13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best Short-Game Instructional Book Ever!, September 21, 1997
By A Customer
A MUST for any serious teacher, student, or even casual sufferer of short-game hiccups. It is the best attempt at simplifiying an extrememly misunderstood but crucial portion of the game of golf. Since it is out of print, I guess I should make sure I get one before I write such a wonderful review and everyone wants one
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best short game book ever written., November 7, 2001
Yes, Pelz is great, but Runyan's book is unmatched. He has an engineering approach that will appeal to analytical types. This guy averaged less than 2 when chipping so he holed it more often than he two putted. An he can explain the principles of what he is doing so you can take his approach without taking his grip for example.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Greatest book from the greatest short-game teacher ever, August 30, 2005
This review is from: The short way to lower scoring (Hardcover)
This book is the best of the best on short game. I've read every short-game book and viewed every short-game video since -- and none is better than what Paul Runyan explains in this seminal book. I have owned this book for 25 years, and go back to it as my bible whenever any part of my short game is even slightly off. Mr. Runyan can fix anything by providing the right idea and visualizaiton of the easiest way to execute any short game shot.
I had the good fortune to grow up as a teenager in La Jolla, CA in the late '60's when Gene Littler, Billy Casper, Mickey Wright, Craig Stadler, Phil Rogers, and John Schroder were all "regulars" at La Jolla Country Club, where Mr. Runyan was head pro. They were there because of Mr. Runyan. He attracted and helped develop the great players of the time because he could help them improve their short games better than anyone else. Unlike later short game teachers, Mr. Runyan proved that what he taught works under pressure -- by beating Sam Snead 8 and 7 for the PGA title in 1938 (even though Snead was outdriving him by 100 yards on many holes) -- and by logging 28 additional PGA tour wins based on his short game. Mr Runyan was a role model not only in golf's short game, but in every aspect of life.
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