The Low Point: A Golf Podcast

Why Rolex Owns Golf, Shooting 59, and Nik's New Putter

1 h 2 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Why Rolex Owns Golf, Shooting 59, and Nik's New Putter

Descripción

No rounds to recap this week, so Ryan and Nik go wide: what it actually takes to shoot 59 on tour, and why a career-low round is almost always followed by a reversion to the mean. Nik delivers a deep dive on how Rolex — a brand whose core function has nothing to do with golf — became the sport's defining sponsor, and the guys finally tackle a long-requested equipment segment on Nik's switch to a mallet putter and how to approach a putter fitting. Chapters 00:00 Cold Open: The Great Hat Debate 06:45 What It Takes to Shoot 59 15:35 Reversion to the Mean & Expectations 21:13 Why Rolex Owns Golf 29:09 Tiger, Tag Heuer & the Identity Game 31:42 Watches, Function & Motorsport 36:44 The Rolex Clock Tower Mystery 39:15 The Equipment Segment: Nik's New Putter 48:56 How to Buy a Putter the Right Way 57:29 Lessons vs. Equipment 59:28 Listener Feedback & Sign-Off Key Takeaways - After a career-low round, expect a reversion to the mean — treat the next round as a blank 18 and care even less than usual about the score. - There is no "hot hand" in golf; reset mentally hole-to-hole and round-to-round instead of chasing the last great result. - When buying a putter, get a real fitting — ideally outdoors on real grass — because it tells you whether your problem is the equipment or your form. - Never trade in your old putter; keep it as a fallback for when a new one stops working. - For single-digit players chasing small strokes-gained gains, equipment can be the lever; for higher handicaps, a lesson usually does more. - In putting, speed matters more than line — good pace rescues a two-putt, but a good line with bad pace still three-putts. Mentioned Courses: Riviera Country Club, Duke University Golf Club | Equipment: TaylorMade Spider Tour X (L-neck), Titleist DCI 990 irons, Titleist T100 irons, New Era 59Fifty cap Watches: Rolex, Omega Speedmaster Professional, Tag Heuer Monaco, Tag Heuer Carrera, Patek Philippe, Audemars Piguet, Vacheron Constantin People: Si Woo Kim, Brooks Koepka, Scottie Scheffler, Sungjae Im, Justin Thomas, Cam Young, Rory McIlroy, Aaron Rai, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Ben Hogan, Steve McQueen, Mark Broadie Events: CJ Cup Byron Nelson, 2017 Sony Open, Northern Trust, Travelers Championship Fitters & Retail: Club Champion, PGA Superstore Concepts: Strokes Gained, the anti-handicap

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11 episodios

episode Why Rolex Owns Golf, Shooting 59, and Nik's New Putter artwork

Why Rolex Owns Golf, Shooting 59, and Nik's New Putter

No rounds to recap this week, so Ryan and Nik go wide: what it actually takes to shoot 59 on tour, and why a career-low round is almost always followed by a reversion to the mean. Nik delivers a deep dive on how Rolex — a brand whose core function has nothing to do with golf — became the sport's defining sponsor, and the guys finally tackle a long-requested equipment segment on Nik's switch to a mallet putter and how to approach a putter fitting. Chapters 00:00 Cold Open: The Great Hat Debate 06:45 What It Takes to Shoot 59 15:35 Reversion to the Mean & Expectations 21:13 Why Rolex Owns Golf 29:09 Tiger, Tag Heuer & the Identity Game 31:42 Watches, Function & Motorsport 36:44 The Rolex Clock Tower Mystery 39:15 The Equipment Segment: Nik's New Putter 48:56 How to Buy a Putter the Right Way 57:29 Lessons vs. Equipment 59:28 Listener Feedback & Sign-Off Key Takeaways - After a career-low round, expect a reversion to the mean — treat the next round as a blank 18 and care even less than usual about the score. - There is no "hot hand" in golf; reset mentally hole-to-hole and round-to-round instead of chasing the last great result. - When buying a putter, get a real fitting — ideally outdoors on real grass — because it tells you whether your problem is the equipment or your form. - Never trade in your old putter; keep it as a fallback for when a new one stops working. - For single-digit players chasing small strokes-gained gains, equipment can be the lever; for higher handicaps, a lesson usually does more. - In putting, speed matters more than line — good pace rescues a two-putt, but a good line with bad pace still three-putts. Mentioned Courses: Riviera Country Club, Duke University Golf Club | Equipment: TaylorMade Spider Tour X (L-neck), Titleist DCI 990 irons, Titleist T100 irons, New Era 59Fifty cap Watches: Rolex, Omega Speedmaster Professional, Tag Heuer Monaco, Tag Heuer Carrera, Patek Philippe, Audemars Piguet, Vacheron Constantin People: Si Woo Kim, Brooks Koepka, Scottie Scheffler, Sungjae Im, Justin Thomas, Cam Young, Rory McIlroy, Aaron Rai, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Ben Hogan, Steve McQueen, Mark Broadie Events: CJ Cup Byron Nelson, 2017 Sony Open, Northern Trust, Travelers Championship Fitters & Retail: Club Champion, PGA Superstore Concepts: Strokes Gained, the anti-handicap

Ayer1 h 2 min
episode The Home Course Advantage + High Minded Reads artwork

The Home Course Advantage + High Minded Reads

The High-Minded Read (feat. Duke + Falls Village) Ryan plays at Duke, and compares his game to Brooks Koepka's. Nik posts back-to-back 88s at Rustic Canyon by trusting his putter. and we launches a new segment: The Low Point's High-Minded Reads, with Mark Frost's The Greatest Game Ever Played as the first subject. ## Chapters 00:00 Cam Young Appreciation Time 05:44 PGA Championship Sunday and Jordan Spieth's Misses 07:46 Brooks Koepka's Major-Week Putter Swap 09:56 Falls Village: Dry Course, Bad Decisions 16:37 Bogey Is Par: Adjusting Expectations Mid-Round 21:49 Duke from the Blues — Eight Greens, Five Three-Putts 29:41 Wedge vs. Putter, Tiger's Strategic Misses 33:46 Hip PT Pays Off: The Physical Pillar Working 36:19 Nik's Two 88s at Rustic, Driving Up, Triples Down 49:12 Handicap Math and Taking the Pressure Off 53:49 High-Minded Reads: The Greatest Game Ever Played 01:02:48 Niblicks, Mud Balls, and Modernizing Golf's Rules Key Takeaways - Body components don't improve on the same timeline. Ryan's hip mobility from PT is up, his lag putting is down from no practice, and both are showing up in the same scorecard. The Five Pillars don't move in lockstep. - Eliminating triples is the cheapest stroke-saver for a mid-handicap. Two of Nik's three triples at Rustic could have been doubles — convert those and the 88s become 85s. - Knowing where to miss is harder than knowing where to aim. The Tiger / Sean Foley story: pick the rough that gives you the easiest up-and-down, not a sucker pin on a green you can't hold. - Handicap math creates breathing room. When your incoming rounds are higher than your outgoing rounds, you get a stretch where the worst your handicap can be is locked in. Use that stretch to play without scoring pressure — it's free practice for high-stakes rounds. - 1913 golf had no embedded-ball relief, no pitch-mark repair, and Ted Ray won majors carrying 7 clubs. Half the modern rulebook is common sense we eventually figured out. Mentioned Courses: Falls Village, Duke University Golf Club, Rustic Canyon, The Country Club (Brookline), Sleepy Hollow | People: Cam Young, Brooks Koepka, Jordan Spieth, Tiger Woods, Sean Foley, Sahith Theegala, Manny Diaz, Francis Ouimet, Harry Vardon, Ted Ray, Tom McNamara, Eddie Lowery, Mark Frost, Bernard Darwin | Tournaments: PGA Championship, 1913 US Open, Ryder Cup, Masters | Books: The Greatest Game Ever Played, The Match, The Grand Slam (all Mark Frost) | Tech: Arccos | Concepts: lift-clean-and-place, embedded ball rule, ABS (baseball comparison), niblick

22 de may de 20261 h 15 min
episode The White Tees (Feat. Albany Golf Club) artwork

The White Tees (Feat. Albany Golf Club)

Nik's off-season ball-striking work has him driving it farther but still chasing a score — including a round at Hero World Challenge home Albany Golf Club in the Bahamas that felt better than the 93 suggests. Ryan drops to the white tees at Duke and manifests a 79 with a birdie on 18. The episode lands on a single discipline: cap your blowups, commit to the game you've built, and let the score come to you. CHAPTERS 00:00 Year of Alchemy Check-In 04:28 Ball Striking and Distance Gains 10:58 Tiger's Albany: A 93 That Felt Better 16:58 Resort Realities and Ernie Els 22:28 Survival Golf at the Ocean Course 30:28 The Quest for Augusta Begins 36:28 Duke Round, Friday Afternoon Crew 40:58 Manifesting the 70s from the Whites 50:28 No Doubles, No Triples 01:00:58 Birdie on 18 for a 79 01:06:28 Commit to Your Game, Stop Tinkering 01:11:28 Masters Picks We'd Like to Forget KEY TAKEAWAYS * Move down a tee box to ingrain the identity of your next scoring level — your brain doesn't know which tees you played from, only what you shot. * Cap the blowups before anything else: if you're a 5, no doubles; if you're a 15, no triples. The math of breaking 80 means a single double per round is the ceiling. * Knowing your miss is its own course-management skill. With cleaner contact, Nik's misses shifted by club — leftward on the short irons, rightward on the long ones — and that only became fixable once he stopped trying to fix it. * Commit to one swing change or one strategy for months before tinkering. Competing fixes never compound. * Stop diagnosing every bad shot. The faster path is to accept the miss, manage your dispersion, and play the shot you actually have. MENTIONED Courses: Albany (Bahamas), Ocean Course at Four Seasons Exumas, Augusta National, Duke University Golf Club, Whistling Straits, PGA National, TPC Harding Park, Bethpage Black, Kiawah Ocean Course, Pinehurst No. 2, Rustic Canyon, Torrey Pines, Grandview (Sun City West) | Designers: Ernie Els | People: Tiger Woods, Jim Carrey | Tournaments: Hero World Challenge, Masters, PGA Championship, Sentry Tournament of Champions | Tech: Arccos

16 de may de 20261 h 13 min
episode The Bad Shot: A Debate artwork

The Bad Shot: A Debate

Ryan and Nik debate where bad shots actually come from — Nik's three-bucket framework (mental, setup, positioning) versus Ryan's counter that you should stop diagnosing and start managing your dispersion. Then they close with Masters picks, dark horses, Sunday final-group predictions, and a last-second pick change that gives the episode its title. CHAPTERS 00:00 Cold Open and Intro 00:26 Watching vs Playing Golf on Master's Week 04:36 Mats vs. Grass and Nik's Wedge Work 07:37 Shooting 87 Without Being Proud of a Shot 11:59 "Proud of the Shot" as a Practice Metric 14:30 Practicing Under Pressure: The Ten-Shot Game 19:26 Par Threes, Dispersion, and Playing Your Miss 24:26 Respecting Penalty Areas and Why Amateurs Don't 29:16 Three Sources of Bad Shots: Mental, Setup, Positioning 33:26 Nik's Reset at Rustic: Doubling 13-14-15, Recovering on 16-17 41:43 Nik's Full Pre-Shot Routine (Ryan: "That's a Lot") 47:56 Ryan's Counter: Stop Diagnosing, Start Accepting 54:31 Course Management, the Five Pillars, and Taking Bogey 1:00:34 Masters Picks: The Favorites 1:03:26 Dark Horses and the Second-Chapter Guys 1:08:39 Ryan Changes His Pick At the Buzzer KEY TAKEAWAYS * Bad shots have three sources according to Nik — a bad mental state, a bad setup, or bad positioning off the previous shot. Diagnosing which one is operative helps you fix it. * Ryan's counter is that you can't eliminate bad shots, so stop trying. Learn your dispersion, learn your miss, and manage your course decisions so the bad ones cost you bogey instead of double. * Take bogey on a 210-yard par 3. Tour average on par 3s is over par — if the pros can't make par on them, amateurs shouldn't be trying to. * Aim away from tucked pins next to bunkers. The biggest stroke-losing mistake mid-handicappers make is trying to hit perfect shots at tucked pins instead of aiming at the fat of the green. * Practice on grass, not mats — especially for wedges. Mats forgive fat contact that real turf won't, and the feel doesn't transfer to the course. * Strategy is the most overlooked pillar. Most mid-handicap golfers know their swings better than they know how to make decisions on a golf course, and strokes gained data will usually surprise you about where you're actually losing shots. * Beginning-of-round mental freedom is real. Nik prefers a back-nine start at Rustic Canyon because he plays more freely before scoring pressure kicks in. MENTIONED Courses: Augusta National, Rustic Canyon, Torrey Pines, Del Mar Driving Range, Pinehurst No. 2 | Tournaments: The Masters, Valero Texas Open, The Players, Genesis Invitational, U.S. Open, Ryder Cup | Players: Scottie Scheffler, Bryson DeChambeau, Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Ludvig Åberg, Xander Schauffele, Matt Fitzpatrick, Justin Rose, Brooks Koepka, Adam Scott, Collin Morikawa, Keegan Bradley, Si Woo Kim, Jason Day, Robert MacIntyre, Akshay Bhatia, Min Woo Lee, Chris Gotterup, Michael Thorbjornsen, Tiger Woods | Concepts: Strokes Gained Approach, dispersion, playing your miss, pre-shot routine, the worm burner, the towel drill | Also referenced: Grant from Good Good, Steph Curry

9 de abr de 20261 h 15 min
episode The Year of Alchemy (The Five Pillars of Better Golf, Revisited) artwork

The Year of Alchemy (The Five Pillars of Better Golf, Revisited)

Kicking Off 2026 Ryan and Nik return for Season 2 with off-season updates, a Five Pillars recap, and their 2026 goals. Ryan's hip rehab breakthrough has him nearly shooting even par after five months off. Nik's chipping transformation and 25-yard driving distance gain have him eyeing single digits. Chapters 00:00 Introduction and Five Pillars Recap 07:27 The PEMPS Framework Deep Dive 12:27 What This Podcast Is (and Isn't) 15:25 Nik's Off-Season: Holding Steady at 13.7 18:47 Chipping Breakthroughs and the Towel Drill 23:49 Ryan's Off-Season: Hip Rehab and Coming Back Strong 28:56 The Reset Effect: Playing Great After Time Off 40:09 Nik's 2026 Goals: Commit to a Swing 44:26 Strokes Gained Targets and Wedge Work 48:36 Chipping Setup Revelations 54:08 100 Workouts in 180 Days 56:39 Ryan's 2026 Goals: Body First, White Tees, Push Cart 1:01:04 The Wedge Proximity Metric 1:08:07 Rangefinders and Lightening the Mental Load 1:12:36 Themes: Alchemy and Letting It Come to Me Key Takeaways - Time off resets bad habits. Both hosts play their best after breaks — grinding doesn't always equal improving. - Nik gained 25 yards driving (236→260) from better contact, not speed. Quality of strike matters more than power. - Setup fixes — open stance, ball position, level shoulders — transformed Nik's chipping more than any swing change. - Ryan's simple "wedge effectiveness" stat (one shot from under 100 yards to hit the green) beats complex metrics for motivation. - Playing shorter courses with fewer clubs is underrated practice. Nik's nine-hole rounds with four iron and down built real confidence. - The Five Pillars don't all need equal attention. Focus on the one or two that move your needle most given your constraints. Mentioned Courses: Pinehurst No. 2, Chambers Bay, Erin Hills, Rustic Canyon, Duke University GC, Los Robles Greens Equipment: TaylorMade Spider X putter, Cleveland wedges People: Chris Derr (Breaking 90), Max Homa, Matt Fitzpatrick Drills: Towel drill, left-hand low chipping Books: The Alchemist (Paulo Coelho) Events: The Continental at Pinehurst (Sept 2026), Chambers Bay trip (July 4th)

5 de abr de 20261 h 15 min