YOON NA-NA, THE FIRST TRAINING IN ORLANDO, THE U.S… PUTT TO RAISE YOUR SENSE OF PLAY

Yoon Na-na, the first training in Orlando, the U.S… Putt to raise your sense of play

Yoon Na-na, the first training in Orlando, the U.S… Putt to raise your sense of play

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After arriving in the U.S., what was the first club that Yoon In-na (22) dubbed "the queen of long hitting" caught? It was putter.

Yoon Na-na (22), who will make her LPGA debut this year, departed for the U.S. through Incheon International Airport on the 19th, passed Atlanta, and moved to Orlando, Florida. She set up a training base camp and began preparing for the LPGA Tour Founders Cup to be held in Bradenton, near Orlando, on February 6.
Ahead of her upcoming debut match, the team urgently needed to adjust to the situation. Coach Choi Jong-hwan, who had been practicing putting since Yoon In-na was a freshman in middle school, was setting up a training camp in Orlando. Kim A-rim, who garnered her second career win in Hawaii last November, is also joining Choi's camp. 먹튀검증

"I'm going to challenge myself to win the LPGA Tour Rookie of the Year title, fighting my own laziness," Yoon said. "However, I had a hot winter signing contracts with various sponsors after the end of last season, but I don't have enough training. I can't participate in a competition that gives me a chance to participate based on my LPGA Tour performance last year, so I should spend every single competition as precious as possible."

"Yoon has two types of internal and technical resources that are necessary for a golfer to succeed," said Choi Jong-hwan, who helps Yoon in her putting training. "Golfers put more emphasis on the process of learning and growing rather than on the outcome will lead to good outcomes." Yoon has five internal resources: desperation, self-image, mind set, vision and planning, and persistence. The five technical resources are par-on rate, distance, putting, short game, and ability to target courses. Yoon said that she is conducting the latest version of am point green reading and speed control training in preparation for the fast green race in the U.S. Aim point green reading is a method in which players step on the green with two feet to determine the inclination, and the more inclined they are, the more fingers are stretched to determine where they will stroke the ball. She has become more famous since Nelly Korda, the world No. 1 golfer in women's golf, won seven consecutive games last year.

Yoon and Choi participated in various training sessions to adapt quickly to diverse grasslands. In the U.S., grasslands vary widely from region to region and golf courses, making it difficult to adapt. Most Korean golf courses are Bent Grass Green, but there are also many Bermuda Grass and Poañua Grass in the U.S.

Florida, which is warm and humid even in winter, mostly uses Bermuda grass on fairways and greens, which is resistant to heat. Bermuda grass has the property of burning a lot of grains and tends to bend rapidly 50 centimeters before the ball stops. Speed control is important. The texture of Bermuda grass usually grows along a downhill slope. There is talk of it growing along the sun or towards the water, but it is not true.

In California, the Poa-Anua grass is tricky because it creates uneven clouds on the green. The ball should make a good rolling path before putting, hit the hole 60 centimeters past the hole, and create a good ball of 2.5 degrees right after the impact to minimize the impact of irregular grasses.

Yoon Na-na practiced with Choi, including 1.2m to 2.4m recovery putt training, delicate touch training using newly created color towels, and mission drills to handle various tasks.

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