For Beginners, Fuller Instruction

jordan_fuller1Golf has never suffered from a lack of good instruction, from PGA teaching professionals to decades of tips in Golf and Golf Digest, Hogan’s Five Lessons, more books than you can count, and now the omnipresent Golf Channel. The volume is proportional to the difficulty of the sport. But for novices, making contact with a ball is merely the beginning of an immense and often baffling number of choices.

This is where Jordan Fuller comes in, with his Golf Influence website, a dense repository of advice on the best approach to golf for beginners, an analysis for the best balls for a high handicapper, 15 ways to stop topping shots, and ideas that explain the best practices of professional golfers and how those apply to beginners. Most remarkably, it’s free.

No catch. No loss leaders. Nothing for sale hidden within the website.

Born and raised in Omaha, the 52-year-old Fuller has been at this for more than 25 years. A self-styled golf enthusiast – – he doesn’t have PGA credentials, nor is he affiliated with any course or range – – Fuller has worked for a number of golf equipment companies. And he knows enough to walk beginners through the basics of competency.

“After studying where beginners would struggle the most, I decided that something should be done to prove free and efficient training for a game improvement plan,” says Fuller. That’s when he launched Golf Influence, “a guide I’d wish I’d had,” albeit in the ancient pre-Interrnet epoch.

The latest addition to Fuller’s website is a comprehensive guide called the What The Pros Have Taught Me: My 17 All-Time Best Golf Tips. “This is literally everything I’ve learned over 25 years on the golf course, including tips from PGA players, and step-by-step lessons to get better swings for your long, mid and short game.”

Take a look.

2 Responses to “For Beginners, Fuller Instruction”

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  1. Jason Hans

    Self taught here…well, for the most part. I’ve had one 1 hour lesson; however, I took nothing from it. For me, I’ve always employed techniques that felt good and produced good scores.

    Started when I was 14, and I had a good understanding of what a swing needed to do, so I went from there. As a teen, I remember going to the range 5-6 nights a week and hitting hundreds of balls a night. In the summer, my mom would drop me off at the local course and I’d walk 36-45 holes. In the end, I attribute my current level to hard work and dedication.

    If I had to do it all over again, I’d do the same thing. I’m not a “you need lessons” type, I believe that people who possess a little athletic ability can work hard, visualize the concepts of the swing, and work toward a desirable outcome.

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