Sunday, August 18, 2024

Unconventional golf coach teaches his children the game and how to win

L to R: Paula, Julian, Emma, Kevin

 






By Jane Feehan

Most who seek a professional career in golf started out using a coach. Some have been coached by parents who were pros. Athletes in other sports have also been trained by family members with skills and experience. Boca Raton resident Kevin Andrews has neither skills nor experience in golf but has successfully coached his children Emma,14 and Julian, 11.

It all started four years ago. Emma already played hockey at school; Julian played soccer. During the COVID pandemic, Kevin’s sports focus was redirected inward. What game could involve the entire family?

“A friend suggested we visit Top Golf,” said Paula Andrews, wife and mother. They went to the high-tech complex to familiarize the children with the game; they left as golf enthusiasts.

Kevin moved ahead and bought a set of used clubs for Emma and Julian. He looked into hiring a coach or buying lessons. It was expensive. Multi-day golf schools can cost thousands. Individual hourly lessons top $100 . Not deterred, he attended local golf events, including an LPGA tourney with the family to get a better feel for the sport.

“I got close to coaches so I could hear their instructions to players,” said Kevin who had already dismissed paying for instruction. He knew he’d need more information. He looked at You Tube videos and got a better understanding of what coaching entailed. He bought books. Then the family visited a golf shop at a public course in Lake Worth where a golf pro encouraged them to get Emma and Julian signed up for tournaments to play with those their age and skill level.

“But no one wants to play with beginners,” said Kevin. They had to start somewhere. He put the kids through drills at home and on a local course. Pressure was building to up his coaching abilities. “I can do this,” he thought. “But I wasn’t sure how to proceed.”

Proceed he did but in an unconventional way.

Kevin is an industrial engineer. Industrial engineers are methodical. They analyze parts of processes, or systems to make things work or to build products.

“When I understood how complex the swing is, I broke it down into parts—feet, knees, hips, elbows hands and head,” Kevin recounted. He started with the hands—the grip. Kevin took videos of Emma and Julian as they swung their clubs. Post-practice analysis helped correct mistakes, build up their strengths and strategize their wins by assessing course risks.

“It’s also a head game,” said Kevin. “So, I read Alter Ego: The Power of Secret Identities to Transform Your Life (by Todd Herman, HarperCollins 2019). “It really helped Emma get out of her head while playing in a tournament.”

Emma

Tournament is now a household activity. Four years later, Emma and Julian are solid competitors in their age group. At times they beat older players. Paula drives them to a course to practice five or six days a week. Kevin joins them after work.

“I’m good at driving the ball,” said Julian who ranks recess as his favorite part of school.

Emma, who hopes to be awarded a golf scholarship for college, visualizes herself as a golf pro one day.  “Putting is my strength,” she acknowledged.

These young golfers put their golfing strengths to work as members of Gold Coast Junior Golf Foundation (www.gcjgf.org). The Boca Raton-based nonprofit provides opportunities and scholarships for young golfers under age 19. Young golfers participate in monthly tournaments throughout South Florida. Once a year the organization recognizes players with an awards event at a golf club. Founder and former golf pro Wayne McKinney pays for the food, golf carts and trophies while sharing stories of his golfing days.

This year, Emma and Julian received trophies for playing in every tourney, scoring wins and maintaining good grades at school.

Today, Emma plays on her high school golf team while eyeing the next tournament. Julian likes driving the ball and beating older kids at the game even more than school recess.  Paula, head cheerleader, and Kevin walk each 18-hole course as the kids play in a monthly tournament. Kevin remains their winning coach.

Julian

“I like to follow the advice given in a book I read that helps me coach and the kids play,” said Kevin.

‘If you can get 1% better each day for one year, you’ll end up 37 times better by the time you’re done.’ (From Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad, by James Clear, Penguin Random House 2018.)

There’s probably something else that no book can offer: the confidence, determination, and love only a parent can share with a child aspiring to be a competitor in sports. It’s a huge win.

Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.


Tags: Faces of Florida, Golf