late last summer, referred by John Riegger and Brian Gay, Jay called. He told me he would be playing the Nationwide Tour and was looking for answers, particularly about the Release. We talked a bit more, and he scheduled a half-day visit to The Swamp.

During the four-hour session, Jay really didn't hit a lot of balls...it was more of a 'skull' session than a scrimmage. Mostly, I explained our approach to the Golf Stroke and how it differed from many of the things he had been advised to do (and that were now resident in his swing). More than once he said, "I've been to everybody, and I've never seen anything that comes close to this. I've wasted ten years." :D The next week, Jay tied for 8th in the Albertsons Boise Open, and his 12-under-par 272 included a tournament low of 64 on Saturday.

Three weeks ago (April 16), we got together again, this time in a no-holds-barred encounter at TPC Sugarloaf in Atlanta. We took his swing apart and reassembled it piece-by-piece. We worked for five hours in each of the Three Zones -- Body, Arms and Hands -- and added the precision alignments of The Golfing Machine. Over the next two days, we reinforced those concepts at Jennings Mill, the site of that week's Nationwide event, the Athens Regional Foundation Classic. Jay played well, going into Sunday T5 and eventually finishing T29 after disappointing bogies on the last three holes.

The following Friday morning at the Henrico County Open at The Dominion Club in Richmond, Virginia, I stood by his bag and watched him warm up for the day's round. He struck the ball beautifully, but when one drive got away, I said simply, "Punish yourself." He immediately did several Start Down Waggles, using his pivot to pull his hands and club directly at the plane line, and the next soared long and true. His work done, he returned to the bag, handed the driver to his caddy and stripped off his glove. We looked each other square in the eye and talked:

Jay: The game's supposed to get easier, not harder, when you're 40, isn't it?

Yoda: The years don't make it any harder, Jay. You just become more aware.

Jay: Yeah, that's right. More aware.

Yoda: But you're looking good now. Really good. Your pivot is centered, and your grip and flying wedges are perfect. You're on plane during the start down, and you're tracing well through impact. You are releasing the club as you should, and you have a beautiful hinge action.

Jay: I guess what you're saying is that I don't have any excuses, right?

Yoda: Just do it.

Jay finished the week with a solid 8-under par 280 and a T18. Then it was down the road to Arkansas and the Nationwide's Fort Smith Classic. Yoda headed for Las Vegas and his LBG Academy at Paiute Golf Resort. At week's end on Sunday, May 6, I had just finished lunch with our Academy class and had the opportunity to check my voice mail. Two messages awaited, and each bore the same news:

Jay Williamson had just won at Fort Smith. :shock:

:cool:

At the age of 40, his brilliant final round of 63 had earned him his first tour win and a golfer's most coveted title: Champion. http://www.pgatour.com/2007/tourname...607/index.html

I stepped out of the Paiute clubhouse and into the desert sunshine. My Academy students were awaiting their final session, and life was good: Jay had won, and the principles and procedures that had worked so well for him were working just as well for them. I was every bit as proud of their accomplishments that week as I was of his.

Put it all together and on that particular Sunday afternoon, one thing was for sure:

'Ol Yoda was a plenty happy guy.

:)

12 piece bucket 05-08-2007 01:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 41488)

In 279 PGA TOUR events over the past 12 years, Jay Williamson made 137 cuts and $3,677,453. He had finished 3rd, but never 1st. In 59 Nationwide Tour events, he had made 31 cuts and $189,837. He had finished 2nd, but again, never 1st. Knee surgery caused an abbreviated 2005 season, and when his Major Medical Extension status on the PGA TOUR expired in 2006, things were looking bleak.

Late last summer, referred by John Riegger and Brian Gay, Jay called. He told me he would be playing the Nationwide Tour and was looking for answers, particularly about the Release. We talked a bit more, and he scheduled a half-day visit to The Swamp.

During the four-hour session, Jay really didn't hit a lot of balls...it was more of a 'skull' session than a scrimmage. Mostly, I explained our approach to the Golf Stroke and how it differed from many of the things he had been advised to do (and that were now resident in his swing). More than once he said, "I've been to everybody, and I've never seen anything that comes close to this. I've wasted ten years." :D The next week, Jay tied for 8th in the Albertsons Boise Open, and his 12-under-par 272 included a tournament low of 64 on Saturday.

Three weeks ago (April 16), we got together again, this time in a no-holds-barred encounter at TPC Sugarloaf in Atlanta. We took his swing apart and reassembled it piece-by-piece. We worked for five hours in each of the Three Zones -- Body, Arms and Hands -- and added the precision alignments of The Golfing Machine. Over the next two days, we reinforced those concepts at Jennings Mill, the site of that week's Nationwide event, the Athens Regional Foundation Classic. Jay played well, going into Sunday T5 and eventually finishing T29 after disappointing bogies on the last three holes.

The following Friday morning at the Henrico County Open at The Dominion Club in Richmond, Virginia, I stood by his bag and watched him warm up for the day's round. He struck the ball beautifully, but when one drive got away, I said simply, "Punish yourself." He immediately did several Start Down Waggles, using his pivot to pull his hands and club directly at the plane line, and the next soared long and true. His work done, he returned to the bag, handed the driver to his caddy and stripped off his glove. We looked each other square in the eye and talked:

Jay: The game's supposed to get easier, not harder, when you're 40, isn't it?

Yoda: The years don't make it any harder, Jay. You just become more aware.

Jay: Yeah, I guess that's right. More aware.

Yoda: But you're looking good now. Really good. Your pivot is centered, and your grip and flying wedges are perfect. You're on plane during the start down, and you're tracing well through impact. You are releasing the club as you should, and you have a beautiful hinge action.

Jay: I guess what you're saying is that I don't have any excuses, right?

Yoda: Just do it.

Jay finished the week with a solid 8-under par 280 and a T18. Then it was down the road to Arkansas and the Nationwide's Fort Smith Classic. Yoda headed for Las Vegas and his LBG Academy at Paiute Golf Resort. At week's end on Sunday, May 6, I had just finished lunch with our Academy class and had the opportunity to check my voice mail. Two messages awaited, and they both bore the same news:

Jay Williamson had just won at Fort Smith. :shock:

:cool:

At the age of 40, his brilliant final round of 63 had earned him his first tour win and a golfer's most coveted title: Champion. http://www.pgatour.com/2007/tourname...607/index.html

I stepped out of the Paiute clubhouse and into the desert sunshine. My Academy students were awaiting their final session, and life was good: Jay had won, and the principles and procedures that had worked so well for him were working just as well for them. I was every bit as proud of their accomplishments that week as I was of his.

Put it all together and on that particular Sunday afternoon, one thing was for sure:

'Ol Yoda was a plenty happy guy.

:)


We ALL win STICKMAN . . . We all win . . .

Got the fight on PPV Saturday night . . . at one point in the fight Floyd Mayweather Jr.'s trainer and uncle looks at him and says . . . "Just keep bein' you. You just be you." And that's all you gotta do too! You be you . . . and people will win . . . LOTS. 1. Take ball 2. Run fast.

Buckle up boys and girls . . .

drewitgolf 05-08-2007 02:15 PM

Fruits of Labor of Love
 
Congratulations Yoda. Full steam ahead!

Bigwill 05-08-2007 07:13 PM

Congrats, Lynn. Is it easier working with a tour player than your average joe? From this limited perspective, it seems that it's easier for them to "get" what you're giving them.

Delaware Golf 05-08-2007 07:39 PM

Hard Work
 
Cool Yoda,

All of the years of hard work and study have paid off.

And one for Homer!!! Cheers...

:salut:

DG

Yoda 05-08-2007 07:52 PM

The Thrill Of Victory
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Bigwill (Post 41504)

Congrats, Lynn. Is it easier working with a tour player than your average joe? From this limited perspective, it seems that it's easier for them to "get" what you're giving them.

What is fun about working with tour players -- and it is fun, especially the 'inside the ropes' rush :eyes: -- is seeing recommended adjustments implemented virtually immediately. That is special. But...

I am a realist and always ask my players, "What can I contribute? You are already a wonderful player. That is why you are here. What, in your opinion, would constitute success in this relationship?" At the PGA TOUR level, a quarter-shot per round improvement in Scoring Average is a tremendous accomplishment, one that can translate into significant additional earnings, not to mention career longevity. And that is important, no doubt. But just as the wise stock market investor never confuses brains with a bull market, I do not hang my teaching ability -- for better or for worse -- on a tour player's next four rounds.

And then there is the bulk of my work with 'average' students. Here there is the potential for a 50 percent improvement, maybe even more. An 18 handicap goes to 9. A 10 goes to 5. And a 5 -- like Tim Rash so many years ago -- takes the training in the spring and goes on to win the Richmond City Amateur in the summer. I love being part of that process!

I am privileged to be working with tournament players and hope to do so for the rest of my life. There is no question that Homer Kelley's great work and my abilities to teach it can make the difference to those seeking success at golf's pinnacle. But the real thrill comes as it did last week, when Daryl DelSasso, alumni of three LBG Academies and now a true friend, shoots a 2-over 38 -- he was 1-under through 7! -- in our 9 holes on Snow Mountain at Paiute in Las Vegas. I watched him pound towering drives down the middle, bore iron shots into the wind that streaked for the flag, and execute deft little pitches from awkward lies that trickled to 'gimme' distance. All the while telling me exactly what he was going to do, how he was going to do it, and then doing it!

Now, with all due respect to the future Masters, U.S. Open, British Open or PGA Champions who may be coming my way, that display of golfing prowess -- one born of desire, will and discipline -- will remain forever one of the highlights of my teaching career.

Thanks, Daryl.

I luv ya, man!

:salut:

Bigwill 05-09-2007 06:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 41509)
What is fun about working with tour players -- and it is fun, especially the 'inside the ropes' rush :eyes: -- is seeing recommended adjustments implemented virtually immediately. That is special. But...

I am a realist and always ask my players, "What can I contribute? You are already a wonderful player. That is why you are here. What, in your opinion, would constitute success in this relationship?" At the PGA TOUR level, a quarter-shot per round improvement in Scoring Average is a tremendous accomplishment, one that can translate into significant additional earnings, not to mention career longevity. And that is important, no doubt. But just as the wise stock market investor never confuses brains with a bull market, I do not hang my teaching ability -- for better or for worse -- on a tour player's next four rounds.

And then there is the bulk of my work with 'average' students. Here there is the potential for a 50 percent improvement, maybe even more. An 18 handicap goes to 9. A 10 goes to 5. And a 5 -- like Tim Rash so many years ago -- takes the training in the spring and goes on to win the Richmond City Amateur in the summer. I love being part of that process...



Thanks, Lynn. That confirmed what I suspected was the difference between teaching tour pros and average guys.

Yoda 05-09-2007 09:55 PM

Gettin' Down
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Bigwill (Post 41544)

Thanks, Lynn. That confirmed what I suspected was the difference between teaching tour pros and average guys.

Bigwill,

We all need more precision in the Component Relationships that make up the Total Motion of our Golf Stroke. In fact, 'more and more precision' is the only difference between Pro and Hacker.

Many methods can satisfy the requirement for improvement at the handicap level. Only one system can satisfy it at the PGA TOUR level.

The Golfing Machine.

Delaware Golf 05-10-2007 03:49 AM

One System....One.....
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 41551)
Bigwill,

We all need more precision in the Component Relationships that make up the Total Motion of our Golf Stroke. In fact, 'more and more precision' is the only difference between Pro and Hacker.

Many methods can satisfy the requirement for improvement at the handicap level. Only one system can satisfy it at the PGA TOUR level.

The Golfing Machine.

And what "One System" is that?

DG

Amen Corner 05-10-2007 08:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Delaware Golf (Post 41559)
And what "One System" is that?

DG


Read carefully Yodas last sentence...........

The Golfing Machine

You know, the one system that TT got his ideas from....:)

Yoda 05-15-2007 09:36 PM

Jay Williamson -- Fort Smith Redux
 
http://www.pgatour.com/2007/h/05/15/...son/index.html

6bmike 05-15-2007 09:54 PM

Nice. Great to see someone rebound back into the win column.

But I was reading for your name in the story, Lynn. :)

Yoda 05-15-2007 11:34 PM

#338 Is the Charm
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by 6bmike (Post 41705)

Nice. Great to see someone rebound back into the win column.


This was not a "rebound back." It was Jay's first win in a PGA-TOUR event.

:)

6bmike 05-16-2007 12:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yoda (Post 41708)
This was not a "rebound back." It was Jay's first win in a PGA-TOUR sponsored event.

:)


:doh: I thought he won the John Deer one year, but I was thinking more like a 'rebound AND into the win column. Man, I'm having a tough week around here. :offtheair

mrodock 05-16-2007 12:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 6bmike (Post 41710)
:doh: I thought he won the John Deer one year, but I was thinking more like a 'rebound AND into the win column. Man, I'm having a tough week around here. :offtheair

stay the course

right now I'm at the stage where all of my errors show up on the transcript

Yoda 05-16-2007 12:10 PM

Perils Of Pauline
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by 6bmike (Post 41710)

Man, I'm having a tough week around here. :offtheair

Mike,

You may have had a better week than you think. I'll be posting in the Lag Transportation thread soon [Emergency Room - Hitters Forum].

:)


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