Tighter Golf Articles

Mechanical Principles, Kinematics, and the Science of the Golf Stroke

Getting Started

First encounters with a radically different approach

Why Tighter Golf Address Looks Nothing Like Conventional Setup

The clubface points right, yet the ball goes straight. Discover what geometric honesty looks like and why it appears so radically different.

Foundation

Core mechanical principles

The Five-Bar Concept

An uncompensated closed-chain model that explains balance, constraint, and alignment without extra fixes.

Beyond Dunning-Kruger: Why Tighter Golf Replaces 'Feel' With Mechanical Certainty

Escape the psychological trap that cycles golfers between overconfidence and frustration. Constraint-based design makes precision inevitable.

The Math of Mastery

Why the golf swing isn't a motion, but a mechanical algorithm built on the Five-Bar Linkage and dynamic stability.

The Universal Linkage: Why The Best Swings Echo Physics

Loose systems are chaotic. Constrained systems are repeatable. See why the best swings behave like efficient mechanical systems found in nature.

The Cognate Theorem

The Roberts-Chebyshev Theorem proves why different anatomies can produce identical swing paths. The mathematical end to the 'everyone is different' debate.

Why Tighter Golf Isn't for Everyone

For golfers who want to understand the architecture, not just execute the positions. Why this system demands more—and why that's the point.

Application

Examples and extensions of the core model

The Five-Bar Stroke and The Golfing Machine

How the five-bar model ties into Homer Kelley's TGM framework of geometry, mechanics, and alignments.

Hogan's Grip & the Real "Secret"

Why Hogan's weak grip, cupped wrist, and late supination were linked compensations—and why copying them literally often backfires.

The Five-Bar Model vs Hogan's Compensation Chain

How a universal kinematic model contrasts with Hogan's personal sequence of swing fixes.

Cognates in Golf: When Different Means Identical

Discover why different golf positions can produce identical results. Understanding cognates reveals hidden equivalences in the swing.

Practical Implementation

Making principles executable

Physics Without Equations

Why mathematical formulas don't improve golf execution, but physics principles translated into procedures do.

The Paradox of Precision

Why geometric golf instruction is actually easier than feel-based approaches. Replacing subjective awareness with objective procedures.

The Systematic Approach

How cross-disciplinary analysis makes intuitive excellence explicit and teachable.

System Positioning

Understanding Tighter Golf in context

Executive Summary of Tighter Golf

A comprehensive overview of the Tighter Golf system, covering its core principles from the Spatial Five-Bar Linkage to Dynamic Balance.

Inverting Golf Instruction

Replacing high-dimensional feel-based searching with low-dimensional constraint-based assembly.

Tighter Golf vs. Traditional Instruction

The paradigm shift from positional mandates to a scientific, rule-based approach derived from mechanics.

Feel vs. Real

An exploration of why mainstream golf instruction prioritizes simplicity and feel over detailed mechanical precision.

Geometric Inputs vs. Kinetic Outputs

A foundational look at how Tighter Golf's inputs contrast with the kinetic data from Swing Catalyst and Trackman.

Architecture vs. Path

Clarifying the difference between architectural inputs and corrective outputs.

A Question of Precision

An analysis of why the Tighter Golf system represents a unique level of procedural and logical precision.

Why Tighter Golf Is Graduate-Level

Most instruction is elementary school (tips). This is graduate school (systems). Discover the difference between mimicry and mastery.

Does a System Need a Tour Pro?

Discussion on the two paths to credibility: validation by results versus validation by first principles.

Your Golf Setup Is an Algorithm

Tighter Golf achieves constant-time setup through constraint satisfaction. The algorithmic difference explained.

Investment & Value

Understanding the economics of instruction

The $10,000 Problem

Why systematic instruction costs $197 but saves you thousands in wasted equipment and lessons.