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Those Weekend Golf Guys

Those Weekend Golf Guys

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Take a Golf Magazine Top 100 teacher, Jeff Smith ( (http://jeffsmithgolfinstruction.com) and pair him with an outstanding radio personality and you have the formula for one helluva Golf Talk Radio Show. John Ashton (the show host) has enjoyed success as a morning personality on radio stations from Bangor, Maine to Dallas, Texas. He’s also embarrassed himself on many golf courses in the same locations. John is a hacker, struggling to break 80 (OK, 90) but has a passion and enjoyment of the game, a skewed sense of humor and an outlook that makes this the most entertaining Golf Show around.Jeff Smith, PGA enjoys the innate ability to create word pictures so, even on the radio, his tips and techniques to improve your game are clear, easy to follow and help listeners cut strokes on their very next round.© 2024 Those Weekend Golf Guys
  • Two Balls, One Brain: The Smarter Practice Episode
    Apr 26 2026

    Practice Formats, Pressure, and Tech
    The conversation shifts to practice formats that actually build skill under pressure — worst ball, best ball, and other creative ways to force better execution. Jeff also shares his experience with golf tech, explaining why he prefers Foresight over TrackMan. Spoiler: software accuracy and hardware reliability matter. The segment wraps when Jeff heads off to teach a lesson.

    How to Improve Without Practicing More For golfers who don’t have hours to grind, Jeff lays out a simple, effective pre‑round routine:
    • Arrive 30–45 minutes early
    • Warm up with practice swings
    • Chip with attention to posture and club length
    • Putt for distance control, not hole‑making The goal: build confidence, reduce pressure, and walk to the first tee already feeling sharp.
    The Two‑Ball Practice Method John and Jeff break down a practice method where players hit two shots on every hole and only play the better one. The twist? You don’t know which one will matter until after you hit both. It creates real pressure, forces consistency, and still keeps pace of play moving. It’s one of their favorite ways to simulate tournament‑style focus. Mental Skills: Competing With Yourself The episode closes with a discussion on mental toughness. Playing “best ball against yourself” is a powerful way to sharpen focus and eliminate insecurity. Jeff and John remind golfers that the biggest enemy on the course isn’t the swing — it’s the fear of looking bad. The cure? Commit to good shots, stay present, and stop trying to impress anyone.


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    44 min
  • It’s Not Your Swing — It’s Your Setup
    Apr 19 2026

    Topics Covered
    Whether teaching pros can watch TV coverage and instantly spot what tour pros are doing wrong when they blow up — including Rory’s Masters unraveling

    Whether amateur golfers can accurately diagnose their own swing faults when shots start flying offline

    How being just 1–2 degrees open or closed at impact can produce huge misses, especially at higher swing speeds

    Why you shouldn’t automatically assume it’s a swing problem — and why checking your setup (posture, alignment, ball position, grip, stance) should be your first move

    Key Insights
    Pros don’t lose their swing — they lose timing, decision‑making, or emotional control under pressure

    Amateurs almost always misdiagnose their misses, focusing on backswing positions instead of impact factors

    Impact rules all — a clubface just one degree open at 100 mph can create 10–15 yards of curve, and two degrees can be disastrous

    Swing speed magnifies errors — the faster you swing, the more brutally the ball exposes tiny mistakes

    Setup is the silent killer — most “swing problems” are actually posture, alignment, or ball‑position issues that sabotage the shot before the club even moves

    Practical Takeaways for Listeners
    • Before changing your swing, check your setup — it fixes more issues than you think
    • If your ball is curving, start with clubface control, not your takeaway
    • When watching pros, look for patterns, not isolated bad swings
    • If you’re swinging faster, you need more precision, not more effort
    • Self‑diagnosis is tricky — get feedback from a pro or use tools that show impact data

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    41 min
  • Spin Doctors: How to Choose and Use the Right Wedges
    Apr 12 2026

    Understand the three specs that matter most when buying wedges

    Learn how to build a wedge setup that fits your game and home course

    Discover simple drills to improve contact, spin, and distance control

    Know when to use high bounce vs. low bounce

    Stop guessing yardages and start scoring inside 100 yards

    Ball Position Tip
    Hold the club with your normal, relaxed grip and make a few small, natural swings back and forth — nothing forced, just brushing the grass. Notice where the club consistently strikes the ground.
    That spot is your true low point, and that’s where the ball should go.

    Wedge Fitting Tip
    If you’re going to get your wedges fitted, work with a brand‑agnostic fitter — someone who isn’t tied to a single manufacturer. That way, you’re choosing the wedge that fits your swing, not the one they’re obligated to sell. And make sure the fitting happens on real grass, not a mat. Mats hide fat shots, change bounce interaction, and give you a totally false sense of how the club performs.


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    38 min
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