Golf has always been known as a challenging sport to master. It’s a dynamic game where success or failure can be measured in centimeters and that to play well, demands dedication, patience, skill and finesse. It can be a source of immense pleasure or extreme frustration. At the competitive level, it’s been dominated for centuries by those blessed with natural ability or fortunate to have been taught correctly. Yet despite its exacting nature, golf is today one of the world’s fastest growing sports.
Much of this burgeoning popularity can be attributed to the recent evolution of the sport. Equipment manufacturers have been pumping out a massive array of hi-tech, hi-performance and attractive looking gear—adding tremendous appeal and intrigue to the once traditional, low-tech sport. Colossal prize money, superstar players and round-the-clock media coverage have also driven interest in the sport.
And quietly in the background at the game’s top level, the past several years has also seen the development of revolutionary new performance technologies. Ones that integrate computer analysis and intuitive training methods, with equipment to optimized each player's game.
These technologies have allowed golfers to improve their performance quickly and with stunning results, but until now, have primarily been reserved for the sport’s touring elite. With the opening of the Wilding Golf Performance Centers in Bangkok these technological advantages enjoyed by the world’s top players are now available to golfers of all skill levels, seven days a week.
Founded by Shane Wilding, an internationally renowned golf coach, the Wilding Golf Performance Centers blend world-class training, state-of-the-art technology and advanced equipment to help players achieve their full golf potential and get the most out of their game.
"Golf has developed at an incredible pace across Asia, however the technology and training available in the region is still very traditional. Until now, golfers living in Asia have had to travel to the US, at considerable expense, to improve their game at state-of-the-art training facilities such as our Bangkok Performance Centers.”
"Golf is not a difficult game if you've been taught correctly, and given the right information on equipment." — Shane Wilding
No comments:
Post a Comment