When I first started working with Nathan Green on the PGA Tour he was top 5 in putting, but was a very poor driver of the golf ball. He could not hit a draw even though he wanted to, and hit a very low fade or snap hook. He could not eliminate half of the golf course and therefore had no idea which way the ball was going. I’m sure a lot of you at home have had this feeling and it is not a very comforting feeling when playing golf for a living. We started talking about his swing and what we wanted to do. In this article I will explain what his thoughts were and how he is using the Perfect Connection Golf Swing to hit the ball better and drive the ball farther and with more control.
Nathan had been taught to keep the club in front of him going back. This is a great swing thought, however Nathan had overcooked this swing thought. To get the club straight back from the ball, Nathan tilted his left shoulder down which caused his shoulders to get steeper and this move slid his right hip to the right. This allowed the clubhead to stay in front of his hands during the backswing, however this was a fake position and actually caused too flat of a backswing. Let me explain. As Nathan’s club reached about waist level in the backswing his body was out of position. Shoulders steep, right hip slide…from here he reversed pivoted his hips (caused them to go left) and then flattened out his shoulders to get to the top. What this caused then on the way down was hips were out in front and his left arm would run away from his body (lose connection) and the club would fall too much to the inside with either an open face (fade with body in front caused low fade) or he would try to flip his hands to square up the face (closed face with body in front caused low snap hook). This was a very inconsistent shot and caused him a lot of mental stress. What we did first was in the setup. Nathan has one of the strongest grips ever and would not change it (because if he did with his left arm running away he would hit it way right and short). We lowered Nathan’s right hip to get his spine in the correct position so his body could work anatomically correct. We then worked on his right arm allowing him to hinge his right wrist earlier and causing him to fold his right arm quicker…this gave him connection to his body. This allowed the club to swing a bit more to the inside on the backswing and this got him away from the steeper shoulder plane that he was accustom to. We next went through the proper body rotation. Nathan’s swing was very disconnected to begin with and when we got his arms connected to his body we were able to get his body to rotate properly which allowed his joints to be stacked over each other. During Nathan’s downswing because of his backswing and because of his strong grip, his left arm ran away and his upper body hung back causing the flip or the right shot. He now could simply unwind his body more naturally and would not have to hang back. We got his upper body more stacked at impact and therefore took stress off of his lower back. Nathan’s work is not finished with his swing. He has come a long way, but he has much better positions in his golf swing and is more connected in his golf swing, which has allowed him to hit it farther and straighter. In my opinion, he is hitting the ball much better now than ever, but he is very humble and does not like to think of himself as great. This is the reason why, in my opinion, his putting has dropped the last two years, because if he had his putting from two years ago he would win frequently. This is the mental part of the game that we all struggle with, but by getting Nathan more connected in his swing, he has become a great ball striker and a player we will see win more frequently on the PGA Tour.
Nathan utilized the Perfect Connection Swing Principles and went on to win the 2009 RBC Canadian Open.
For the readers at home work on the connection in your golf swing. This will allow straighter shots and will take stress off of your body, which will allow you to play this game for many years to come.
Be on the lookout for a video tomorrow about my revolutionary Perfect Connection Golf Swing.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ

The key to creating power is a major fundamental in the Perfect Connection Golf Swing. I took my knowledge of working with two of the top three golf instructors in the world and then with the help of kinesiologists and doctors applied the human anatomy and principles of kinesiology to the perfect connection golf swing. One of the main fundamentals in the Perfect Connection Golf Swing is the lateral hip bump to your left side during the transition so as to stack your joints of your left leg to create power and reduce the risk of injury. I recently was studying a book called Golf Anatomy by Craig Davies and Vince DiSaia, and one of their main points described the transfer in a way that sounded familiar. They described this transfer, which is literally the lateral hip bump, in a way that I wanted to praise them and let each of my students listen to their findings about the golf swing.
“When a right-handed golfer initiates the downswing, he shifts his body weight onto his target side (left side) by positioning his target-side knee (left knee) over his target-side foot (left foot). This places the golfer’s lower body into an ideal force-generating position. With the knee over the foot, the quadriceps can function to straighten the knee, and the gluteus maximus and hamstring muscles can contract to create extension of the hip and pelvis. This combined extension movement drives the target foot into the ground. The ground creates a resultant force back into the golfer that can be passed effortlessly through the legs and into the golfer’s pelvis and core…This force can be transferred into the arms and, finally, into compression of the golf ball.”
The study of the human body of how it is supposed to work and create power without injury is the source behind the perfect connection golf swing. Stacking the joints, setting the spine and the body in the proper position at address, creating a powerful ¾ length backswing, all of these principles are addressed in my golf swing and are many of the reasons why the Perfect Connection Golf Swing is the best swing out there. Understanding this paragraph from the book Golf Anatomy already eliminates such swing theories as the one plane golf swing and the stack and tilt method. Using these swings as well as many traditional golf swing theories will certainly have you ending up in the chiropractors office and lead to many disappointing rounds of golf and lots of frustration in the future. Best wishes to all my students.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
P.S. Want to learn more about the Perfect connection golf swing? I will be releasing the Perfect Connection Golf Swing Signature Series next week. So keep an out eye out for it.

A great way to improve your driver is to practice swinging with just your right hand only. Many people struggle with the driver because their golf swing does not support the club properly and they lose width or come over the top.
I have seen many of my students improve just by practice swinging with one hand. This drill forces you to support the club properly at the top with the right elbow and right hand underneath the shaft. This is the position that we want to achieve with both hands on the club, but many do not. Another great reason for practicing with one hand is the width that it creates in your downswing. If you are a player that has the club come down from over the top then the one hand swing will be good because of the extra weight that the club will feel like. In order to swing one handed your body must transition properly or you will stick the club in the ground. The lack of support with two hands will force the body to shift to the left to help the right arm start the club down. You will also notice that as you do this you will maintain width in the right arm and this will allow the face to be square through the impact area longer, causing straighter shots. Once you can do this drill with practice swings I encourage you to hit some balls with an eight iron. Try it slow at first, but as you practice this shot you will notice that you will be able to hit your eight iron over 100 yards in the air. After some success with this drill place both hands on the club but feel like your grip pressure with your left hand is a zero and try to sense the feeling that you had with only one hand.
One handed swings are a great way to improve your driver because it forces the club to fall on plane and it creates the proper feeling of width that you need to hit long straight drives.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
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Cj,
I keep hitting block shots dead right and high. It’s costing me from breaking 80 for the first time any suggestions?
Rick
This is a question I received from Rick and I am pleased to tell him that he is in good company. The dreaded high and right shot is a typical miss of good players. Getting the club “stuck” behind him on the way down causes this miss. In other words basically as Rick transitions into the downswing his club will drop too much to the inside and his hips will spin out causing the club to come too much from behind him. This is the cause of the high right shot and if Rick gets a bit too quick with his hands, he will hit a snap hook. This is the same problem that Tiger faces when we see him start to spray his driver all over the lot. . There may be several reasons for this stuck shot and maybe that the club is too flat at the top of his swing or his hips are too fast on the way down.
The key to fixing this miss is to get the club coming more in front of him on the downswing or for him to feel like he is coming from over-the-top. Another way to fix this shot and to get the club more in front of him is to do what Tiger does in tournaments and that is to hit knockdown shots. The great aspect of knockdown shots is that in order to finish low, which is the key to hitting knockdown shots; the body and club must work in sync together. Not even Tiger is strong enough to have the club come from inside and finish low. Centrifugal force would force the club to flip through and therefore would require a high finish.
The club coming from the inside too much is one that most slicers would love to experience, however there is not a worse feel in golf for good players than that of being stuck through the shot. This is certain death for good players, since they must overly use their hands to hit shots, which will kill your ball control. To fix this shot on the course I recommend the knockdown shot until you can get to the range and work a bit on your technique to figure out the cause of the stuck club.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
Are you frustrated with your golf game?
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I can’t seem to consistently make putts from 5 feet and in. My speed control is bad leaving me tough putts for come backers. Can you help?
Tom
I want to sincerely thank all my students for writing in questions like Tom did.
I truly enjoy helping each of you with your game and will from time to time, instead of answering on the blog, take your questions and write an article to help them and each of you.
Tom expresses concern on his short putts and the main reason for this problem according to him is his distance control. I break putting down into three areas and you will learn this soon when I release my putting DVD, but the key to making putts boils down to speed, roll, and break. In its simplest form speed is a result of practice and a great drill to help Tom with his speed control is my front, middle, back drill.
Most people struggle with distance control because they do not practice the proper way. Speed in its simplest form boils down to practice and I promise you that most people do not practice their speed control on short putts. In order to improve your short putts it is essential that you practice your speed control on these putts. Working on the front, middle, back drill is a great way to improve your control on these short putts and lower your scores as a result.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
Are you frustrated with your golf game?
Click here to discover a scientifically proven “body friendly golf swing”, that is so darn powerful yet simple to repeat. Check it out here.
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Too often I see players with a lower body that does not support their swing. Our Goal for the golf swing is to have our lower body stable and quiet. Notice I did not say motionless, but quiet. I see wild lower bodies more in kids, but us adults can learn what not to do by watching these kids.
The proper golf swing should have our upper bodies turn about ¾ of the way back with our shoulders with just a bit of left knee turn in the backswing. Anything more than that and we are not only losing power, but increasing our chances of injury greatly. Any person that has seen a kid swing has noticed the over emphasis of the lower body in their kids swing. The reason that kids do this is because they are compensating for the weight of the club. The club is very heavy for these kids and their hips are the most powerful area in their body. It amazes me how golf instructors will teach adults to swing with these same principles of an active, driving lower body. These kids usually create extremely long swings, lots of mishits, and a reverse C or finish that sends me into pain just by watching it. This is not the way to swing the club, or if it was then why do we not all swing that way. That is what most instructors are teaching. This is definitely the first way to hit the ball unsolid and to never play the game again due to bulging discs and hip replacement.
The key to solid golf is to wind the upper body just enough while maintaining a solid lower body. Once your lower body starts to move that should be enough shoulder turn. This will be about a ¾ turn and is plenty far enough to crush the ball. The basic principle of the golf swing should be similar to life. Would you build your house on sand? Would you shoot a canon from a canoe? I don’t think I would want to be in that canoe, nor would you.
Build your golf swing with a base that is shoulder width apart and not a lot of movement in the golf swing. A great drill for this would be to take your address position and then to bow your knees out. Hit a few shots with this and feel how stable your lower body is and try to maintain that feeling while making your normal golf swing. Build your House on the rock as well as your golf swing and it will be there pain free in the future.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
Are you frustrated with your golf game?
Click here to discover a scientifically proven “body friendly golf swing”, that is so darn powerful yet simple to repeat. Check it out here.
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Too often I see players struggle on the putting green and get extremely upset and curse under their breath and say things that are negative to themselves. I often hear statements like “I can’t buy a putt today”, or “I’m terrible at putting.” Making putts is an outcome and that cannot be your main focus when you putt. This is as simple to understand as me taking you to the first tee and telling you I want you to shoot even par. This is an outcome as well and the process to shooting par is to hit the first fairway and first green and so on and so on. Making putts comes down to three areas. That is speed, roll, and break.
Speed in its simplest form is related to practice. If you were struggling with speed then I would encourage you to practice while working on speed related drills. Roll is related to technique and that is the area where an instructor can really help you by improving the path and face of your putter. To determine if your roll is good you should take a sharpie and draw a straight line on your golf ball. Titleist already places a line on their golf balls, however I encourage you to trace over that line with a sharpie to make it easier to see the ball roll. Now line up the ball at your intended line (obviously playing break if need be) and then to hit the putt. If your technique is good the line will roll end over end perfectly and will look like a solid straight line while the ball rolls. If your technique is not good then the line will wobble slightly and or you may not see it at all. If the line does not roll perfectly end over end then this is a clear indication that you need to work on the technique of your putting stroke. The final factor that goes into making putts is the break. Break is related to experience and this is one area that even tour players struggle with. I will guarantee that if you do not have proper speed control or proper roll of the ball then the break is the least of your concern. There are two areas of the putt that you can control and that is the speed and the roll. The next time you hit a putt I want you to evaluate the putt versus judging the outcome of the putt. Everyone needs to evaluate the putt based on the speed and the roll. If you hit the ball with the correct speed that you wanted and the ball rolled end-over-end then you hit a great putt regardless of the outcome. Too many factors can cause a putt to miss and living your life by makes and misses will provide you with a very frustrating life. The key to making more putts is to control what you can control and that is the speed and the roll.
I promise you, if you can roll the ball end-over-end properly and your speed is correct the outcome will be more favorable than not and your scores will fall dramatically.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
Are you frustrated with your golf game?
Click here to discover a scientifically proven “body friendly golf swing”, that is so darn powerful yet simple to repeat. Check it out here.
Discover it here – – – Body Friendly Golf Swing.
Please comment below.
The grip is the only connection we have with the club and may be the most important area for you to focus. The problem I have with golf instruction is that it is all-different in regards to the grip and every teacher has his own personal preference with the grip that they want. The problem is that their preference is not what may be right for you. Every person is different and is built slightly different. I cannot tell you how many times I have taught people with flexible wrists, inflexible wrists, double jointed arms, arms that can’t straighten fully, and people with different size chests. All of these factors amongst others effect what the proper grip should be for you. It is physically impossible to put a person into a box and say that this grip is correct for everyone and you should use this grip.
The perfect connection grip was founded upon solid biomechanics and personal body structure to determine what is the best grip for YOU! I do want to give applause for all those instructors that have taught that the left hand should hold the club in the fingers since this is correct. In regards to the grip being strong, weak, neutral, we will discuss that in another article, but for today I want to focus mainly on the right hand. Many instructors leave the grip there and say that you should hold the club in the fingers of both hands and that is DEAD WRONG! The grip is in the left hand fingers and more in the palm for the right hand. The proper way to determine the right hand position is to hold the club at a 45-degree angle in the air and with the right hand make your hand flat and place your right index finger pointed down the shaft. At this point you will feel that your right elbow is low. Now simply slide your right hand down until the lifeline of your right hand sits slightly on the side of your left thumb. Take your normal grip, whether that is the interlock, the overlap, or the 10-finger baseball grip. This will produce a grip that will feel a lot more together than before and puts the wrists in the position to set the club properly so as to maximize the clubhead speed and give you the best control of the club.
The grip is so important to swinging the club properly and everyone’s body is so completely different that I encourage you to determine what is the best grip for YOU. Our previous article focused on the left hand grip and it showed you how to place your left hand on the club so that your joints fall into their natural alignment. You can read it here.
This is the key to the perfect connection golf swing and that is a swing that is easy on the body and tailor made for your body. Any other instruction that does not take into account your shape, body structure, its weaknesses, and strengths will never allow you to achieve the results that you want.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
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The left hand grip for the Perfect connection grip is Tailor made to what your body’s build and structure determine. This is the main problem with peoples golf grip in that they read and article or try to put their hands on the club they way they have been taught by some article or local pro. The problem with that is that this information is simply regurgitated information and has no understanding of the human body in it. The closest information that is correct is that I have seen that the left hand should be in the fingers of the left hand. This is correct, however I challenge those instructors to take that information further and to tailor that grip to your body’s natural build.
Any time you swing the club at some speed your arms and joints will want to come into natural alignment. If your grip does not meet that natural alignment than you will have to compensate or create some other flaw in your golf swing that will cause inconsistency and loss of speed, power, and control. This is the reason why people have a tendency to come over the top and hit the ball left and right. Basically as humans we have figured out how to swing the club regardless of what our body is telling us and we can get the job done, even though it may not be correct. Any time we do these compensations we will lose the repeatability factor and will put our body at risk for injury and pain.
The Perfect Connection Grip in regards to the left hand will utilize your body’s natural alignment of joints and muscles. In order to achieve this grip you will need and assistant to help you. First place the grip of the club running from the middle joint of your index finger running to the top base pad of your pinky finger. This is the proper placement of the club “being in your fingers” of your left hand. The key component from here is to find what is “neutral” for you. Most golf instruction you read will tell you that the v formed by your left hand thumb and your forefinger should point towards your right ear. That may be correct for some but not for you. The best way to determine what your proper placement should be is to have your assistant hold the clubhead as you hold the grip and lean back. Make sure your assistant holds the club firmly, but as you lean back your left arm shoulder, elbow and wrist will want to move to their natural alignment. Make sure your assistant allows the clubface to either open or close. If your grip is on too strong than the clubface will naturally close when the load of your weight is placed on it. If the grip is too weak then the clubface will naturally open. Determining where your hand should be is the secret to creating consistency and speed in your golf swing. If you can achieve this natural position than you will also reduce the chance of injury to your left arm.
So many injuries and inconsistencies in the golf swing are formed before you ever take the club back. Focus on getting the correct grip for you and you will be on your way to playing better golf without pain and injury.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
Frustrated with your scores?
It’s a fact 70% of your shots are made from 100 yards and in.
Click here to Discover CJ’s Short Game Secrets.

Too often I see players scores range in strokes of 10 or more shots per round from a good round to a bad round. If this happens to you then you can be assured that you are not managing your round to the best of your ability. In regards to managing your rounds, this will be a first in a series or articles that we will discuss the key ingredients to managing your round. These ingredients range from course management, Chipping course management, distance control, wedge distance control, fixing your swing mid round, Go to shots for the Driver, Go to shots for the irons, and many more.
I have a student that I currently work with and we try to play at least once a week during the summer and it has been amazing to see the difference in this player’s game this year. He now refers to me as his bobble head sitting on his shoulder when he is planning a shot. This player has shot under par several times, but maintains about a 5 handicap and would often shoot in the low 80’s when things didn’t go his way. I understand many readers would love to play bad and shoot in the low 80’s on a bad round, but it’s all relative. This player played baseball at a high level in college and was a pitcher. I needed to relate his golf game to his pitching skills and once we were able to find the connection between the two he has been playing much better and does not shoot in the 80’s anymore. Golf is similar to a lot of other areas in your life, whether it’s sports, business, or your personal relationship. The key is taking what you learned in those areas and applying them to your game. I’m sure all of us have had a fight with our spouse. Sometimes it can be something stupid and small that sets us off, and after an hour of arguing we settle down, listen to our partner, understand where their coming from and resolve the issue. If we did this immediately then the argument may not have happened and we would have saved a lot of harsh words or stress in our live. This is similar to golf. When we hit a bad shot we get upset and lose control and 4 or 5 holes later when we calm down we start to play better golf, but the damage to our score has already been done. The student that I play with every week took this to an extreme. Three years ago he would get so angry and throw clubs that on one occasion he banged his club on a tree and it snapped and came back and went through his right bicep. This is a funny story now, but that is how upset he would get when he hit a poor shot. We played last week and he hit a bad shot and instead of trying the miracle recovery shot he played safe (because of my bobble head he told me) and ended up hitting a 50 yard wedge to 6 feet and made the putt for par. I was really proud of the steps he has taken to control his anger and control his game, even though he beat me on the hole and it cost me 50 bucks, but that’s another story. This player is not perfect yet, but is learning how to play the game the proper way. High scores on holes come from a bad shot that is followed by a bad mental mistake. Next time you hit a bad shot, take your medicine and don’t try to make up for a bad shot with one swing. A bogey will not kill you and I am sure many of you would love to trade the triple you just made for a bogey. This will change your mental outlook of the hole and you will walk of positive sometimes after a bogey and it won’t take you 4 holes to calm down.
Keep em Long and Straight,
CJ
P.S. Are you frustrated with your golf game?
Click here to discover a scientifically proven “body friendly golf swing”, that is so darn powerful yet simple to repeat. Check it out here.
Discover it here – – – Body Friendly Golf Swing.
Please comment below.