Mark Blackburn breaks down how golfers are beginning to physically evolve.
It’s fair to say that GOLF Top 100 Teacher Mark Blackburn — founder and CEO of the Blackburn Golf Academy and muse to many PGA tour professionals — may know a thing or two about what the future holds for the sport. With his credentials in mind, Blackburn dove into his theory on golf’s evolution on this week’s edition of GOLF’s Subpar.
Blackburn began his analysis on how golf players will continue to evolve and physically advance by drawing parallels to progression in other sports — namely, track and field.
“I just think athletes evolve,” Blackburn said, responding to co-host Colt Knost’s prompt about if this upcoming, potential change is good for the sport. “If you look at Roger Bannister, and the four-minute mile, and then you look at what people do now, if you look at Usain Bolt … It’s evolution.”
Blackburn also discussed the fascinating intersection between coaches — whose job it is to develop and condition their athletes — and the golfers who are being coached and subsequently competing.
“We’re not the ones who hit the shots, so by no means can coaches take the credit, it’s all the player. They’re the one in the battle doing the stuff,” Blackburn said. “But you’d like to think that the ancillary people behind, we’re better at coaching, we’re better at conditioning, we’re better at creating athletes. And golfers are becoming more athletic.”
One player Blackburn lauded as being a “full-on athlete?” Recent Northern Trust winner and World No. 1 Dustin Johnson.
“When golfers look like [Johnson] — and I they are going to, from a younger age,” Blackburn said. “And they look more like baseball players … the 200 mile-an-hour ball speed thing will not be anything that’s un-normal. I think it’s just a matter of time.”
However, while some may be tentative to leave the old, more antiquated fixtures of the game behind, Blackburn believes that all pros should simply be adopting this new style.
“I just think everyone should get on with it,” Blackburn said.