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  • EP 127: Hold Your Nerve — The Mental-Physical Connection Under Pressure
    2026/06/23

    This week's US Open and Meijer LPGA Classic told the same story from opposite ends — Wyndham Clark grinding down a hostile Shinnecock crowd to win his second US Open, and Lottie Woad missing a two-footer with the Meijer title right there. Two world-class players, same moment: when the mind spirals, the body follows.

    That's exactly what we unpack in this episode. Grip pressure spikes, breathing gets shallow, and the stroke you've made 10,000 times suddenly feels foreign. This isn't just a mental breakdown — it's a physical one. And it's the SSWING sweet spot.

    The Improvement Pivot Point this week: Train Your Pressure Response, Not Just Your Swing. Most golfers practice when they're comfortable. But golf is played under pressure — and pressure changes your body. We break down how to build pressure reps into your routine, find your physical anchor, and train your movement patterns so deeply that when everything's on the line, your body already knows what to do.

    Because golf improvement isn't just about how you move on the range. It's about how you move when it counts.


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    17 分
  • EP 126: Be Honest About Your Game
    2026/06/17

    This past weekend, champions were made across every sport — and the ones who won all had one thing in common: they looked their weaknesses dead in the eye and got to work.

    On the PGA Tour at the RBC Canadian Open, Bud Cauley, the 36 year old, finally got his first win — his 239th start — and it didn't come off the tee. It came from a chip-in on 12 and a wedge to the heart of 18. His short game saved him when it mattered most. On the LPGA, Jin Hee Im and Somi Lee won the Dow Championship with a bogey-free 62, just 26 putts, and a clutch 8-footer in a playoff — and Lexi Thompson's run came down to a 5-foot putt that didn't fall. Five feet. The whole tournament. On the Korn Ferry Tour, Zack Fischer converted a four-shot final round lead to claim his first win in his 171st career start at the inaugural OccuNet Classic in Amarillo.

    Off the course — the New York Knicks are NBA Champions for the first time since 1973. Jalen Brunson dropped 45 points in the clinching Game 5 against the Spurs, capping a run where the Knicks came back from double-digit deficits in all four of their wins — including the greatest comeback in NBA Finals history, erasing a 29-point deficit in Game 4. They didn't win because they were the most talented team. They won because they were honest about their gaps, made adjustments, and trusted each other when it mattered most. That's the thread.

    This week Scott gets into the short game conversation that most golfers keep avoiding — chipping, pitching, and the truth about what happens after you miss a green. Because here's the thing: if your short game is good enough, you take the pressure off everything else. You can miss greens. You can have an off day with the irons. But if you can get up and down — you stay in the round. Most golfers know their short game needs work and do nothing about it. That stops today.

    Ask yourself honestly: is your short game good enough? Because the answer is either your biggest problem or your biggest opportunity.

    Own Your SSWING.

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    👉 Available now in the SSWING Shop

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    22 分
  • EP 125: Pressure, Perseverance & the Long Game
    2026/06/09

    This past weekend reminded us why we love this game. At the center of it all was Nelly Korda, who won her first U.S. Women's Open at Riviera — her fourth major — with a clutch birdie on 17 and a par putt on 18 that circled the lip and dropped in for the win. Seven shots off the lead after round one, she made a grip change on her sister Jessica's advice and shot 67-67-69 to close it out. That's not luck. That's what elite athleticism looks like under pressure — and it's exactly what sets the LPGA women apart. Born into arguably the most athletic family in sports, the daughter of Czech tennis champions, Korda's rotational power, her ability to reset physically mid-round, her body that holds its pattern when everything tightens — that's a trained athlete performing at the highest level. The LPGA women move differently. This week at Riviera proved it.

    The rest of the weekend didn't disappoint either. JT Poston won a marathon Memorial Tournament in a playoff after blowing a four-shot lead, grinding through a 31-hole Sunday to birdie 18 when it mattered most. New dad Tyrrell Hatton went wire-to-wire at Valderrama to hold off Rahm on LIV. And 35-year-old Ben Kohles chased a fifth Korn Ferry Tour win across 1,016 career professional rounds — the definition of the long game. With Shinnecock Hills and the US Open two weeks away, Scott breaks down what all of it means for your game: why movement under pressure is the separator at every level, and how you can start building the kind of athletic foundation that holds up when something is actually on the line. Own Your SSWING.


    Shop the new G'day Golfers hat
    👉 Available now in the SSWING Shop

    Join the SSWING Society
    Be part of a growing community of golfers, movers and performance-minded individuals committed to mastering their game.

    📬 Join the SSWING Newsletter: www.sswing.com

    Your weekly drive — The Friday Fix — delivering golf movement, mastery tips and all things SSWING straight to your inbox.


    Support the Show

    Follow our Social Media for all the best moments from the show:

    Pivot The Path Instagram - click here!

    SSWING YouTube - click here!

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    20 分
  • EP 124: Learn to Love the Mundane — A Lesson from the Charles Schwab Challenge
    2026/06/02

    The most important putting lesson of the year didn't come from the winner. Russell Henley birdied his final three holes in regulation to catch 54-hole leader Eric Cole, then converted again in the playoff to win the Charles Schwab Challenge at 12-under. Cole, 37, had been here before — this was his third runner-up finish on the PGA Tour and his first win is still waiting.

    But here's what's fascinating: through 54 holes, Cole led the field in Strokes Gained: Putting and Proximity to the Hole — the two most "boring" disciplines in the game. No highlight-reel drives. No flashy recoveries. Just relentless precision on the greens and dialed-in distance control, week after week. "That's why I practice really hard and that's why I try and do everything the way I do," Cole said — "so that I could be as prepared for whatever tomorrow brings."

    That's this week's Improvement Pivot Point: learn to love working on the mundane. The stuff nobody films. The 10-foot putts you roll for an hour. The alignment drills. The putting gate. The things that feel like nothing — until Sunday at Colonial, when they become everything. Scott also breaks down Joaquin Niemann's playoff win at LIV Korea, Céline Boutier's stunning Sunday charge on the LPGA, Kota Kaneko's breakthrough on the DP World Tour, and Doc Redman's Korn Ferry victory in Knoxville.

    Five tours. Five lessons. All of it pointing back to the same truth — the work you do on the mundane is what makes the magic possible. That's how you Own Your SSWING.


    Shop the new G'day Golfers hat
    👉 Available now in the SSWING Shop

    Join the SSWING Society
    Be part of a growing community of golfers, movers and performance-minded individuals committed to mastering their game.

    📬 Join the SSWING Newsletter: www.sswing.com

    Your weekly drive — The Friday Fix — delivering golf movement, mastery tips and all things SSWING straight to your inbox.


    Support the Show

    Follow our Social Media for all the best moments from the show:

    Pivot The Path Instagram - click here!

    SSWING YouTube - click here!

    SSWING Website - click here!

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    15 分
  • EP 123: From Long Shot to Major Champion: Aaron Rai's Master Class in Quieting the Noise
    2026/05/19

    Aaron Rai just shocked the golf world — but was it really a shock?

    At the 2026 PGA Championship, a 290-1 long shot stepped onto one of the most crowded leaderboards in major championship history and did something most players never figure out: he turned down the volume. While Rory McIlroy chased history, Jon Rahm lurked, and a packed field jostled for position at Aronimink, Aaron Rai went quietly to work — and thundered to a three-shot victory, becoming the first Englishman to win the Wanamaker Trophy in over a century.

    This week, we break down the one skill separating the player who cracks under pressure from the one who cashes in on it: quieting the noise. From Rai's "quiet eye" putting technique to his iron covers rooted in a father's love, to his total indifference to what tour players are "supposed" to do — Rai's win is a masterclass in what happens when you Own Your SSWING so completely that the external chaos simply can't compete.

    Whether you're facing a packed leaderboard, a crowded market, or a moment that feels too big — this episode is your blueprint for finding stillness in the storm and turning it into something thunderous.


    Shop the new G'day Golfers hat
    👉 Available now in the SSWING Shop

    Join the SSWING Society
    Be part of a growing community of golfers, movers and performance-minded individuals committed to mastering their game.

    📬 Join the SSWING Newsletter: www.sswing.com

    Your weekly drive — The Friday Fix — delivering golf movement, mastery tips and all things SSWING straight to your inbox.


    Support the Show

    Follow our Social Media for all the best moments from the show:

    Pivot The Path Instagram - click here!

    SSWING YouTube - click here!

    SSWING Website - click here!

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    20 分
  • EP 122: Integrity, Consistency & Showing Up When No One's Watching
    2026/05/05

    This week on Pivot the Path, Scott breaks down one of the most remarkable weekends across the tours — and the through-line is something every golfer (and every human) can take away.

    Cam Young goes wire-to-wire at Doral and wins by six — but one simple moment has nothing to do with the scorecard. He called a penalty on himself that nobody else saw. Then birdied the next hole. That's not just integrity. That's freedom.

    Nelly Korda is doing something that's never been done. Six events. Zero finishes outside the top two. She's now in the same breath as Annika Sorenstam — and she's doing it with a process, not a highlight reel.

    And Mikael Lindberg? He won a DP World Tour title in Turkey — and a PGA Championship berth he didn't even know he was playing for. Showed up fully, week after week, and the reward found him.

    Scott unpacks the Self-Penalty Principle — the idea that we often know exactly where we've let something slide. The question is whether we call it on ourselves before someone else has to.

    Where in your game — or your life — are you waiting for an official that's never coming?


    Join the SSWING Society
    Be part of a growing community of golfers, movers and performance-minded individuals committed to mastering their game.

    📬 Join the SSWING Newsletter: www.sswing.com

    Your weekly drive — The Friday Fix — delivering golf movement, mastery tips and all things SSWING straight to your inbox.


    Support the Show

    Follow our Social Media for all the best moments from the show:

    Pivot The Path Instagram - click here!

    SSWING YouTube - click here!

    SSWING Website - click here!

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    17 分
  • EP 121: There Is No “Wrong” in Golf—Only Consequences
    2026/05/01

    There is no “wrong” in golf—only consequences. The best players in the world learn how to adapt.

    It’s a simple idea, but it changes everything.

    This week, we look at Matt Fitzpatrick and his cross-handed chipping grip—something that, to many, might look unconventional. But here’s the truth: it’s not wrong. It just produces a certain left hand position that works for Matt under pressure when chipping.

    And Fitzpatrick? He understands those consequences. He owns them. He adapts around them.

    That’s what the best in the world do.

    In this episode, we break down:

    • Why “unconventional” doesn’t mean incorrect
    • How Fitzpatrick’s grip influences his ball flight and control
    • The real difference between technical perfection and functional performance
    • How to understand your tendencies instead of fighting them

    If you’ve ever felt like your swing doesn’t “look right,” this is your reminder: it doesn’t have to.


    It just has to produce something you can manage.

    That's how you Own Your SSWING.


    Shop the new G'day Golfers hat
    👉 Available now in the SSWING Shop

    Join the SSWING Society
    Be part of a growing community of golfers, movers and performance-minded individuals committed to mastering their game.

    📬 Join the SSWING Newsletter: www.sswing.com

    Your weekly drive — The Friday Fix — delivering golf movement, mastery tips and all things SSWING straight to your inbox.


    Support the Show

    Follow our Social Media for all the best moments from the show:

    Pivot The Path Instagram - click here!

    SSWING YouTube - click here!

    SSWING Website - click here!

    SSWING Instagram - click here!

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    21 分
  • EP 120: Mastery Lives in the Monotony
    2026/04/22

    At every level of professional golf, the separation isn’t just distance or power anymore—it’s the ability to move the ball intentionally. Left-to-right, right-to-left, flighted, controlled. The best players in the world aren’t married to one shot shape—they own both.

    That was especially clear in the playoff where even Scottie Scheffler showed a rare crack in the armor. In a moment where shot-shaping versatility was critical, being forced into one pattern under pressure made even the smallest margin matter. At that level, it’s not about perfect swings—it’s about having options when tension rises.

    SSWING’s physical training supports exactly that adaptability. One of the key movements we use is the glute bridge. It’s simple, but it builds what elite players need—pelvic stability, glute activation, and control of rotation without losing balance. That directly translates to controlling face and path under pressure.

    That connects to something we see every day at SSWING.

    Stability is the foundation of all of it.

    One of our new members this week came in doing what so many golfers do—adding more effort to fix inconsistency. More speed, more manipulation, more “trying.” But what unlocked things wasn’t complexity—it was stability through movement and sequencing. Once the base became stable, shaping the ball both ways stopped being something they chased and became something they could access.

    That’s the shift.

    Because at every level—from Korn Ferry grinders to LPGA winners to PGA Tour champions—the game rewards the same thing:

    Stability first.
    Control second.
    Then the ability to shape it any way the situation demands.

    That’s where real mastery lives.


    Shop the new G'day Golfers hat
    👉 Available now in the SSWING Shop

    Join the SSWING Society
    Be part of a growing community of golfers, movers and performance-minded individuals committed to mastering their game.

    📬 Join the SSWING Newsletter: www.sswing.com

    Your weekly drive — The Friday Fix — delivering golf movement, mastery tips and all things SSWING straight to your inbox.


    Support the Show

    Follow our Social Media for all the best moments from the show:

    Pivot The Path Instagram - click here!

    SSWING YouTube - click here!

    SSWING Website - click here!

    SSWING Instagram - click here!

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    22 分