SimpleGolf.com’s Amazing 1 Hour Short Game System This Free Ebook is part one of the two part SimpleGolf.com’s Simple Swing Version 2.0 THIS EBOOK WILL DRAMATICALLY IMPROVE YOUR SHORT GAME IN LESS THAN 1 HOUR! This eBook contains a simplified short game system that will dramatically improve your short game in minutes. It includes an easy to learn short game stance that will immediately improve all shots of 50 yards or less. This stance almost completely eliminates fat shots and topped shots. It will immediately give you an accurate and consistent short game. We also give you swing checkpoints to make sure your short game swing is very consistent and very accurate. While you can use your current grip with the short game system, we do also include a section on the Power Thumb Grip, which is a great new grip that will improve your short game shot accuracy by 50%, which means you will consistently be closer to the pin. For Questions or Support Go To: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Danbury, CT SimpleGolf.com’s 1 Hour Short Game System “Guaranteed To Take Strokes Off Your Game In Under An Hour” Free Support Even though this Ebook is free, we still provide full support. We are doing this in order to impress you so much with your short game improvements that you realize we can easily help your golf swing in the same way and you will check out our amazing new Simple Swing Version 2.0 . If you have a questions please feel free to ask at the HelpDesk at http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk or give us a call at 203-794-4900. The Simple Golf Short Game System is the little brother of Simple Swing V2.0 – the 1 Hour Golf Swing. Simple Swing V2.0 virtually makes your shots to go straight. The Simple Golf Short Game System was developed specifically to increase short game accuracy and consistency and it does that magnificently. Most golfers are actually experience an increase in accuracy in the first 10 minutes. After 20 minutes, most golfers feel very stable and confident with the new swing. How Is The Simple Golf Short Game System Different From The Traditional method? In the Simple Golf Short Game System we use the “Heels Together Flared Stance”. In this stance, we put the heels are together and then “keeping both knees bent” we flare the back foot 45 degrees at address. The Heels Together Flared Stance Just Plain Stops The Ball From Going “Left”! The biggest swing mistake most golfers make with the short game is cutting across the ball with an outside-to-inside swing often using just their arms. Slicing or pulling short game shots to the left (for a right-handed golfer) will be a thing of the past. Since about 80% of all golfers have an outside-to-inside swing, this is a really big deal. In the Simple Golf Short Game System, we use what we call the “Double Tuck” with the arms. We keep “both upper arms tuck in” against the side of the chest. This “Double Tuck” forces something called “connection” which automatically makes the core (shoulders, chest & abdomen) power your swing correctly rather than letting you make an “arm swing”. This “double tuck” will instantly make your short game shorts more accurate and more consistent. For higher handicappers the Simple Golf Short Game System will immediately and dramatically improve your short game shorts. Your shots will be much straighter and much more consistent. The Simple Golf Short Game System will instantly improve your percentage of good golf shots for all chips and pitches. It is much easier to learn and it is much easier to repeat than any other swing. You will immediately become much more consistent than you ever thought possible. Most importantly, the Simple Golf Short Game System makes your short game more fun! “Stiff to the pin” is definitely fun! Why Is The Simple Golf Short Game System Better? By being a “restrictive swing” by design, the Simple Golf Short Game System literally makes you Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT do most things necessary in a good short game swing correctly. Because of the way you set up you can NOT make most of the swing errors that are common in traditional short game stances. The 1 Hour Short Game Swing reduces the number of variables in the short game thereby reducing the possibilities for mistakes. Traditional short game methods with their complex turning and movements are fine for people who dedicates their life to golf and can spend hours each day practicing. If you want to be a “traditionalist” then as long as you practice multiple hours each day you will do fine. However, most of us cannot spend hours each day practicing. For the rest of us the Simple Swing System offers the easiest to learn, easiest to maintain golf swing and short game system ever. Ball Position Ball position should be set in relation to your front shoulder, which is the center or axis of your swing. In general changing your ball position will change the height of your shots. See Ball Position at http://simplegolf.com/blog/full-swing/basics-full-swing/ball-position-for-sympleswing/ for more information. Normally you should hit your short game shots with a descending blow so the ball should be played back behind the front shoulder joint. By varying your ball position, you can dial-in the height of the shot you want. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT THE HEELS TOGETHER STANCE The Importance of A Narrow Heels Together Stance For Your Short Game One of the big differences with the Simple Swing System short game swing is that we do everything with a narrow heels together stance. Only if the terrain prohibits a heels together stance should you use a wider stance. The reason we only use this narrow heels together flared foot stance this is simple, it reduces variables in your swing so there are fewer things to go wrong. Having fewer things go wrong will definitely make you more accurate and more consistent. When you have your feet apart, it becomes very easy to make slight movements with your head or body that effect your balance and shift your weight. When you shift your balance point, you also shift the bottom of your swing arc. That means it will be much hander to make solid repeatable contact with the ball at impact. In addition, when you keep your feet together you will find you have a more compact swing because keeping the narrow stance does limit the amount of your backswing. In this case, that is a very good thing because you will be much more consistent with a compact backswing. It’s a fact that most of the bad swing errors are introduced at the top of backswings. Having a compact swing eliminates a major percentage of all those potential errors. When you have your feet together, you are reducing the variables in your shot whether it is a chip shot or a pitch. The bottom of your swing arc will always be at the same point giving you much more consistent contact because there is much less body movement. Some people have done this previously with chips. Now we are doing it for any shot where you can get the ball to the green easily with a compact swing with your feet together. For most people that means all shots inside 50 yards and for longer hitter it could be out to 100 (or more) yards. Let me give you a practical example. Previously, when I was at 100 yards, I used to hit my sand wedge. Now I have an easier shot to use. I now use my 50-degree PW with my heels together back foot flared 45 degrees and an upper body dominant compact swing. With this compact shot, I am more consistent and more accurate that I ever was with my full swing sand wedge. I normally hit my full swing 50-degree gap wedge 125 yards. With my heels together using the Simple Golf Short Game Pitching motion I hit my 50 degree pitching wedge 100 yards. The big difference is that this simple pitching motion is much more accurate and much more consistent. Accuracy and consistency is exactly what we are striving for with our short game. THE WRISTS No Conscious Wrist Break The 1 Hour Golf Short Game swing for chipping and pitching are not wristy shots. With the 1 Hour Golf Short Game Swing you will learn how to hit solid consistent chips without any conscious wrist break. We are not saying to hit shots without any wrist action. Yes, there definitely is some wrist break but it is not a conscious or deliberate part of the swing. With the Simple Swing System Power Thumb Grip, the wrist hinges or bends in the direction of the thumb. We call this “thumb cocking” rather than wrist cocking. There will be some “thumb cocking” on your longer shots because of the momentum of the club however; you should almost feel like your hitting your shots without conscious wrist action. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Phil Mickelson hits great wristy lob shots. If you practice 6 hours a day for decades then you can hit wristy shots like Phil. However, using the Simple Swing System Lob Shot method you will be able to hit very high, very accurate lob shots even if you do not play very often. POWER THUMB GRIP You Do Not Have To Use Our “Power Thumb Grip” But We Highly Recommend That You Do. Our testing indicates that using the Power Thumb Grip reduces you shot dispersion factor by 50%. That means if you normally miss shots 20 yards right and 20 yards left you will now only go 10 yards right or 10 yards left. To put it another way the Power Thumb Grip is 100% more accurate. Top Hand Grip (The Left Hand Grip for Right Handed Golfers.) The top hand PowerThumb Grip is a key element of the Simple Swing System because it allows you to keep your club on-plane with the clubface square all through the swing. The top hand grip is significantly different from a traditional grip. It does not hold the club in all the fingers. The top hand and forearm are in a completely different orientation from that of a traditional golf grip. It is NOT a strong grip. It is a completely different way of gripping the club. We call it the “Power Thumb Grip.” It is a flat wristed grip. The “flat wrist” refers to the back of the hand being flat (or aligned) with the wrist throughout the swing. 1. Extend your left arm down again with your elbow joint on-plane. Grab the club in a pinching motion between your thumb and index finger. The back of your hand (near your index finger) will point almost straight up (12 o’clock position). Thumb at 3 o’clock position Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Club in middle of palm Notice the whole thumb is in contact with the grip. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT 2. You should feel a slight groove forming at the base of your thumb, where your palm joins your wrist. The grip of your club will go in that groove. Your whole thumb from the top to the base of the thumb pad should be in contact with the grip. The Groove the Club Fits In The thumb pad positioned at the back of the club KEY POINT: Notice how the whole thumb including the thumb pad at the base of the thumb is in contact with the grip of the club. Your thumb and the large pad at the base of your thumb should be against the grip at the 2 o’clock to 3 o'clock position (for a right-handed golfer) on the back side (away from the target) of the grip. The pad at the base of your top hand index finger should be right on the top of the shaft. YOU NEED TO USE THE RING FINGER AND MIDDLE FINGER OF THE TOP HAND TO LITERALLY PUSH THE CLUB’S GRIP FIRMLY UP AGAINST THE PAD AT THE BASE OF THE THUMB. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT (The Top Thumb Fits In The Groove) Then you let your fingers grab the club to hold it securely. It is okay to have a small gap between the base of your little finger of your top hand and the grip. 3. The left thumb (for a right-handed player) and the golf club travel back “on-plane” during the backswing and it is also “on-plane” during the downswing. BOTTOM HAND Grip (The Right Hand Grip for Right Handed Golfers) A two finger overlap grip is strongly recommended although other bottom grips can be used if used with the “pinch” modification. We have Simple Swingers successfully using all type of bottom hand grips (baseball, interlock, overlaps, etc.).Those bottom hand grips can cause some people to close the clubface through impact causing a draw (or hook). We highly recommend starting with the two-finger overlap with pinch modification. The “Pinch” With all the grips it is very important that the thumb and index finger of the bottom hand are “pinched” together. The tip of the thumb and the tip of the index finger should be very lightly touching. It is also okay to have the almost touching or open slightly. The pad of your bottom hand thumb should be resting on the pad of the bottom hand index finger. You are in effect pinching your thumb and first finger together around the club. The purpose of this “pinch” modification is to slightly weaken the tendency of the bottom hand to tense up, overpower the top hand, and roll it over closing the clubface at impact. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT The Two-Finger Overlap Grip Note The "Pinch" With The Two Fingered Overlap Grip Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT The Simple Golf Short Game System Step 1 – Heels Together Back Foot Flared 45 Degrees 1. Square your front foot to the target line meaning your front foot will be perpendicular to the target line. 2. FLARE THE BACK FOOT 45 DEGREES (THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT) 3. Definitions: The TARGET LINE is an imaginary line that extends from the target to the ball. The EXTENDED TARGET LINE extends from the ball back to infinity. 4. Put almost all of your weight on your front leg. In reality, you will be hitting your short game shot standing on one leg with your back leg just used for balance. Weight on Front Leg: We have you keep your heels together and your weight almost all on your front leg to dramatically reduce extra lower body motion improving consistency. Knees Bent: We have your keep both knees bend to reduce the rotation of your hips. You can still turn your back hip away from the ball but you will not be able to over-rotate your front hip creating an outside-to-inside swing with often with a pulled shot as the result. Back Foot Flared: We have you keep your back foot flared to allow a good turn on your backswing. Yes, it will be somewhat restricted because of the reduced hip and leg motion but that is a good thing, which will dramatically improve your accuracy and consistency. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 2 – Both Knees Bent 1. Next set up with both your knees bent 2. Your weight should be almost all on the front leg. (The back leg is used just to help you with balance.) 3. To get all your weight on your front leg you will have to shift your hips forward so your front hip is actually outside your front ankle (meaning your hip is closer to the target than your ankle is). To see what we mean try standing on one leg for a few seconds. In order to maintain your balance you will have to shift your hips toward the target (while keeping your head in the same place). If you do try to stand on one leg and you do not shift your hips towards the target, you will not be able to keep your balance. 4. When you shift your hips towards that target, that motion will automatically tilt your spine away from the target (20-25 degrees). At impact, we want your head behind the ball and your spine tilted away from the target. This is our way of pre-setting you in the correct position so all you have to do is turn your core (shoulders, chest & abdomen). 5. Your front shoulder should be significantly higher than your back shoulder. Do make sure your hips and your shoulders stays square (parallel to the target line). If you set up with your shoulders off line, your shots will be off line. If you push your shots (toward the right for a right-handed golfer), the most common cause is that you are setting up with your shoulders pointing a little to the right. 6. TO REALLY STABILIZE YOUR LOWER BODY ON LONGER SHOTS MOVE BOTH KNEES OUTWARD UNTIL YOU FEEL YOUR LOWER BODY “LOCKDOWN”. If you do that correctly there should be little or no lower body movement on your longer shots which will increase your accuracy and consistency. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 3 – Tuck and Track It Back 1. As the club shaft comes back the club head end of the shaft should be pointing at (or tracking) the extended target line. If the club head end of your shaft does not point at the extended target line then you are off-plane. 2. The upper arms stay tucked or “connected” to the sides of the chest. The front arm is straight but the upper arm (inside of the biceps) still stays “connected” to the side of the chest. 3. The head remains stable while the core turns around the spine. Your spine should be tilted away from your target (20-25 degrees) because your hips have shifted forward. 4. The weight remains almost all on the front leg. What little weight that is on the back leg is on the ball of the back foot. 5. Both knees should remain bent because this limits over rotation of the hips. Notice that if you keep both knees bent you cannot turn your hips too far especially too far forward. (Try straightening your knees and watch how easy it is to turn your hips too far opening those hips up at impact and causing an outside-to-inside swing.) While we are not completely preventing hip motion we are very much limiting hip motion. Limiting hip motion reduces variables in your swing insuring more consistency and accuracy. On these short game shorts accuracy and consistency is more important than raw distance. Yes, you will lose 20% in distance but your gain 100% in accuracy and consistency. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 4 – An On-Plane Backswing At Horizontal 1. As the club shaft comes up to horizontal, the shaft should be parallel to the target line. THIS IS BACKSWING CHECKPOINT #1 2. Only now does the back elbow start to bend. 3. The upper arms stay “connected” to the sides of the chest. Even though the front arm is connected or tucked in, notice that it is straight (no bend in the front elbow). 4. The head remains stable while the core turns around the spine. 5. The weight remains on the front leg and the spine stays tilted away from the target. 6. If there is too much hip turn the club will start coming inside (under the swing plane) and your shaft will not hit “Checkpoint #1”. If you do not hit “Checkpoint #1” with the club parallel to the target line when it is horizontal, the odds of your hitting a straight shot drop significantly. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 5 – On-Plane Checkpoint #2 1. When the front arm is horizontal, it too should be parallel to the target line. THIS IS BACKSWING CHECKPOINT #2 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. If your front arm (at horizontal) is starting to point behind you then you are taking the club back inside or under the swing plane. In the upper part of the backswing, the butt of the club should point at the ball and then continue back tracing the extended target line (Red Line). Both your upper arms should stay “tucked” in to the sides of your chest up to (or at least almost up to) the position where your front arm is horizontal. The head stays stable as the core rotates around the spine. Your weight stays almost all on the front leg. Both knees stay stable (meaning bent and hardly moving). KEEPING BOTH KNEES BENT THROUGH IMPACT IS THE KEY TO STOPPING ANY OVER-ROTATION OF YOUR HIPS FROM PULLING SHOTS TO THE LEFT (RIGHT HANDED GOLFER) The front arm horizontal is the recommended top of backswing position especially when you are just learning the Simple Golf Short Game System. Yes, you can make longer backswings where your front arms goes about horizontal but your absolutely most accurate and most consistent short game shots will come when you limit your backswing to front arm horizontal or below. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 6 – Extra Long Top Of Backswing 1. THIS LENGTH BACKSWING IS RECOMMENDED ONLY FOR LONGER SHOTS This length short game backswing (with the front arm going higher than horizontal) is a little harder to control and recommended only when you have developed really good short shot accuracy and consistency with your front arm just going to horizontal on your backswing. That is a great backswing length for most golfers. It will give you good distance control and the most accurate and most consistent results. 2. As your arm moves up past horizontal, it follows your swing plane and starts to move inside (of parallel) pointing behind you just a bit. Past horizontal that is normal and your swing is still on-plane. However, you must make sure the butt of the club continues to point at the extended target line. 3. If you have to make a backswing this long, make very, very sure the butt of the club continues to trace the extended target line. To see where the butt of your club is actually pointing it is helpful to stick a long white tee into the hole on the butt of your club. That will make it much easier to see where the butt of the club is pointing. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 7 – The Downswing Begins 1. Notice that the head is remaining stable. (We are not saying frozen, we are saying if there is any side-to-side movement it shouldn’t be too much movement.) What we don’t want is any up-and-down movement of the head. 2. The hips do move forward a bit. Note the front hip is actually outside of the front ankle. 3. Both upper arms should again remain connected (or tucked in) to the sides of the chest. 4. The downswing is just an uncoiling of the core (shoulders, chest & abdomen). The core is turning around the spine. 5. The club retraces the path of the backswing. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 8 - Downswing Continues On-Plane 1. 2. 3. 4. Head is staying stable although spine tilt (and hip tilt) may increase slightly. Weight stays mostly on the front leg. The “connected core” powers the swing right through impact. In effect, your arms are acting like a segmented whip. Your core (shoulders, chest & abdomen) is the center that powers the whip. Your shoulder, upper arm, lower arm, wrist and club are the other segments of the whip. Since your wrists are very “loose” or relaxed they function as the tip of the whip 5. Your wrist and arms do add power but it is done as a reaction to the turning of the core rather than as a conscious effort to power the swing with your arms. 6. As the club shaft reaches horizontal it is again parallel to the extended target line (red line). Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 9 – Approaching Impact 1. Both knees retain their bend. Both knees need to stay bent to prevent any over-rotation and opening up of the front hip causing an outside-to-inside swing path. 2. The upper arms stay “connected” or “tucked in” even well through impact. 3. The hips and shoulders stay square well through impact. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 10 – The Follow Through 1. Both knees stay bent at least through this point. 2. As the club comes up to horizontal, it is again parallel to the target line (red line). 3. On the follow-through, the arms should stay “tucked in” at least until the club reaches parallel in the follow-through. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT -- Step 11 – Approaching the Top Of The Follow Through 1. Now the legs are almost straight. 2. The body is turning to finish facing the target. 3. Only now are the upper arms are being fully pulled away from the chest losing their connection. 4. The butt of the club continues to trace the target line. (The butt of the club tracing the target line indicates that the club is still on-plane.) Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Step 12 – The Finish 1. The knees have straightened allowing the body for finish facing the target. 2. Your back heel lifts so you are up on the ball or toe of your back foot. 3. Your weight should finish almost entirely on the front leg. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Review of key points of the Simple Golf Short Game System Backswing (Begin Your Backswing By Turning Your Core) Your backswing should begin by turning your core (shoulders, chest & abdomen) not your arms and not your hips! The inside of both your upper arms should be connected to (“tucked in” against) the side of your chest. If you truly have your weight on your front leg, you will have to do a core turn in order to maintain your balance. Both knees should be bent. The back foot should be flared 45 degrees. THERE SHOULD BE VERY, VERY LITTLE WEIGHT ON THE BACK FOOT. You do NOT need any deliberate arm or wrist movement until the club is approaching horizontal in the backswing. There is little or no hip movement on shorter shots. On longer shots your back hip should not start moving back (on your backswing) until the shaft is somewhere near 45 degrees back from the address position. Starting your backswing with your core will help insure you make a one-piece on-plane takeaway. As you take your club back, the shaft should trace the extended target line. At the top of the backswing, your front wrist should be flat and the butt of the club should point at the extended target line. Start every backswing by saying to yourself “Tuck and Track”. The “tuck” is to remind you to keep both arms tucked in or connected to your core. The “track” is to remind you to make sure the club head end of the shaft points at (tracks) the extended target line right from the beginning of the backswing. Backswing Checkpoint 1 When the club shaft is horizontal in the backswing the shaft should be parallel to the extended target line. It should be even with the “hand line” (the line where the hands started at address). That will help insure that your backswing is on-plane. Backswing Checkpoint 2 When your front arm is horizontal in your backswing it should be parallel to the extended target line. You also need to double check that the butt of the club is pointing towards the extended target line club. This is most easily done by sticking a long white tee in the grip hole on the butt of the club. Then when your front arm is parallel, you should easily be able to see if the tee stuck in the butt end is pointing at the extended target line club. Use The Heels Together Simple Golf Short Game System On Almost All Short Game Shots The Simple Golf Short Game System should be used on all short game shots (where terrain allows) inside of 50 yards. Longer hitters can often very effectively use this stance out to 100+ yards. The Simple Golf Short Game System is a deliberately restrictive swing. That restriction is the reason for its tremendous accuracy and consistency. The only time the Simple Golf Short Game System should not be used is when the terrain is too uneven or if you are outside your “comfortable distance” range. Remember, keep the heels touching with the back foot flared. It you move the heels apart you will be less consistent and less accurate. Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Choose Your Club Using The 20% Rule THIS IS IMPORTANT! A rule of thumb is that the feet together stance will reduce your total distance 20% (sometimes up to 25%) for each club but significantly increase your accuracy and consistency. That means you will have to use one or two clubs more but the result will be a big improvement in accuracy and consistency. After a little practice, you should see a big improvement in your distance control as well as your accuracy. The short game is not about power and raw distance; it is about accuracy, consistency and distance control. Chart Your “Feet Together ” Flared Stance Distances For Your Short Clubs The best way to accurately learn your short game distances is to go out to the practice range (or an open field or park) with a tape measure and a dozen balls. Mark off some distances in 10-yard increments. Then mark down how far you hit your wedges and short irons with your feet together. Keep that chart in your bag so you do not forget your distances. The “other partial swing” column is for charting things like ½ wedges or other partial shots you may be comfortable. Knowing “your distances” for all these shots will take strokes off your game. Chart Your Full Swing “Tuck” Distance Club Lob Wedge Full Swing Tuck Swing Other Sand Wedge Pitching Wedge Gap Wedges 9 iron 8 iron 7 iron You can use the Simple Short Game Swing for even longer clubs but we would strongly recommend the Simple Swing System for the longer full swing shots. (See the special offer at the end of this eBook) Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT Addendum THE SIMPLE SWING VERIONS 2.0 FULL SWING This Simple Golf Short Game System is the little brother of the 1 Hour Golf Full Swing. The 1 Hour Golf Full Swing allows you to hit full swing, full power shots just even straighter than your Simple Golf Short Game System shots. For more information about Simple Swing Version 2.0 Ebook check out: http://SimpleGolf.com Any special offers we are currently running will be listed here: http://SimpleGolf.com/specials SUPPORT If you have any questions at all about Simple Golf Short Game System check out the Simple Golf Helpdesk at http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ or call us at 203-794-4900. We are here to help. The HelpDesk is the fastest and most dependable way to ask a question or make a comment and get a prompt response because everything is tracked. PLEASE USE EMAIL ONLY AS A LAST RESORT BECAUSE EMAIL JUST IS NOT DEPENDABLE THESE DAYS AND I DO NOT WANT TO MISS ANY COMMUNICATIONS FROM YOU. If you do email me and you do not get a response in 24 hours then I missed your email so try the HelpDesk or call. You can call us directly at 203-794-4900. If you are an international customer, we can set up a Skype schedule through the HelpDesk. Just put a message in on the HelpDesk at http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/and we’ll schedule a time to meet online. Simple Swing System Blog and Forum You should also check out the Simple Swing Blog http://simplegolf.com/blog/wp-admin/ and the Simple Swing System Forum http://simpleswing.forumco.com . Support: http://www.simplegolf.com/helpdesk/ © 2012 Simple Golf Company – Danbury, CT
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