Both Sides of Par: Golf Podcast for Every Handicap

He Built a Launch Monitor at Home for $500 (And It Matches Trackman)

48 min · 21 jun 2026
aflevering He Built a Launch Monitor at Home for $500 (And It Matches Trackman) artwork

Beschrijving

Ross is off the grid this week, so Colin holds the high handicap fort alone and brings in a guest who sits at the other end of the spectrum: Coleman Rollins, better known online as Coleman Golfs. Coleman is a near scratch software engineer who got so fed up with launch monitor prices that he did the only reasonable thing and built his own, an open source unit called OpenFlight. The two quickly discover a shared origin story of being used as moving targets on a driving range as kids, which sets the tone nicely. From there it becomes part golfing journey, part tech masterclass. Coleman talks through almost ten years of caddying and what it taught him about reading greens, course management and the classic amateur sin of not playing within your means. He covers the grip change that wrecked his game for a full year, the coach who finally rebuilt his swing, and then the good stuff: why a Trackman costs the price of a small car (it uses the same phased array radar that tracks missiles), how his three radar Doppler setup works, and why his whole rig comes in at around five hundred dollars. There is also a very enjoyable detour into reverse engineering commercial monitors from their publicly filed photos, which earned Coleman a distinctly unfriendly Instagram message from one red and white branded manufacturer. The back half turns practical. Coleman explains which numbers actually move the needle for an improving golfer, how handing data to a coach (human or AI) has helped him, and how dialling in his wedge distances on a Trackman paid off at his biggest tournament of the year just the day before. A quickfire round closes things out with some genuinely useful takes: the metric golfers underrate, the one they hopelessly overrate, a twenty quid putting hack borrowed from woodworking, and the golf marketing trick that makes him want to throw his phone. Colin, to his credit, resists buying a launch monitor on the spot. Just. EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS 🟢 The "playing within your means" lesson Coleman picked up caddying for everyone from Tuesday ladies' tournaments to single digit men, and why even near scratch players get this wrong 🟢 Why a thirty thousand pound Trackman is arguably fair value: a plain English explanation of phased array radar versus the Doppler tech in cheaper units like the Garmin R10 🟢 Coleman's Trackman wedge session the week of his state amateur qualifier, and how knowing his exact 50 to 120 yard numbers gave him a dozen confident shots on the day 🟢 The quickfire round: vertical launch angle being underrated, swing speed being wildly overrated, and a twenty dollar woodworking laser that doubles as a putting trainer the golf brands would sell you for a hundred quid GEAR & RESOURCES MENTIONED 🟢 Coleman Rollins, the guest, on Instagram and TikTok as @colemangolfs 🟢 OpenFlight, Coleman's open source launch monitor, on GitHub at https://github.com/jewbetcha/openflight [https://github.com/jewbetcha/openflight] 🟢 OpenFlight project site and cloud (FlightWeb) at https://openflight.dev [https://openflight.dev] 🟢 Open Tracer, Coleman's free shot tracer web app for swing videos, on GitHub at https://github.com/jewbetcha/opentrace [https://github.com/jewbetcha/opentrace] (Colin mentioned a hosted "try it" page too, worth confirming the exact link before publishing) CHAPTER LIST 00:00 Welcome, no Ross this week, meet Coleman and OpenFlight 00:56 Growing up in the game: caddying for almost ten years 03:57 What caddying really teaches you about golf 06:05 The biggest mistake amateurs make: not playing within your means 07:31 The grip change that broke his game, and finally getting a coach 11:18 Why he built his own launch monitor 13:13 The metrics that actually matter 16:24 What separates a thirty thousand pound Trackman from the rest 20:08 Inside OpenFlight: three radars and a Raspberry Pi 22:13 The parts list and building one yourself 25:56 Reverse engineering the competition (and an angry DM) 30:55 Keeping it open source and affordable 34:40 Using your data with a coach, and AI as a caddie 37:59 What's next: a DIY rangefinder 38:46 Open Tracer: free shot tracing for swing videos 40:29 The OpenFlight Discord community 42:01 Quickfire round: metrics, gadgets and marketing gripes 47:15 Where to find Coleman and everything he's building

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aflevering Cut your Golf Handicap: Practice Routines, Speed Training & Smart Strategy artwork

Cut your Golf Handicap: Practice Routines, Speed Training & Smart Strategy

Big news opens the show: Ross has made it back to scratch for the first time in roughly 16 years, and the lads pick apart exactly how he got there. It turns out most of the battle was in his head, with old handicap barriers (that stubborn 0.5, the dreaded jump from 6 to 5) doing more damage than his swing ever did. The fixes were refreshingly human: their weekly chats keeping him accountable, three years of left-handed putting, a focus on pace over line (a Scott Fawcett favourite), some carefully added clubhead speed for strategy rather than showing off, and properly purposeful practice where you actually test yourself on the course. Colin, holding up the high-handicap end as ever, soaks it all in and the two have a lovely back-and-forth about whether you can ever truly ignore your score (Ross, for the record, cannot). From there the chat turns to Senior Open qualifying, which Ross has now entered. He explains the whole thing in plain English: turn 50, get to 0.4 or better, pay your £250, and take your shot in a one-round shootout, in his case at Stirling on Monday 20th July, with the actual Senior Open landing at Gleneagles' King's Course and a field featuring the likes of Henrik Stenson and Pádraig Harrington. Colin then unveils his weekend project, a "course-bagger" app at track.bothpar.com inspired by Munro bagging, complete with regions to complete and prestige points for links courses, Open venues and famous architects. That sparks a genuinely useful discussion about what actually makes a course worth seeking out, from qualifying pedigree to a proper grass range. The back half is all about playing more golf for less money. The two dig into reciprocals and second memberships, including the 300-plus James Braid Association courses, Spey Bay's generous reciprocal list and quirky Summer Solstice comp, getting onto Royal Dornoch via a Golspie or Brora membership, Nairn Dunbar's country option, and joining somewhere like Southerness for reliable winter golf. A quick detour into eye-watering London joining fees (think £20k just to get through the door) makes the Scottish maths look very sensible indeed. They close with this week's competition pick at Downfield in Dundee, plus a heads-up on new Instagram swing clips using Coleman's shot tracer. EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS 🟢 Ross's route back to scratch after a 16-year gap, and why the real barrier was almost entirely mental 🟢 The pace-over-line putting shift (credited to Scott Fawcett) that quietly cut out the three-putts 🟢 Why Ross added clubhead speed for smarter strategy rather than ego, and how it changed his club choices off the tee 🟢 Senior Open qualifying demystified: the criteria, the £250 one-round shootout, and the realistic odds of getting through 🟢 Colin's new course-bagger app and the "prestige points" debate over what genuinely makes a course worth playing GEAR & RESOURCES MENTIONED 🟢 Both Sides of Par on Instagram (@bothsidesofpar [https://instagram.com/bothsidesofpar]): clips, swing videos and weekly updates 🟢 track.bothpar.com [track.bothpar.com]: Colin's new course-bagger app 🟢 Scott Fawcett and the DECADE Course Management System: the pace-putting and aggressive-off-the-tee thinking referenced throughout (decadegolf.com) 🟢 Coleman Golfs and his shot tracer: Find Coleman over at @colemangolfs 🟢 The Association of James Braid Courses: 300-plus Braid-designed courses with reduced green fees (jamesbraidgolfsociety.com) 🟢 The Senior Open at Gleneagles, King's Course, 23 to 26 July 2026 (legendstour.com) 🟢 Stirling Golf Club: Ross's chosen Senior Open qualifying venue 🟢 Spey Bay Golf Club: links course with a wide reciprocal list and the Summer Solstice comp (the membership and reciprocal figures were quoted live on the show, so verify before relying on them) 🟢 Get in touch: hello@bothpar.com [hello@bothpar.com] WEEKLY COMPETITIONS 🟢 Downfield Golf Club, Dundee: Open on Sunday 2nd August, £45 entry. A James Braid-designed parkland championship course, beautifully tree-lined and a former Open final qualifying venue (now a regional qualifier), roughly 25 minutes from St Andrews and easy to reach off the A90. A brilliant excuse for a weekend away, with a Saturday-night stopover in Dundee and a Sunday round. CHAPTER LIST 00:00 Welcome and the plan for today 01:09 Ross gets back to scratch after 16 years 03:50 Why handicap barriers live in your head 06:48 What moved the needle: pace putting and weekly chats 09:55 Adding clubhead speed (and why it isn't about bombing it) 13:24 Purposeful practice and smarter course management 23:23 Can you actually ignore your score? 24:17 Senior Open qualifying, explained 33:03 Building a course-bagger app for golfers 45:44 Reciprocals and second memberships worth having 55:12 The eye-watering cost of a London membership 57:44 This week's competition: Downfield in Dundee 1:00:44 Wrap-up, Instagram and swing clips

29 jun 20261 h 2 min
aflevering He Built a Launch Monitor at Home for $500 (And It Matches Trackman) artwork

He Built a Launch Monitor at Home for $500 (And It Matches Trackman)

Ross is off the grid this week, so Colin holds the high handicap fort alone and brings in a guest who sits at the other end of the spectrum: Coleman Rollins, better known online as Coleman Golfs. Coleman is a near scratch software engineer who got so fed up with launch monitor prices that he did the only reasonable thing and built his own, an open source unit called OpenFlight. The two quickly discover a shared origin story of being used as moving targets on a driving range as kids, which sets the tone nicely. From there it becomes part golfing journey, part tech masterclass. Coleman talks through almost ten years of caddying and what it taught him about reading greens, course management and the classic amateur sin of not playing within your means. He covers the grip change that wrecked his game for a full year, the coach who finally rebuilt his swing, and then the good stuff: why a Trackman costs the price of a small car (it uses the same phased array radar that tracks missiles), how his three radar Doppler setup works, and why his whole rig comes in at around five hundred dollars. There is also a very enjoyable detour into reverse engineering commercial monitors from their publicly filed photos, which earned Coleman a distinctly unfriendly Instagram message from one red and white branded manufacturer. The back half turns practical. Coleman explains which numbers actually move the needle for an improving golfer, how handing data to a coach (human or AI) has helped him, and how dialling in his wedge distances on a Trackman paid off at his biggest tournament of the year just the day before. A quickfire round closes things out with some genuinely useful takes: the metric golfers underrate, the one they hopelessly overrate, a twenty quid putting hack borrowed from woodworking, and the golf marketing trick that makes him want to throw his phone. Colin, to his credit, resists buying a launch monitor on the spot. Just. EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS 🟢 The "playing within your means" lesson Coleman picked up caddying for everyone from Tuesday ladies' tournaments to single digit men, and why even near scratch players get this wrong 🟢 Why a thirty thousand pound Trackman is arguably fair value: a plain English explanation of phased array radar versus the Doppler tech in cheaper units like the Garmin R10 🟢 Coleman's Trackman wedge session the week of his state amateur qualifier, and how knowing his exact 50 to 120 yard numbers gave him a dozen confident shots on the day 🟢 The quickfire round: vertical launch angle being underrated, swing speed being wildly overrated, and a twenty dollar woodworking laser that doubles as a putting trainer the golf brands would sell you for a hundred quid GEAR & RESOURCES MENTIONED 🟢 Coleman Rollins, the guest, on Instagram and TikTok as @colemangolfs 🟢 OpenFlight, Coleman's open source launch monitor, on GitHub at https://github.com/jewbetcha/openflight [https://github.com/jewbetcha/openflight] 🟢 OpenFlight project site and cloud (FlightWeb) at https://openflight.dev [https://openflight.dev] 🟢 Open Tracer, Coleman's free shot tracer web app for swing videos, on GitHub at https://github.com/jewbetcha/opentrace [https://github.com/jewbetcha/opentrace] (Colin mentioned a hosted "try it" page too, worth confirming the exact link before publishing) CHAPTER LIST 00:00 Welcome, no Ross this week, meet Coleman and OpenFlight 00:56 Growing up in the game: caddying for almost ten years 03:57 What caddying really teaches you about golf 06:05 The biggest mistake amateurs make: not playing within your means 07:31 The grip change that broke his game, and finally getting a coach 11:18 Why he built his own launch monitor 13:13 The metrics that actually matter 16:24 What separates a thirty thousand pound Trackman from the rest 20:08 Inside OpenFlight: three radars and a Raspberry Pi 22:13 The parts list and building one yourself 25:56 Reverse engineering the competition (and an angry DM) 30:55 Keeping it open source and affordable 34:40 Using your data with a coach, and AI as a caddie 37:59 What's next: a DIY rangefinder 38:46 Open Tracer: free shot tracing for swing videos 40:29 The OpenFlight Discord community 42:01 Quickfire round: metrics, gadgets and marketing gripes 47:15 Where to find Coleman and everything he's building

21 jun 202648 min
aflevering Golf Chipping Practice Drills That Work on the Course (PLUS Scratch Heartbreak, Spider Putters & 5-Wood Bump-and-Runs) artwork

Golf Chipping Practice Drills That Work on the Course (PLUS Scratch Heartbreak, Spider Putters & 5-Wood Bump-and-Runs)

Follow us at @bothsidesofpar [https://instagram.com/bothsidesofpar] and grab the newsletter here [https://graysgolf.beehiiv.com/]. EPISODE SUMMARY Ross very nearly gets to scratch this week - painfully nearly. He talks through a round where one missed short putt on the 18th left him sitting at 0.5, along with the classic golfer’s curse of knowing you should stick to process while your brain quietly screams, “go on then, make history.” Colin, naturally, offers sympathy while also enjoying the drama just a little bit. The pair then get into gear chat, with Colin trying to make sense of the new TaylorMade Spider putter range and the Cobra OPTM Max-K driver, while Ross brings the lower-handicap reality check on forgiveness, lie angle, workability and why most amateur golfers probably don’t need to be shaping it like prime Tiger. There’s a big short-game section too, covering Ross’s chipping experiments, looking away from the ball, cack-handed chips, landing-spot practice, ladder drills, using a putting stroke with different clubs, and even the mighty five-wood chip-and-run. They wrap up with Colin entering the Golspie open, Ross recommending Grantown-on-Spey, and a reminder to follow the show on Apple, Spotify, YouTube and Instagram. EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS 🟢 Ross misses a two-footer on the 18th that would have taken him to scratch - brutal, funny, and very golf. 🟢 Colin tries to decode the TaylorMade Spider putter family, from Tour and Tour X to the smaller V model and different hosel options. 🟢 Ross explains why looking away from the ball has helped free up his chipping stroke, borrowing the same idea from his putting. 🟢 The boys talk through practical chipping games, including landing drills, 15-yard stock shots, ladder practice and up-and-down challenges. 🟢 A deep chat on lie angle, flatter clubs, workability and why “standard” clubs might quietly be sending half of us left. GEAR & RESOURCES MENTIONED 🟢 TaylorMade Spider Tour / Spider Tour X / Spider Tour F / Spider Tour V putters — discussed around forgiveness, MOI, True Path alignment and the White TPU Pure Roll insert. TaylorMade describes the White TPU Pure Roll insert as using 45-degree grooves to encourage forward roll and says the white insert works visually with True Path Alignment. (taylormadegolf.com [https://www.taylormadegolf.com/Spider-Tour-X-Double-Bend/DW-TC847.html?lang=en_US&utm_source=chatgpt.com]) 🟢 Cleveland Frontline putter — Colin’s current Spider-ish mallet putter, which he still seems dangerously close to replacing because golf equipment exists. 🟢 Cleveland wedges — Ross gives another glowing mention to his newer Cleveland wedges after a very tidy bunker shot on the 18th. 🟢 Scotty Cameron putter — Ross compares his current larger-headed Scotty Cameron setup with the stability he used to like in the Spider. 🟢 Cobra OPTM Max-K driver — Colin’s latest temptation in the “maybe this will fix my driver” category. Cobra says the OPTM driver line uses shaping and weight placement to reduce twisting, while Golf Monthly describes the OPTM Max-K as Cobra’s most stable model, with a combined MOI of 13K. (COBRA Golf [https://www.cobragolf.com/en-eu/products/optm-max-k-driver?srsltid=AfmBOorAwdOZ18FUAZque7vJ4HyLn4G0H2hZZbWQrATtqcGX6Z7dFXHP&utm_source=chatgpt.com]) 🟢 Scott Fawcett / DECADE Course Management — referenced again in Ross’s scratch-handicap journey, especially the idea of sticking with process and long-term averages rather than forcing one heroic outcome. 🟢 Golspie Golf Club — Colin has entered an open there and is looking forward to testing the game somewhere slightly more exciting than the garden lawn. The club’s open competition listings include the Millicent Bowl & Campbell Shield and the Golspie Open. (Golspie Golf Club [https://www.golspiegolfclub.co.uk/competitions/?utm_source=chatgpt.com]) 🟢 Grantown-on-Spey Golf Club - Ross’s weekly open recommendation, picked partly because it looks gorgeous, has heather, mountain views, and doesn’t cost the price of a new wedge. WEEKLY COMPETITIONS 🟢 Golspie Golf Club — Millicent Bowl & Campbell Shield, Golspie, Scottish Highlands. Saturday 13 June 2026. Gents singles strokeplay. Visitor entry listed at £35, members £25, with Golf Empire listing the handicap index limit as 28.0 for men. (BRS Golf [https://www.brsgolf.com/opencomps/club/detail/?id=2003&utm_source=chatgpt.com]) 🟢 Golspie Golf Club — Golspie Open, Golspie, Scottish Highlands. Saturday 25 July 2026. Gents singles strokeplay. Visitor entry listed at £35, members £25. The club describes this as its flagship competition on its James Braid-designed course. (BRS Golf [https://www.brsgolf.com/opencomps/club/detail/?id=2003&utm_source=chatgpt.com]) 🟢 Grantown-on-Spey Golf Club — Gents “McCulloch Cup” Strokeplay, Grantown-on-Spey, Scottish Highlands. Sunday 6 September 2026. Ross mentions a handicap limit of 24 and an entry cost of £27 per person in the episode; I found a Golf in Scotland post confirming Grantown-on-Spey’s 2026 open schedule includes the Gents McCulloch Cup Strokeplay on 6 September, but the visible search result did not confirm the £27 price. (Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/Golfinscotland/posts/%EF%B8%8F%EF%B8%8F-grantown-on-spey-golf-club-opens-2026-%EF%B8%8F%EF%B8%8Four-2026-open-competition-schedule-is/1780326913292279/?utm_source=chatgpt.com]) CHAPTER LIST 00:00 Welcome back, intro duties, and Ross taking four shots to start the podcast 02:51 Ross hits the crossbar on his scratch-handicap attempt 08:30 TaylorMade Spider putters and Colin trying to understand the range 12:12 Mallet putters, forgiveness, Rory, Scottie and off-centre strikes 17:00 Ross’s chipping practice update and balance work 20:13 Switching chipping grips during a round 24:20 Chipping games, landing drills and target practice 25:40 Why the 15-yard chip is such a useful stock shot 26:53 Using a putting stroke for chip-and-run shots 27:29 The five-wood chip-and-run enters the chat 30:28 Colin enters the Golspie open 32:02 Cobra OPTM Max-K driver and the search for more forgiveness 35:35 Workability, shot shaping and whether average golfers really need it 37:46 Lie angle, flatter clubs and why standard might not suit everyone 41:58 Why getting your lie angles checked could make a huge difference 43:31 Ross recommends the Grantown-on-Spey open

15 jun 202646 min
aflevering Golf Trolley Roundup (Push or Self-Driving?) PLUS pick the Yellow Tee on your Next Medal? artwork

Golf Trolley Roundup (Push or Self-Driving?) PLUS pick the Yellow Tee on your Next Medal?

This week, Ross takes us through the highlights of playing the iconic Wentworth West Course, diving into his five favorite holes and what makes the experience special. The boys also tackle a deep dive into modern golf trolleys, sharing tips and insights for anyone considering an upgrade. Then they discuss whether you should take advantage of the WHS rules around using whatever tee suits you in competitions, and how that makes sense for smart golf. Plus, hear about an incredible value open competition on the Isle of Arran and get an update on Ross's Cleveland wedges, featuring a new tip that could improve your short game instantly. Whether you’re a seasoned pro or just starting out, this episode is packed with stories, advice, and practical gear talk to help you enjoy your next round even more. Love the show? Help us grow! * Follow @BothSidesOfPar on Instagram for exclusive videos and tips. * Follow @theshedisback and @mcgraygolf on instagram, too * Subscribe on your podcast app - Spotify, Apple, wherever you listen. * Reviews and ratings make a huge difference - drop us a few stars and say hi! Thanks for listening and supporting us. Got feedback or questions? Shoot us a DM or reply to this email! Until next time—play smart, have fun, and see you on the fairways. — Colin & Ross

8 jun 202651 min
aflevering A £5 Golf Drill, a 1-Under Round, and an Amazing Scottish Links Nobody Talks About artwork

A £5 Golf Drill, a 1-Under Round, and an Amazing Scottish Links Nobody Talks About

This week Colin and Ross catch up on a productive stretch of golf, with both of them quietly sliding down the handicap charts. Colin is dropping into the low twenties and threatening more cuts, while Ross casually drops in a one under round that takes him to 0.7, the sort of update only a low handicapper can deliver with a straight face 😆 Before any scorecards come out, there's a proper gear nerd-out: Colin has ditched fiddly towels and dropped gloves for a £5 figure-eight power band to keep his arms connected and rein in his flying elbows, and the pair compare notes on connection ball drills that mostly gather dust in the garage. From there it's wedges and wisdom. Ross talks through his new cavity-back Cleveland wedges, the tighter gapping he's noticed, and a round that finished with two birdies in the last three holes, alongside an honest confession about misjudging a yardage because the front of an angled green sits closer than it looks. There's a genuinely useful run through formats too: why Ross loves match play while Colin shelters behind Stableford, how to actually use your shots rather than trying to beat better players off scratch, and a plain-English explainer of foursomes, four-balls and greensomes ahead of Colin and his brother Bruce teeing it up in the Royal Dornoch foursomes. Add a neat tip on cutting down a graphite shaft without shredding it and you've got a tidy little improvement toolkit. The back half is a love letter to underrated Scottish golf. Colin reports back from Buckpool on the Moray Coast, a links he'd never heard of that served up blue skies, revetted bunkers, a couple of ugly early numbers, and the highlight of his comeback: team twos on the same par three. They land on a lovely point about value, namely that the gap between a hidden gem and a famous name is far smaller than the green fee suggests, with cracking courses going for £35 to £50. EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS 🟢 The £5 fix for flying elbows: Colin's figure-eight power band that finally beat the towel and the dropped gloves 🟢 Ross shoots one under to reach 0.7, and explains how his new cavity-back Cleveland wedges tightened up his gapping 🟢 The angled-green yardage trap that cost Ross a shot, and why you should laser the pin rather than the front edge 🟢 Match play psychology: how to win by using your shots instead of trying to beat better players off scratch 🟢 Buckpool on the Moray Coast: back-to-back twos, revetted bunkers and proper links golf from as little as £35 GEAR & RESOURCES MENTIONED 🟢 Power band connection trainer (figure-eight arm band), around £5, search "golf power band" on Amazon 🟢 Cleveland wedges (cavity-back 48, 54 and 58 degree) - https://www.clevelandgolf.com [https://www.clevelandgolf.com] 🟢 TaylorMade Stealth driver and adapter shaft, with cheaper replacement shafts found on eBay - https://www.ebay.co.uk [https://www.ebay.co.uk] 🟢 Scott Fawcett and DECADE course management, referenced on lag putting and the 50-foot three-putt - https://decadegolf.com [https://decadegolf.com] 🟢 Buckpool Golf Club, Barhill Road, Buckie, Moray Coast - https://www.buckpoolgolf.com [https://www.buckpoolgolf.com] 🟢 Leven Thistle Golf Club at Leven Links, Fife - https://www.leventhistlegc.co.uk [https://www.leventhistlegc.co.uk] 🟢 Royal Dornoch Golf Club (the foursomes tournament) - https://www.royaldornoch.com [https://www.royaldornoch.com] 🟢 Dalmahoy Hotel & Country Club, East Course, mentioned as a Solheim Cup venue with cut-price evening tee times 🟢 Both Sides of Par on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/bothsidesofpar [https://www.instagram.com/bothsidesofpar] 🟢 Colin on TikTok and YouTube as Golfing Gray, search "Colin Gray golf" WEEKLY COMPETITIONS Leven Thistle Gents Open Course: Leven Thistle Golf Club, played over Leven Links Location: Leven, Fife, Scotland Date: Saturday 8th August Format: Gents individual singles stroke play, 18 holes Cost: £40 for visitors, with coffee and a bacon roll included on arrival Worth knowing: a former Open qualifying links with famously fast greens at this time of year, and early tee times around 7:30am were still showing as available. Entry is via the Leven Links booking site. The club also runs other well-priced opens through the season, including Four Ball Better Ball and Texas Scramble formats. CHAPTER LIST 00:00 Welcome and handicap updates 00:01:41 Connection drills and the £5 power band 00:08:00 Ross's new Cleveland wedges and a one under round 00:12:09 The angled-green lesson: why the front number fools you 00:15:24 Weekly competition: Leven Thistle open 00:16:57 Favourite formats: match play, Stableford and scrambles 00:19:19 Match play psychology: play the shots, not the player 00:23:57 Foursomes, four-balls and greensomes explained 00:28:33 Driver control and cutting down a graphite shaft 00:31:50 Buckpool golf course report 00:36:48 Back-to-back twos: the highlight of the day 00:39:22 Hidden-gem value: brilliant golf for £35 to £50 00:43:04 Wrap-up and where to follow the show

1 jun 202644 min