Customer Rating: 




Summary: The Best
Comment: I am a 54 year old beginner. I read The Little Red Book but I learn more easily from visual demonstrations. This video is easy to follow and has given me a whole winter's worth of things to work on. I don't need a bunch of theory just some simple drills to help me. This video is great for the basics.
Customer Rating: 




Summary: Greatest Golf Video
Comment: The Little Red Book is one of the greatest golf instructional books of all time, and I would argue the greatest. It's simple golf, it teaches the game and the swing without the technical jargin that too many people get caught up in. The only flaw with the book is its lack of illustration, though must concepts are simple enough not to need them.The Little Red Video offers images of those concepts. It's one thing to talk about "clipping the tee" and another to see Ben Crenshaw make a smooth swing with that thought. There is a saying in art, "The great artist is the simplifier," well, I think that goes in golf, too. I strongly reccomend this book to anyone who loves golf--it's forever changed my game and my outlook.
Customer Rating: 




Summary: 15 minutes of oohs and aahs and finally good instructions
Comment: This is an excellent video if the viewer can stand 15 minutes of back-patting. The step by step instructions and imagery make this a great instructional video. Sure wish they did some video magic to Harvey, the camera doesn't do his antiquity justice.
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Summary: Informative yet symplistic.
Comment: Golf basics that anyone can understand. Mr. Penick's illustrious career as a teacher of the sport he loved, was straight forward and easy to understand. The high speed slow motion video was particularly helpful.
Customer Rating: 




Summary: Very instructive, Mr. Penick teaches well.
Comment: This video features Ben Crenshaw and Tom Kite, two of Harvey's pupils. Their admiration for 'their pro' shows. The video examines a wide range of shots, handles the mental game well and reiterates -shotmaking is the name of the game- not form.