Golf MaGazine - Custom Fit Your Game
Transcription
Golf MaGazine - Custom Fit Your Game
COVER STORY: Buy a Better Game magazine GETFIT2011 MIKE ROYNAN Age: 40 Handicap: 12 Clubs fitted: Mizuno MX-300 irons SEE TRY BUY @ For more information on any of the products in this section, go to Golf.com/see-try-buy Get Fit! ROB ARONOW Age: 42 Handicap: 5 Clubs fitted: Titleist AP2 irons Our exclusive testing reveals that custom-fit equipment makes a tremendous difference for 10 average Joes we’ve PUBLISHED DOZENS of first-person accounts in the past five years that demonstrate how properly fit equipment can help golfers of all abilities be more consistent, have more fun and shoot lower scores. (Most of those fittings were conducted by our exclusive research partner, Hot Stix Golf.) In addition, our affiliation with GolfTec includes savings on clubfittings at the firm’s 140-plus retail locations. Yet, the majority of you still haven’t taken advantage of custom fitting (see page 64). Want more proof that fitting works? GolfTec (and NY Golf Center) fit 10 average Joes, and we tracked their progress during the first few months with the new clubs. You’ll find their stories here. Final note: Look for our exclusive “ClubTest” reviews of 27 top drivers next month. written by Dave Allen & Mike Chwasky EDITED by Rob Sauerhaft photography by Schecter Lee RON RAMSEY Age: 55 Handicap: 14 Club fitted: Cleveland Launcher DST driver DAVID DEUCHLER Age: 34 Handicap: 16 Clubs fitted: Adams Idea a7OS Hybrid irons Age: 42 Handicap: 15 Club fitted: TaylorMade Burner SuperFast driver JOHN RIORDAN Age: 33 Handicap: 14 Club fitted: Cobra ZL driver CHRIS PULICHINO KEVIN KEHOE Age: 48 Handicap: 19 Clubs fitted: Callaway X-24 Hot irons DAN PERRY Age: 33 Handicap: 19 Club fitted: Ping G15 driver DAVID SHANKER BRIAN MAHONEY Age: 31 Handicap: 9 Club fitted: Nike VR STR8-FIT Tour driver Age: 42 Handicap: 14 Clubs fitted: Wilson Di9 irons On GOLF.com For an insiders’ look at a GolfTEC fitting, go to golf.com/equipment Buy a Better Game SEE OLD DRIVER Stainless steel, 200cc, 9°, stiff flex, graphite shaft, 44” length New DRIVER TaylorMade Burner SuperFast, 10.5°, TaylorMade Matrix Xcon 4.8 by Ozik graphite shaft, regular flex, 46.5” shaft length chris pulichino “I’ve gained a ton of distance, sometimes as much as 30 to 40 yards, without exaggeration.” FItter: Tom Sialiano, Director of Instruction, GolfTEC White Plains: “Chris has a sound swing, but for his clubhead speed he was launching the ball too low and with too little spin. We needed to get these numbers up in order to improve his performance.” FIX: More loft, a longer, lighter shaft, and a larger, more modern head dramatically increase his average launch angle and spin rate, which boosts overall distance by providing a better flight. RESULT: The trick for Chris is getting used to the lighter, longer shaft, which proves to be easy. His head speed, ball speed, launch angle and spin rate all increase, which adds up to more yards on a consistent basis. A more forgiving head tightens dispersion, too. Handicap before: 15 Handicap after: 15 Age: 42 Home: Westport, Conn. Occupation: Advertising/Marketing BUY @ TRY OLD IRONS Forged cavity-back, 3-PW, regular flex, steel shaft, standard length, lie and grip size New IRONS Callaway X-24 Hot, 4-GW, uniflex steel shaft, 1° flat lie, standard length and grip size kevin kehoe “The fitting was an amazing experience; I wish I’d done it sooner. I’m hitting the ball a full club longer throughout the set.” FItter: Tom Sialiano, Director of Instruction, GolfTEC White Plains: “Kevin is a developing player who needs irons that optimize his launch angles and spin rates. His old, off-the-rack clubs simply didn’t allow him to perform up to his potential.” FIX: Kevin hits the ball solidly because he’s working to improve his swing. However, his old clubs launch shots too high and don’t produce enough spin so he hits high knuckleballs, which isn’t ideal. The clubs aren’t particularly forgiving, either, so ball speed off the clubface suffers. By contrast, the new iron has a seriously hot face plus a lighter shaft. A slightly flatter lie angle leads to improved accuracy. RESULT: The new irons help in just about every way. Kevin’s head speed and ball speed increase significantly. He’s swinging faster and making better contact. In addition, his launch angle came down 4°, while spin rate increased by 600 rpm. The result is 10 yards more carry (6-iron) plus a much tighter dispersion pattern. Handicap before: 22 Handicap after: 19 Age: 48 Home: Katonah, N.Y. Occupation: Creative Director READER Chris Pulichino: 66 old new 89 mph 93 mph 130 mph 133 mph 11.3° 17.2° 2,550 rpm 3,675 rpm 862 rpm 1,615 rpm 54 yds 38 yds 189 yards 209 yards 207 yards 219 yards Golf Magazine / golf.com February 2011 NEW 3,000 BACKSPIN (RPM) Driver head speed ball speed launch angle backspin sidespin dispersion Range carry distance total distance 4,000 2,000 OLD 1,000 0 0 100 200 DRIVER TOTAL DISTANCE (YARDS) 300 Launch Monitor Results 6-iron head speed ball speed launch angle backspin sidespin dispersion carry distance total distance old 69 mph 97 mph 22.7° 3,911 rpm 749 rpm 25 yards left 143 yards 152 yards new 75 mph 104 mph 18.3° 4,496 rpm 640 rpm 11 yards left 153 yards 161 yards 200 CARRY DISTANCE (YARDS) Launch Monitor Results “I’d been using my driver since the late ’90s. The fitting showed me that it’s important to change clubs to match your swing as it changes over time. I’m getting so much more distance on the course [as I become used to the club] than I did on the launch monitor. My accuracy improved, in part, because I’m making smoother swings with the longer shaft. But I’m not executing on approach shots. I need to get custom-fit irons that suit me like my new driver.” READER Kevin Kehoe: NEW 150 100 OLD 30 LEFT 20 10 0 10 6-IRON (YARDS FROM CENTERLINE) 20 RIGHT “The confidence in knowing that I have clubs fit to my body and swing has been a major benefit. It really helps on short-iron approach shots, since I can swing more under control and still get all the distance I need.” February 2011 golf.com / GOLF MAGAZINE 67 Buy a Better Game SEE OLD DRIVER 460cc multi-material head, 9.5°, graphite shaft, stiff flex, 45”, standard grip size New DRIVER Ping G15, 9° (digitally measured to 10°), UST ProForce AXIVCore Tour Red 79 graphite shaft, stiff flex, 45.75”, +1/32” grip under bottom hand only FItter: David Estabrook, Director of Club Fitting, GolfTEC Philadelphia: “Dan’s high launch and high spin rate caused him to carry the ball far. But shots often flew way off to the right because of that spin. This caused him to miss the fairway and hit out of trouble. So we want high launch and low spin.” FIX: Dan’s natural shot is a baby fade, and the stiffer shaft helps to straighten it. The heavier, tip-stiff driver shaft lowers Dan’s spin rate and drastically decreases his left-and-right dispersion range (see yellow ovals). The G15 provides significantly better performance on offcenter hits (good perimeter weighting and low CG) than his current model. RESULT: Dan gains six yards, his average dispersion decreases by more than six yards (due to a decrease in backspin and sidespin) and he eliminates really bad misses. With G15, the misses are much more clustered (decrease the “hallway” or dispersion pattern) and under control. HANDICAP BEFORE: 22 HANDICAP AFTER: 19 AGE: 33 HOME: Glenside, Pa. OCCUPATION: Semiconductor sales Launch Monitor Results 68 Golf Magazine / golf.com February 2011 TOTAL DISTANCE (YARDS) Driver old new head speed 99 mph 96 mph ball speed 142 mph 139 mph launch angle 16.4° 16.6° backspin 3,852 rpm 3,446 rpm sidespin 1,512 rpm 995 rpm dispersion 26 yds right 20 yds right carry distance 234 yards 239 yards total distance 244 yards 250 yards 300 READER Dan Perry: NEW 200 100 OLD 20 LEFT 10 0 10 20 30 40 DRIVER (YARDS FROM CENTERLINE) 50 60 RIGHT “Going in [to the fitting], I thought it was going to be more of a tape-measure type of thing—here’s my build and how we modify the clubs to fit you. But it’s more about my whole athletic personality, and how I operate on the course.” OLD IRONS Game-improvement cavity back, 3-PW, steel shaft, regular flex, standard length and grip size New IRONS Titleist AP2, 3-PW, Royal Precision Project X 6.5 steel shaft (tip-stiff), extra-stiff flex, 1° flat lie, standard length and grip size rob aronow “These clubs totally changed my game. I’m excited to hit them because I know where they’re going. I know I’m going to hit a good shot, and that’s a fun way to play golf.” FItter: David Estabrook, Director of Club Fitting, GolfTEC Philadelphia: “Rob was wearing out his old irons on the heel. The regular-flex shafts were too soft, especially in the tip, which caused the shaft to bow too much and the clubface to shut down. As a result, he either pulled his shots left or hit them high and right.” FIX: Rob benefits from a club with less offset and a firmer, tip-stiff shaft to eliminate the high, right shots and pulls. This gives him the opportunity to swing hard with confidence, knowing the ball will go straight. RESULT: Rob picked up an extra two clubs in distance with the AP2s. The change from a regular-flex shaft to the extra-stiff shaft eliminated the all-toocommon left miss. His average miss with AP2, on the launch monitor, is just 3 yards right of the centerline. HANDICAP BEFORE: 8 HANDICAP AFTER: 5 AGE: 42 HOME: Collegeville, Pa. OCCUPATION: Director, eBusiness Development READER Rob Aronow: Launch Monitor Results 6-iron head speed ball speed launch angle backspin descent angle dispersion carry distance total distance old new 82 mph 84 mph 106 mph 114 mph 18.5° 18.7° 5,941 rpm 5,367 rpm 42.5° 43.8° 6 yds left 3 yds right 150 yards 170 yards 155 yards 177 yards 300 CARRY DISTANCE (YARDS) dan perry “I’m much more consistent. I’m hitting more fairways and I’m not far off when I miss them. I have confidence to aim the ball instead of hitting and hoping.” BUY @ TRY OLD 200 100 NEW 30 LEFT 20 10 0 10 6-IRON (YARDS FROM CENTERLINE) 20 RIGHT “When I hit the AP2s, it’s like butter. It’s as pure as can be. I’m hitting these 15 yards farther than my previous irons. I’ll still mis-hit one from time to time, but mis-hits aren’t killing me—I’m just off the putting green. Before, I’d be 15 yards left, or under a tree. Now, it’s a tiny pull or fade. It’s like my bad shots aren’t bad at all.” February 2011 golf.com / GOLF MAGAZINE 69 Buy a Better Game SEE OLD DRIVER 440cc, titanium head, 10.5°, regular flex, graphite shaft (65 grams), 1° open clubface, 45” shaft length New DRIVER Cleveland Launcher DST, 10.5°, Cleveland Mitsubishi Ultralight Diamana Red graphite shaft (47 grams), regular flex, 45.75” shaft length ron ramsey “I’m hitting the ball at least 20 to 30 yards longer with better accuracy than before because I don’t have to try to hit the ball high.” FItter: Tom Sialiano, Director of Instruction, GolfTEC White Plains: “Ron is a good ballstriker and has a balanced swing, but he doesn’t launch the ball high enough for his clubhead speed. We need to increase his launch angle by several degrees.” FIX: The Launcher DST 10.5° head is slightly closed, which adds a bit of dynamic loft to the club versus his old model (10.5° and a slightly open clubface, which decreases dynamic loft). In addition, the DST comes with a long (45.75”) and light (47 grams vs. 65 grams) shaft. These specs help him to produce higher launch angles and greater carry distance. RESULT: Launcher DST helps Ron launch the ball higher with impressive results. His launch angle increases from 11.5° to 14.1°, and carry and total distance increase by 25 yards. Handicap before: 14 Handicap after: 14 Age: 55 Home: Bronxville, N.Y. Occupation: Graphic Designer/Illustrator BUY @ TRY OLD IRONS Game-improvement cavity back, 3-PW, graphite shaft, regular flex, standard lie, length and grip size New IRONS Adams Idea a7OS Hybrid iron, 3-PW, Royal Precision Project X 6.0 steel shaft, stiff flex, 2° upright lie, standard length, +1/64” grip size david deuchler “I’m not afraid to pull out the 3- or 4-hybrid, whereas I used to dread hitting a shot out of rough or fairway from 190 to 220.” FItter: Wayne Sciscio, Director of Instruction, GolfTEC East Hanover, N.J.: “David has too much clubhead speed and load to be playing a regular-flex graphite shaft. Also, the lie angle on his previous set was too flat. This caused him to bury the toe of the club in the ground, so the clubface pointed to the right [in an open position] at impact. That’s why he lost so many shots to the right, and lost distance, too.” FIX: The Project X 6.0 steel shaft provides David with more control over the clubface, increasing the number of solid hits. The oversize hybrid iron set (includes 3- to 7-hybrids) generates more distance on mis-hits and is more forgiving than his old irons. RESULT: The stiffer shaft significantly lowers David’s backspin numbers (by 1,200 rpm). This combines with a more upright lie angle to increase average distance by 20-plus yards. David still has a tendency to miss to the right, but dispersion is a little less with the hybrid irons. HANDICAP BEFORE: 20 HANDICAP AFTER: 16 AGE: 34 HOME: Chatham, N.J. OCCUPATION: Portfolio Manager READER Ron Ramsey: 70 new 86 mph 129 mph 14.1° 1,256 rpm 225 rpm 35 yards 193 yards 216 yards Golf Magazine / golf.com February 2011 TOTAL DISTANCE (YARDS) Driver old head speed 84 mph ball speed 126 mph launch angle 11.5° backspin 1,431 rpm sidespin 388 rpm dispersion RANGE 69 yards carry distance 167 yards total distance 192 yards 300 200 NEW 100 OLD 30 LEFT 20 10 0 10 20 30 DRIVER (YARDS FROM CENTERLINE) 40 50 RIGHT Launch Monitor Results 6-iron old new head speed 90 mph 90 mph ball speed 114 mph 121 mph launch angle 19.1° 20.7° backspin 6,723 rpm 5,545 rpm descent angle 49.5° 49.9° dispersion 27 yds right 23 yds right carry distance 153 yards 176 yards total distance 154 yards 181 yards 300 CARRY DISTANCE (YARDS) Launch Monitor Results “The fitting process was very scientific and interesting. I learned that my old driver was poorly fit for me. I’ve always hit a relatively low ball that rolls but now I see how much distance I’ve been sacrificing. My new flight is higher, but I still get good roll. I’m not scoring, though, because my putting is really letting me down.” READER David Deuchler: NEW 200 100 OLD 20 LEFT 10 0 10 20 6-IRON (YARDS FROM CENTERLINE) 30 RIGHT “The hybrids are a big help out of the rough and on long par 4s and par 5s—my long approach shots aren’t automatic layups anymore. Obviously, the extra 15 to 20 yards I’m getting make a big difference. I consistently hit the ball straighter, too.” February 2011 golf.com / GOLF MAGAZINE 71 Buy a Better Game SEE OLD DRIVER Steel-headed 3-wood, 15°, graphite shaft, medium-stiff flex, 42,” standard grip size New DRIVER Cobra ZL, 9.5°, Aldila Voodoo graphite shaft, stiff flex, 45”, standard grip size john riordan “I’m pulling out the driver on every hole now. It’s a drastic change from when I used my 3-wood or my partners’ drivers. My misses are so much more manageable.” OLD IRONS Forged blade, 5-PW, steel shaft, regular flex, standard lie, shaft length and grip size New IRONS Mizuno MX-300, 3-PW, True Temper GS95 steel shaft, regular flex hard-stepped, standard lie, +1” shaft length, +1/32” grip size mike roynan “I’m seeing an average distance gain of 15 yards throughout the set. Once I get the distances down, I’ll be going real low.” FItter: Wayne Sciscio, Director of Instruction, GolfTEC East Hanover, N.J.: “The question John needs to ask himself is, ‘Would you rather hit an 8-iron from the rough or a 5-iron from the fairway?’ I think most people would choose the 8-iron from the rough. There’s limited potential with the 3-wood; you’re not going to hit it 250 yards.” FIX: A larger, 460cc head expands the hitting area and gives John so much more distance than his 3-wood. The club’s lower loft and stiffer shaft flex bring down spin rate and ball flight and dramatically boost carry and roll. RESULT: John’s clubhead speed jumps 5 mph and his ball speed increases 8 mph, while backspin drops and sidespin decreases by 1,250 rpm. It all adds up to 26 yards more off the tee. He’s even tamed the dreaded hook, which occasionally plagued him with his old 3-wood and driver off the tee. HANDICAP BEFORE: 16 HANDICAP AFTER: 14 AGE: 33 HOME: San Francisco, Calif. OCCUPATION: Internet Sales Manager BUY @ TRY FItter: David Estabrook, Director of Club Fitting, GolfTEC Philadelphia: “Mike’s clubs were simply too short, so his approach shots were very unpredictable. He was so up and down in his posture that he couldn’t get the meat of the club on the ball and was losing a lot of distance.” FIX: Lighter, longer shafts (1 inch longer than standard) take the dip out of Mike’s swing. This brings his contact point closer to the center of the clubface and improves the transfer of energy to the ball. The MX-300 irons provide Mike with a forged feel plus more forgiveness than his blades. RESULT: Switching to a more dynamic head design (stronger lofts) and longer, lighter shafts (softer tip and ‘hard-stepped’ to play between regular and stiff) provide a dramatic increase (12 mph) in ball speed while making misses more manageable. Contact is much closer to the sweet spot, as evidenced by an enormous improvement in “smash factor” from 1.20 to 1.29 (1.50 is max). HANDICAP BEFORE: 15 HANDICAP AFTER: 12 AGE: 40 HOME: Collegeville, Pa. OCCUPATION: Attorney READER John Riordan: 72 new 96 mph 138 mph 18.1° 3,677 rpm 43.1° 7 yds right 230 yards 241 yards Golf Magazine / golf.com February 2011 NEW 200 100 OLD 20 LEFT 10 0 10 DRIVER (YARDS FROM CENTERLINE) 20 RIGHT “I have much more confidence in the driver. I’m hitting more short irons into the greens of late. (Of course, I can’t say I’m hitting it beautifully every time.) Also, my shot shape has become a more consistent fade. Before, I had a tendency to slice, pull or even duck-hook the driver. That was no fun.” Launch Monitor Results 6-iron old new head speed 78 mph 82 mph ball speed 94 mph 106 mph launch angle 25.3° 21.3° backspin 6,668 rpm 6,009 rpm SIDESPIN 1,292 rpm 1,302 rpm descent angle 48° 46° carry distance 124 yards 149 yards total distance 125 yards 153 yards 10,000 BACK SPIN (RPM) Driver old head speed 91 mph ball speed 130 mph launch angle 17° backspin 4,059 rpm DESCENT ANGLE 43.4° dispersion 16 yds right carry distance 205 yards total distance 215 yards TOTAL DISTANCE (YARDS) Launch Monitor Results 300 READER Mike Roynan: OLD NEW 6,000 0 0 100 6-IRON CARRY DISTANCE (YARDS) 200 “It’s eye-opening to see the on-course differences with longer shafts. The extra inch takes time to get used to, but I’m starting to be more dialed-in and comfortable, especially with longer irons.” February 2011 golf.com / GOLF MAGAZINE 73 Buy a Better Game SEE OLD DRIVER 460cc, 9.5°, graphite shaft, stiff flex, 46”, standard grip size New DRIVER Nike Victory Red STR8-FIT Tour, 11.5°, neutral face angle, Mitsubishi Rayon Fubuki Tour 73 graphite shaft, stiff flex, 45”, standard grip size brian mahoney “I actually work less to get more [distance]. I’m hitting a more controlled shot and I know where my misses are going to be.” FItter: Josh Chervokas, Custom Shop Director, New York Golf Center: “Brian has a tendency to come into the ball too steeply, which delofts the face at impact. He launches shots too low for his head speed. We need to increase his launch angle, which should increase overall distance.” FIX: The 11.5° loft (2° more than his previous driver) plus a higher-launching shaft help to produce a higher ball flight, longer carry and more overall distance. The 1-inch shorter shaft provides better feel and control. RESULT: Brian blocked his old driver on occasion. The new club improves dispersion, distance and consistency. Nike’s STR8FIT technology enables him to increase launch angle, too. The setting for a 2° closed face angle boosts launch (15.2°) and flight apex (99 feet). Brian prefers the neutral face visually and hits it three yards longer than the 2° closed face. HANDICAP BEFORE: 12 HANDICAP AFTER: 9 AGE: 31 HOME: Stamford, Conn. OCCUPATION: Tournament Director BUY @ TRY OLD IRONS Forged oversize cavity-back, 4-PW, regular flex, graphite shaft, standard length, lie and grip size New IRONS Wilson Di9, 4-PW, regular flex, steel shaft, -1/2” length, standard lie, standard grip size davId shanker “The distance gains I see with the new clubs on the launch monitor are real when I get out on the golf course.” FItter: Josh Chervokas, Custom Shop Director, New York Golf Center: “David hits it remarkably straight for someone with such a steep and out-to-in club path. He manages his pull cut but loses tons of ball speed, generates a crazy amount of backspin and launches the ball too high. All of this adds up to massive losses in distance.” FIX: The Wilson Di9 (a significantly lower and deeper center of gravity) reduces his backspin to a manageable 6,500 rpm. The slightly shorter shaft length (1/2-inch shorter than standard) improves his consistency. David also benefits greatly from a change to a lower-spinning ball from a Tour model. RESULT: The combination of Di9 clubheads and a slightly shorter, heavier steel shaft reduce his backspin (2,200 rpm less) while increasing ball speed. The result is a significant distance gain (more than one full club) throughout the bag. Handicap before: 14 Handicap after: 14 Age: 42 Home: Dix Hills, N.Y. Occupation: Manufacturing Executive READER Brian Mahoney: 74 Golf Magazine / golf.com February 2011 NEW 75 APEX (FEET) Driver old new head speed 101 mph 100 mph ball speed 146 mph 146 mph launch angle 12.5° 14.3° backspin 3,447 rpm 3,086 rpm SIDEspin 1,287 rpm 1,020 rpm apex 81 feet 93 feet carry distance 230 yards 240 yards total distance 243 yards 254 yards 100 OLD 50 25 50 100 150 200 DRIVER TOTAL DISTANCE (YARDS) 250 300 Launch Monitor Results 6-iron head speed ball speed launch angle backspin DESCENT ANGLE dispersion carry distance total distance old 82 mph 93 mph 20.6° 8,653 rpm 42° 1 yd right 115 yards 118 yards new 85 mph 100 mph 21.8° 6,483 rpm 44° 2 yds right 128 yards 130 yards READER David Shanker: 300 CARRY DISTANCE (YARDS) Launch Monitor Results “At last, I carry the ball the way I should. It’s a much higher trajectory. Before, if I had to carry a hazard, I had to compensate in some way. Now, if I have 240 to carry the bunker, I carry it 250 on the course. It feels easy. Also, my slight mis-hits aren’t unplayable anymore. No longer do I play ‘Army golf.’ Rather, I hit a nice, controlled draw.” 200 NEW 100 OLD 20 LEFT 10 0 10 6-IRON (YARDS FROM CENTERLINE) 20 30 RIGHT “The fitting was a huge learning experience. I play quite a bit of golf and thought I had a very good set of irons, which I liked. It was eye opening to see exactly why I was losing so much distance on approach shots. I’m not long, so every bit helps.” February 2011 golf.com / GOLF MAGAZINE 75 C MAGAZINE GETFIT2011 Camilo Villegas amilo Villegas would no sooner skip a workout than Mario Batali would miss a meal. But Villegas isn’t one for taking chances. Emblazoned in block letters on the wall of his home gym is a warning that serves as his reminder: SACRIFICE OR REGRET...YOU CHOOSE! Three years ago, when Villegas bought his house, a twostory stucco spread on a leafy street in Jupiter, Fla., his first design decision was to furnish a downstairs bedroom in the manner of a 24-Hour Fitness. His second move was to clamber up a ladder and stencil on the bold-faced, finger-wagging message—a jolt of motivation for a man with plenty of his own. and abuses his abs against 90 pounds of tethered weight-machine resistance. One way he works his lower body is through a freakish feat of strength and athleticism: Standing on one leg, he jumps to the top of a three-foot-tall box, then jumps down, landing on the other leg, 10 times fast. Fresh from that torture, he grabs a 25-pound medicine ball in both hands, squats with the ball between his legs, then leaps as if to dunk it through a basketball hoop, repeating the maneuver for four sets of 10. His approach sounds obsessive, ritualistic. “It’s not a program or a regimen,” he explains. “It’s a lifestyle.” “It’s about balance. Too much of anything can get in the way of you achieving your goals.” HUGE DRIVE “Without fitness, I wouldn’t be on Tour,” Villegas says. “It’s absolutely central to my success.” 82 GOLF MAGAZINE / golf.com February 2011 “I’m not the kind of guy who hits the snooze button in the morning,” Villegas says. “But I still like to see those words when I wake up and get going. They help keep me focused on what it’s all about.” Sacrifice or regret. In the choice between them, Villegas, 29, has never wavered. At least not since the fall of 2000, when he showed up as a freshman on the University of Florida campus, a 138pound wisp from Medellin, Colombia, and the shortest hitter on the Gator golf team. Back in his home country, he had prowled the fairways as an alpha male, racking up an amateur record that made him something of a Latin Tiger Woods. College brought about his first Charles Atlas moment. “I realized,” Villegas says, “that I was going to have to get longer and stronger if I wanted to compete.” Into the campus gym he went—weights, yoga, cardio, pilates—with a fervor wor- thy of its own Rocky soundtrack. Out he stepped four years later, having trimmed his body fat from 12 percent to 4.5 percent while adding 25 pounds of limber muscle to his threadbare frame. By graduation, Florida’s shortest knocker had transformed himself into its longest bomber. Peter Parker had become... Spider-Man. “Without fitness, I wouldn’t be on Tour. No doubt about it,” Villegas says. “It’s absolutely central to my success.” Success for Villegas—three wins and more than $13 million in prize money in four years as a pro—has come in the kind of torrents that allow for private jets and five-star hotels, both breeding grounds of softness. Villegas has responded by hardening his resolve and his already rippled core. His methods have the ring of the masochistic. His sit-ups aren’t situps: They’re seated cable crunches in which he perches on a medicine ball On non-tournament days, at home or on the road, Villegas is up at 6 a.m. and at it for the next two hours. Workouts that begin with stationary bike warm-ups and dynamic stretching give way to squats, presses, crunches and a grid of exercises that read like an astronaut’s instructional manual: rocket jumps, thrusts, lifts, vertical swings. Over the past decade, his longest layoff from the gym lasted all of seven days. “I’m not sure what happened,” Villegas says. “I must have had a really nasty case of the flu.” “With a guy like Camilo, it’s like you’re dealing with a thoroughbred,” says Chris Noss, Villegas’s strength and conditioning coach. “The challenge isn’t getting him to get going. The challenge is trying to rein him in.” In the depth of his dedication, Villegas calls to mind his idol, Gary Player, the Tour’s original fitness guru. And like Player, he acknowledges the dangers of overdoing it, which doesn’t always translate into his slowing down. An avid cyclist, Villegas alternates gym time with long hours on his road bike, often pairing them back-to-back. One year, Noss recalls, Villegas pedaled 80 miles from his home in Jupiter to Miami in time to catch a flight to a tournament. On trips home to Colombia, he trains with his fellow countryman, Santiago Botero, a world champion cyclist. Villegas himself competes in amateur races. Of the six 100-kilometer events he has entered, he has won four. Last year, Villegas concedes, he spent so much time cycling that his play suffered. Though he won the Honda Classic and notched six other top-10s, fatigue set in late in the season. Noss had to ask his man: Do you want to be Lance Armstrong February 2011 golf.com / GOLF MAGAZINE 83 ANGUS MURRAY Villegas’s longest gym layoff? Seven days. “I must have had the flu,” he says. magazine GETFIT2011 captain crunch Villegas rises every day at 6 a.m. for a two-hour, fullbody workout. the seat of his road bike, Villegas feels the mental clutter melt away. “It’s something that lets me get away,” Villegas says of cycling. “I just lock onto the wheel in front of me and don’t lose it. That’s the only thought that’s going through my head.” Such single-mindedness lies at the heart of who Villegas is. The term “Type A” undersells his disposition. His bedroom closet is color-coded, his shirts arranged according to both hue and style. When he cooks, he cleans the dishes before he eats. Villegas’s younger brother, Manny, who followed Camilo to the University of Florida and is now struggling to follow him onto the PGA Tour, regards Camilo’s bearing with a mix of wonder and admiration. “He’s always been like that,” Manny says. “I work out with him a fair amount. But we’re very different. I like to work out like a normal human being.” 84 Golf Magazine / golf.com February 2011 Villegas’s approach has helped earn him not only a superhero’s nickname but also a place in pop culture as golf’s buffed-out poster child. Late last year, he enhanced that reputation by appearing naked on the cover of a glossy magazine, splayed out in his famous Spider-Man pose: torso in plank position, one leg stretched behind him, the other bent and poised to spring. “To be honest, I didn’t even think twice when I was asked to do that,” Villegas says of his Full Monty. “I’ve worked 10 years to get the body I have. I’m proud of what I’ve accomplished.” Glancing quickly at the picture, you might mistake Villegas for a photoshopped teen idol. But images of him that you swear were airbrushed prove undoctored when you meet him faceto-face. He has the chiseled calves of a sprinter, and square-cut shoulders sloping toward a tapered waist. Bulging veins run down his biceps like tributaries in a topographical map. With every tournament he enters, there are, of course, groupies. Predictably, People named him one of the country’s “hottest bachelors,” and little about his home suggests that the honor should not be his. Gym aside, there are few furnishings, and nothing perishable in the fridge. His garage is given over to a turbo Cayenne Porsche, a Mercedes CLK 63 and a white Chevy truck with the license plate, KMILO. A hot tub on the back deck spills into an infinity pool. At the end of a dock, two Jet Skis sit suspended above the currents, ready to be lowered, James Bond-style. Yet if the house has a few hallmarks of a playboy’s mansion, Villegas hardly leads the life of Hef. He rarely drinks. He’s tucked in by 10 p.m. most nights. His idea of indulgence is a weakness for sweet potato fries, and he admits to “eating only half a cookie.” Inside his house, at the top of the stairs leading to the second floor, hangs a large framed photograph of the Rolling Stones. Among the faces gazing from it is the wizened, wrinkly visage of Keith Richards, a man who has known neither sacrifice nor regret—a better musician than role model. “I try to live my life in moderation,” Villegas says. “Except when I work out. Battle of the Buff Two exercise nuts from different eras—Camilo Villegas, 29, and the father of golf fitness, Gary Player, 75—go head-to-head HOURS IN THE GYM One hour a day (minimum), three to six days a week Two hours a day, seven days a week workout of choice Biking, plyometrics (high-impact muscle training), weight-lifting Swimming laps, stretching, running. “You know what I did this morning?” Player tells Golf Magazine. “I jogged up and down a mountain. A mountain!” philosophy “Rest is rust.” “Sacrifice or regret. . . you choose.” diet Everything, but in moderation Mostly vegetarian, grilled chicken, lots of water. “Sugar is killing our young people,” says Player, whose son, Wayne, is diabetic. traveller’s tip “Pack resistance bands in your suitcase. In a pinch, you can get a decent workout with them.” “Pushups! You can do them anywhere, any time, strengthening your arms, pectorals, and back. And good old-fashioned sit-ups for your core.” Then I tend to go at it pretty hard.” He pauses, ponders. “The scary thing,” he says, “is how quickly you lose it when you don’t stay with it.” It’s just another reminder, fixed into his psyche—like a slogan stenciled onto his wall. n ap photo/rob carr or the Tour’s money leader? Villegas says he won’t make the same mistake again. “It’s about balance,” he says. “Too much of anything can get in the way of you achieving your goals.” Fitness remains central to that equilibrium. The gym, for Villegas, isn’t just a fueling station but a refuge, a sanctuary from the near-constant distractions of his work life—what Villegas calls the “zoo of the PGA Tour.” Rising early in the morning to reel off several hundred crunches as electronica pumps through his surround-sound system amounts to a kind of hardcore meditation. Hopping on Camilo Villegas