Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: How you should practice to improve By: Claude Harmon III, Top 100 Teacher July 29, 2021 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share by Email Off Course with Claude Harmon: How you should practice to improve First impressions of L.A.B.'s new Link 2.1 and 2.2 | Fully Equipped Why there is no ‘standard length’ in the golf industry | Fully Equipped Brent Rooker's favorite course (and 1 he wants to play) | Subpar How MLB players squeeze golf into Spring Training | Subpar A SURPRISING DAY AT COBRA Why you need to know what you're doing adjusting the Qi4D weights | Fully Equipped Why the new Opus SP+ wedge fits a niche | Fully Equipped Ad Slot 90 Seconds A Ad Slot 60 Seconds B Ad Slot 60 Seconds A World-renowned putting coach Phil Kenyon lays out a practice plan for green reading, getting a good start line, and distance control on the greens. Latest In Instruction 3 hours ago 5 lessons from the U.S. Women's Open champ to shoot lower scores 3 hours ago How an elite amateur trains low point to guarantee solid chipping contact 1 day ago The difference between hitting fairway and greenside bunker shots 2 days ago The drill this elite amateur uses to control low point and flush his irons Golf.com Photographer Related Articles Putting Pros Teaching Joes: Do these 5 things to drill every 5-footer By: GOLF Editors Putting Golden Rules: Jack Nicklaus’ putting technique Instruction Play Smart: Lower your expectations for massive putt lengths Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: The stark differences between the PGA and LPGA Tour Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: Why this LPGA pro’s second career win was so sweet Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: Why golf appealed to Mito Pereira as a kid Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: Why Mito Pereira quit golf for two years as a teenager Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: Why Mito Pereira was ‘so embarrassed’ the first time he saw Tiger Woods Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: Why this major winner likes to keep his warm-up short