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Guest: Jeff Flagg (2014 World Long Drive Champ, Founder of Flagg Performance)
Host: Jeff Pelizzaro
Episode Number: 365
Podcast: The 18STRONG Podcast
Partners: Linksoul, 1stPhorm
Unlock the secrets to enhancing your golf game with the wisdom of Jeff Flagg, the 2014 World Long Drive Champion, as we traverse the significance of rotational strength and athleticism on the fairway. Our conversation is not just a swing analysis; itās a full-fledged exploration of how to invigorate your game, regardless of whether youāre in your prime or enjoying the sportās golden years. We tap into Jeffās expertise in functional training, using tools like PurMotion, to fortify your strength, mobility, and ultimately, your performance.
This weekās episode is a treasure trove of insights for the discerning golfer who recognizes that power drives are just the beginning. Jeff and I pull back the curtain on the nuanced interplay between sport-specific exercises and our bodyās mechanics, challenging the status quo of traditional workouts. We share stories from both the tee and the gym, illustrating the importance of a comprehensive training regimen that acknowledges the unique demands of golf ā from honing rotational movements to fostering endurance for those challenging back nine holes.
Finally, we chart Jeffās inspiring journey from baseball to the links and how a philosophy rooted in functional movement revolutionized his approach to fitness. Our discussion underscores the need for tailored training that respects the intricacies of different sports, advocating a holistic strategy for strength and injury prevention. So, whether youāre aiming to lower your handicap or simply wish to infuse your lifestyle with vigor, this episode is your caddy to a more athletic and assured presence on the green. Join us as we help you shape not just your game, but an energetic and enriching life beyond the course.
(00:03) Building Athleticism in Golf
World Long Drive Champion Jeff Flagg discusses rotation in the gym, social media engagement, and embracing individual perspectives in fitness and nutrition.
(12:16) The Importance of Rotation in Golf
Rotation is crucial in golf, impacting mechanics and endurance. Physical deficiencies can be exposed, requiring more rotational exercises in training.
(14:59) Rotational Strength for Athletes
Rotational strength is crucial in sports like golf, and sport-specific training with dynamic movements can prevent injury and enhance performance.
(25:11) Transition to Exercise Education and Driving
A former baseball player found a new passion in golf after studying philosophy, working with a swing coach, and seeking functional movement training.
(28:36) Building a Rotational Athlete
Natureās interconnectedness in sports training, emphasizes rotational exercises, fasciaās role, and individualized approaches for injury prevention and performance.
(36:25) Gym Equipment and Protein Supplements
Proper post-workout nutrition, innovative fitness equipment from PurMotion, and the benefits of ground-based tools for functional training.
(49:35) Golf Training for Strength and Confidence
Natureās versatile fitness program for golfers of all ages and skill levels, using movement variety and alternatives like bands, to eliminate weak links and build confidence.
(56:44) Favorite Golfing Moments and Advice
Debating golf movies, walk-up songs, book recommendations, and dream celebrity foursome with generational talent.
It Takes What It Takes ā Trevor Moawad
Getting to Neutral ā Trevor Moawad
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1st Phorm: Try any of the 1st Phorm products with FREE SHIPPING, go to 1stphorm.com/18strong.com (By using this link, you will be entered into our Monthly 1st Phorm Giveaway!)
To continue the conversation and ask any questions you may have, head over to the 18STRONG Movement group on Facebook.
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18STRONG Resources (All of the cool stuff we recommend: products, books, golf stuff, etc ā and discount codes for the 18STRONG Crew)
0:00:04 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
The 18STRONG Podcast, episode number 365 with Jeff Flagg from Flagg Performance. Whatās up guys? Welcome back to the 18STRONG Podcast, where weāre here to help you build a stronger game, because we believe that every golfer deserves to play better, longer. This episode, we have a return guest from episode number 170, Jeff Flagg. Jeff was the 2014 World Long Drive Champ and is the founder of Flagg Performance. Jeff has been working with golfers on their fitness, on their game, for several years now, and we bring him back on the show to talk about building the athleticism in your game. And heās actually here making the case for golfers rotating more in the gym and not just rotating more, but rotating better in the gym, utilizing some different pieces of equipment. Especially, we talk about the pure motion pieces of equipment that he used a lot in his training program that helps his golfers, whether they be teenage golfers or all the way up into their 80s, move better and hit different areas of the body, different angles, different forces, to make sure that theyāre able to handle everything that the golf course could ever throw at them. So youāre going to really enjoy this episode with Jeff.
Right after this, our partners over at Lynx hole have been providing us with the best apparel for both on the course and off the course, from polos to t-shirts like the one I have on right now. Everything that they have is meant to be worn from the golf course to wherever youāre going next, whether that be casual, whether that be to the beach thereās all different options over there. So youāll get 18strong.com slash Linksoul. Youāll get 20% off of anything in your cart over on Linksoulās website. So again, 18strong.com slash Linksoul for our favorite brand of apparel for anything on the golf course and off. Now letās get to this weekās interview. Whatās up? Yeah, man, thanks for doing this. This is cool, not too much. I was just kind of scrolling through your Instagram and realized, holy shit, he literally just kind of started posting that.
0:02:18 ā Jeff Flagg
Iām so bad. Iām so bad at it.
0:02:20 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Iām so bad at it.
0:02:25 ā Jeff Flagg
Itās like provided me so many opportunities in the past and itās like I just got to tell myself that like it matters and like I just post and like get in the rhythm of it. Yeah, so thatās my 2024 goal is to get on it, because itās just like itās just just where people find you. Itās just like itās kind of dumb not to.
0:02:53 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, can I give you one suggestion on yours, because the black and white that you have of you just doing some exercises just do nothing but that like, keep it simple for yourself and that will look sick and people will.
0:03:10 ā Jeff Flagg
Itāll come, just itās fun, like people just the look of it feels cool and Iām sort of played with, like the you know you talk about, like the art and science, right, like and I sort of tend to lean towards the art side of it and like my dadās artistic, and itās like I looked up, like I just kind of like the look of black and white and itās like you know what makes black and white phones different or whatever, and basically like the science or whatever says you know, itās like your, your, your eyes drawn more towards the subject and not like crazy colors, and the other part of it is like our gym at Bears Club is the ugliest shade of yellow so itās like that was the main reason, but.
But it was like, yeah, it, and thatās kind of what I want to try to do is like like focus your eye on like whatās happening with the body and not like peripheral stuff.
0:04:08 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
But yeah, like I was just kind of scrolling through and looking, Iām like this just looks cool, plus, the movements that youāre doing are cool and eye catching. You know the pure motion stuff that you use. So Iām like, yeah, if he just does this and itāll keep it really simple myself to just shoot those kind of videos.
0:04:24 ā Jeff Flagg
Yeah, and itās just like trying to take all the friction points out as much as possible because Iām a classic like over thinker, like all right. But you know Iām showing this, but itās like somebodyās gonna say this and itās like, and I know thereās nuance and itās like in social media, itās just not. Itās not a place for nuance. You just you post it and youāre falling across the room.
0:04:48 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Well, we just had Jeff Levecchio on recently and you said youād listen to that episode and like talking to him, heās like man, you just gotta you put it out there. You say what you know your audience is gonna need to hear in the way that they need to hear it. And, yeah, people are gonna chirp you. Theyāre gonna say, oh well, your glutes donāt actually activate that way, you donāt turn muscle, you know whatever.
0:05:07 ā Jeff Flagg
But itās like no, Iām talking to the people that need to hear this, need to understand it and everybody else just it brings up and itās like everybodyās got you know everybodyās got their you know takes, getting older and stuff like that they realize like everybodyās got their own bias, like everybody does. Itās like youāre not gonna be completely gonna make everybody happy and itās just like you know everybodyās got different experiences and and you know view points on things and lenses to look at things and itās like to me thatās thatās unique and thatās like itās not something to like go, oh, itās right or wrong. I mean, you know our field is just shades of gray, you know, and itās like thereās nothing established really much on any end of you know exercise, nutrition, like thereās so many factors. Itās like unique perspective I feel like is is, you know, thatās kind of yeah, thatās one manās opinion. Itās kind of like how I see things this way and you know, thank you for what itās worth.
0:06:07 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, itās like anything any golf pro, any fitness professional you could ask somebody to create a program. You could ask ten different professionals to create a program and they could be the smartest people in the world. Theyāre all gonna do something different and they could all probably critique a little bit of what the other person, what the other trainer or coach or whatever, did it. Thatās just, itās our natural inclination.
0:06:26 ā Jeff Flagg
So, yeah, for sure youāre doing it, you know, and thatās itās funny, like just going through, you know, Iāve been primarily in person and then, like you know, kind of launching an online product here shortly, and itās like all those things going through my head and itās like, and obviously thereās like all the you know scientific justification and you know swing speed and injuries work around itās like. But itās also like the other day, itās like weāre training.
Itās like you know thereās obviously boxes we need to check, but another box that I feel like is important to check is like itās gonna look cool, I think like I mean look at, look at look at any golf swing, you know pro golf swing, letās say amateur, the pro golf swing, you know, in slow motion or a cool different angle, itās like it looks cool, itās like a cool athletic, coordinated, you know body, itās just twisted up and itās like itās cool. Look at watch and itās like eye catching and itās like you know. Why donāt we bring a little bit of that into training, not only to prepare for what youāre trying to do, but also, like you just want to move cool, like you donāt want to walk around like a brick, you donāt want to walk around. Like you have the, you know, as we all get older, the old man shuffle. Like you know.
Itās like you, you just, whatever you do, however, whatever your talent level is with golf, itās like, at the end of the day, I think you want to move, you know walk in. And like you walk in, you know you carry yourself well, you move smoothly, itās like you flow. You look at all the greatest athletes. Theyāre all just like a swag to them and itās like, bring it a little bit of that into into your training. Itās like, why not work on that a little bit, you know?
0:08:00 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, you know, thatās the athleticism part to me, right, like we talk about. You know you want to be an athlete when you train you want to be an athlete. Golfers are athletes, but like so. For instance, I just had a gentleman in here the other day. Heās a year younger than me, 44 years old. He if heās listening to this, heāll know who Iām talking about having some back pain. I worked with him years ago when I was in the physical therapy clinic. But he came back and he, you know, played high level football, played a lot of high level sports, loves golf, and heās been having so much pain recently that heās like dude.
I literally feel like an old man and almost to the point where itās. Itās become depressing because he feels like the pain may never go away and this may. He may be just on the down slide right and I was like dude, you have so much athleticism in your history, in your background. Yeah, you beat your body up so we got to fix some things, but like itās not over, youāre 44 years old, like weāre going to get this back, weāre.
And I saw like the weight fall off of his shoulders and be like are you kid? Like like, oh, thatās all I needed to hear. And now you know heās doing some things and weāve only met one time but like I have very high hopes of where weāre going to go with him and just to make him feel like like heās a strong, powerful dude again. You know, heās like a 6ā3 big guy and like and he said he was golfing with his dad not too long ago and his dadās like whatās wrong with you? You look like an old man. Heās like I feel like Iām your age, you know so, so itās that kind of thing. Itās like, yeah, I want to be able to move and do things. And you know, like, move around and not just stick in a box.
You know, like Levecchio said, like do all my exercises in a phone booth, right like you need to be able to move like a, like a cat, you know. So Iām glad that you said that, because itās itās the athleticism and we we hear that word all the time, but to me thatās like really.
0:09:48 ā Jeff Flagg
What that means is like no, Iām itās not downhill, I mean, thatās like I actually had so much, like you know, being at a golf club and you know my day to day is a lot of the older, you know, club golfers and itās like itās almost when they first come in. Itās like thereās a little bit of like that wall up that you got to break down. Like you know, the gym is, itās intimidating call these weights, like all these things you know. And itās like I, you know my doctor told me this I got this hip replaced, I got this bad knee, I got this shoulder, I got this neck fusion or whatever. And itās like Iāve sort of Iāve worked with all of that and itās like, okay, great, and Iām not here to diagnose you, thatās not my lane. Itās like Iām here to find what can we do. You know, as opposed to you told me all the things you canāt do, right, so itās like what can you do? Thatās where we start. And then you just built from there and itās like, and you guys are in your playing golf three, four times a week.
You know how hard a golf swing is on your body, like, if you can swing the golf club like, you can do a heck of a lot in the gym and itās just again itās like weāre here making the gym, you know, a, a, a, you know not a intimidating place, start here and then you just build it out and I think itās yeah, itās one thing I always try to do when trying to put myself in people shoes, being there in the past, injuries and you know kind of that feeling of I mean I was 20, you know, playing college baseball, and like I felt fragile, like I was big, strong, but like I felt fragile because I love training. Itās training hard and getting Iām not gonna anything, but it was a lot of the Olympic stuff, a lot of the square stuff, a lot of that itās like. And then I always had to do a bunch of hip mobility and all that to get my body ready and itās like had you know the little, you know the little oblique strains, little you know rhomboid strain, things like that, itās like the little connectors and stuff, and itās just like it got to the point where I was like Iām on paper Iām strong, but I donāt feel strong and itās like there was just a disconnect there. So again, over the years of got athletic career taking its course, you know being exposed to different things over the years and you know competing myself, obviously in a different sport long drive and swing a stick for a long time and itās like just trying to find whatās gonna. Itās never gonna be one-to-one, but like bringing you know all the benefits of training right. We all know to be healthy, resistance training is great, cardiovascular health and all that like thatās all like we get it.
But golf is like my luck and I play it a lot and itās like no-transcript in the traditional sort of approach is like you gotta do this, then go play your sport. But itās like can we? You know, like we have to do the basics right. But what if the basics were a little more, kind of speaking to me and what I like to do and the rotation is a huge part of the golf swing and like thatās kind of where I kind of looking at the landscape and like when everybody comes to me, itās like you know what is.
What does every golfer say? When I get tired, I quit turning. You know I go to the golf pro. I canāt turn. Like I need more. I need more turn, I need more backswing, I need more like with.
You know Iād say everybody says it and itās like, okay, well, like, letās work on that, you know. Letās like letās you know, if you, if you got it, letās keep it, train hard and letās keep it, and if you donāt have it, letās sort of try to cultivate it and like, little by little, everything you do sort of goes into that bucket of like itās helping me turn better. And and thatās where I, you know, when you think of next stuff, low back, you know, hip to knee, any of the you know pick your, pick it out of a hat, a lot of it comes back to it. For me, for golfers, itās like itās thatās, itās not turning fully or inefficient, sort of mechanics and sequencing and and comes from, like you know, physical capacity not being able to rotate right, left, you know, or some you know, the golf swing will expose. If you have a, if you have a physical deficiency of any kind, the golf swing is going to expose it.
0:13:48 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, itās interesting.
You know, when we were communicating back and forth, you said something to the effect of you know, thereās a lot of of professionals out there saying that you know, like, and and Iām Iām one of them Iād said it in the last couple episodes that you know, golfers rotate all the time, and so one of the things we need to do when theyāre in here is is not necessarily have them rotate, but youāre like, actually Iām here to like make a case for a little more rotation for these golfers, and what you just said about you know, at the end of their round, them losing their rotation, like that makes a lot of sense to me.
We just had Mitch Sodowski on talking about the fact that golf isnāt explosive sport, but itās also an endurance sport. No matter what level youāre playing, if youāre riding in the car for four hours, maybe five, or if youāre playing for four days, but yeah, at the at the end of a round, you still have to have the same mobility and capacity of the endurance of that rotation. So you know that that definitely kind of changes my mind a little bit on the idea of, yeah, maybe there we do need to, maybe I do need to start putting a little bit more of that stuff and and a lot of the unilateral stuff that ends up going in has some rotation to it. Iām watching a lot of your videos and seeing how you utilize the cables and things like that a lot. But yeah, so youāre here to plead the case for more rotation.
0:15:00 ā Jeff Flagg
Yeah, I mean again, itās like Iāve only snicked my whole life and itās like you know, and itās one of those things like over the years itās just like aha moments and again being and itās kind of like I feel like a lot of you know fitness professionals and trainers and things.
Itās like we have, whether we have an athletic past or like have an injuries in the past, and itās like thatās like sort of you know pushes us in this direction of like I want to help people not have those injuries and things. And and yeah, itās just like itās you know. Itās kind of how I see it is like itās just preparing. Itās itās you know we talk about building strength and itās like rotational strength and thatās sort of where I sort of I guess you know my viewpoint sort of centers on, because obviously, with like power and speed you know I used to be a long drive champion like yeah, people kind of you know want to hit it further. Itās like I see the recipe being, you know, trained and get yourself strong and ripped drivers like do the thing Right and and again, we try and yeah, and I, I, I.
I utilize the all kinds of tools but, like you know, medicine balls are kind of in the middle.
But again, what I see, the limiting factor a lot of times is that rotational strength portion and, like you said, a lot of the you know, unilateral stuff. I mean, I just see rotation as itās not just twisting right, itās like you know itās. You know what do we do right at golfers, right, weāre loading to the right, unloading to the left, right, okay, well, like what if we loaded to the left and unloaded to the right? And what if we, you know, right in a golfers, are side bent to the right at impact kind of creating force in a sort of right side bend, you know, impacting through the ball? So what if we create force side bending the left, like itās just that the golf swing is very specific, so what? And I just I love again I sort of the the my dadās architect and like I sort of gotten this eye over the years of like just looking at, like the architecture. You look at the body, you look at the lats and look at the obliques and you look at the pecs, look at the groin, like how they, they all like sort of wrap and and the architecture of it all, like okay, like you know, and I donāt know, not a penguin broad brush, but, like you know, bench squat and deadlift are like not hitting those like I use them, you know, and and itās thereās a disconnect of a feel, right, and so itās kind of again, I talk about it like itās rotation just like ties everything together from a physical standpoint and from like I think when we talk about athleticism, like you know, you see, I mean the example that once comes up in my head is, like you know, you look at an unbelievable athlete like I just I remember this from years ago Adrian Peterson, right running back. I remember watching like a celebrity softball game and he was like swinging and missing Like dude, looks like a Greek God when heās standing there heās running on the football field but then like that rotational coordination and awareness and just looked like he was just like you know he was that fit out of water and itās just like. Okay, so like the athleticism demands are different. Obviously heās a great football player, but, you know, obviously a rotational athlete has different demands, right.
So itās like thatās kind of again all goes into like my, my sort of view on things of like you know itās definitely not loading up a cable machine and holding it with a golf grip and you know, pulling down, like working on your downswing, thatās just that. But I just see, you know, with different implements. You know, I know Iāve kind of been told in the past that like the movements that I do with the foot, the feet pivoting, itās like they kind of chuck that up to like baseball footwork. But to me itās like you know we get so you know golfers get so planted in the ground right Again the like globally, sort of looking at the golf swing. Itās the feet are planted, the bodyās rotating on top of sort of solid legs, right. Obviously thereās more involved, but so basically in the gym sort of flipping that. So those exercises are sort of getting the hips, the groins, lower leg, everything a little more active.
Looks like a baseball swing, but itās just, itās kind of again, looking at it from a balanced perspective of like all right, I can rotate my feet planted, I can rotate my feet, movement, I can rotate with my yo and with those moves itās like the chest is pretty square to the resistance and then itās like, okay, Iāll do stuff where. Itās like, you know, feet are solid and the upper half is rotating, so itās like itās all. Itās kind of just just looking at all the different directions, itās kind of like you know, or or from from pure motion, itās like weāve, weāve, we sort of you know the whole planet and orbit, sort of analogy. Itās like you, when you look at the planet and you look at how the planets go around, itās like you know, you got, you got here, you got here, you got here you got all the different angles and theyāre all different.
Like all the muscle activation is different. Itās different. You know parts you know harder than others and itās just like itās at the other day. Itās like I want to be able to cover all those bases to be just, you know, a complete rotational athlete. You know, thatās kind of kind of what Iām trying to try to build. You know, when Iām working with people yeah, I mean watching your videos.
0:20:30 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
I mean, thereās some some cool things that I had never even really seen before. You know, like some of the bar movements where youāve got the bar overhead and youāre either pulling or rotating and youāre in kind of that split stance, and Iāve always liked the idea or mentally just kind of seen the idea of like, yeah, weāre just trying to hit different angles, different vectors, and, and if my body can handle, or my clientās body can handle, forces in all different directions they can, they can find their balance, they can create some sort of force and and direction and movement against resistance. Like then I feel like weāre doing our job, like you said. As far as making them more well rounded, yeah, weāre not working specifically on what their downswing feels like in that motion, not to say that I never goof around with that kind of stuff too and play around with some of those things, right, because thatās also what they want they come in and they want the same.
But, yeah, watching your, your different movements, Iām like that just makes so much sense and and some of the different you know apparatuses that you guys are able to use.
0:21:29 ā Jeff Flagg
Well, and itās like you know, like I said, kind of with the, you know itās like pro guys or or you know, college players, high level players, itās like you know they have it right. They have rotates like weāre trying to get more the whole Western way more weight, more range of motion, more, more, more, more, more. So itās you know itās itās cultivating that right and sort of solidifying that and stabilizing that. Thatās their range of motion. They own it right. And then you know, for the older clubs, I mean I do like again some of the you know more extreme stuff, I sort of pose the me do under stuff like that. Like that thatās thereās obviously progressions, but I mean I do it with 75 year old ladies and I do it with, you know hope again guys that have neck fusions and itās itās itās itās a systemic sort of you know strengths that I want to build where itās itās. Yeah, maybe you do have, you know your, you know a couple cervical vertebrae fused. All right, youāre not getting anything out of that, right, youāre next to me a little stiff, but we got to get as much as we can out of thoracic. We got to get as much as we can out of our hips, we get as much as we can out of your shoulder blades, like we got to be able to like work with what you have. And itās not just like itās, itās, you know itās, and thatās where itās like I talk about it more systemically where itās not just sitting there doing isolated exercises, kind of like youāve seen, itās like itās, itās Iām on my feet coordinating everything and itās itās. Everybody in the boat is rowing the same direction and apparently you know some people are going to be limited, but itās, Iām trying to. Iām trying to build it where itās not just one area thatās getting connected to a lot of injuries happen. Right, itās like youāre too loose in some areas, not strong enough in other areas, and itās like the one spot that kink in the hose gets hammered and trying to again open everything up where itās.
And again, with the older clientele not even if I love the cable so much because you can, you can play with resistance and itās like you can put them in athletic positions and itās, you know, kind of work in resistance that theyāre not really used to and you know kind of you know theyāre so used to golf swing rotating. You know loaded rotating. You know, I take all my lessons, do all that and itās like just getting them to rotate the opposite direction. Itās almost like the whole, all the benefits of like walking backwards.
Right, there is the brain benefits, of what itās like just getting them rotating in a different direction or having, you know, loading on one leg instead of the other or sort of just itās sort of you can see their brains sort of light up where itās like, and thatās where, again, a lot of tightness and stuff comes from just awareness and like you know, a you lock up because you donāt feel strong and you donāt feel comfortable with your balance or your strength or your you know.
You kind of devolved this way, right, so to be able to sort of not only, obviously, you know, strengthen the tissues and things like that, but itās given the brain that information of like hey, like youāre safe here, like you can turn here, like you can go there, like itās, itās all just feeding, trying to feed good information into the system and let the athlete do what it wants. Everybody swings different ways, everybodyās got different ways to do it. Itās just like letās just try to bulletproof you so you can be, you know, free to do it, use it, how you use it, you know.
0:24:58 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
When did your kind of philosophy mentality on training shift so for for people that are listening that donāt know your background, professional baseball won the 2014 Long Drive Championship. Then was it after Long Drive that you went back for your education in exercise.
0:25:17 ā Jeff Flagg
I finished baseball and then I had a semester of school left so I went back I think it was 20, 2013, went back to school and then thatās when, like you know, didnāt have baseball. You know, I was like my spring, my spring is freed up. You know, itās nice to have a spring time, so I was going to go to school and start philosophy and just spending more time to golf course just because I was, you know, kind of Iād always kind of grew up, I just kind of self taught growing up playing. And then I met a swing coach there and you know, we we got on technology the first time, I think first time I, you know, measured my swing speed of, like you know, 132 or four or something like that. So itās like you know I was, I was a power first baseman, like I had. I had Iāve always had a little bit of juice. You know, being six foot six helps too, but but, but, uh, and just started, you know, long Drive there, and then that was 2013, then one in 2014.
But, um, yeah, I met Jorge from Pure Motion in 2010, I believe, when I would play baseball, and and he just he had this warehouse and he, I like it was an off season job, um, I like I worked there and was able to work out there and, like, sort of, was exposed to sort of his way of looking at things. And you know, itās cool just thinking back. I mean, itās been a long time now. But like the development of you know, some of the products and stuff that you see, itās like itās kind of fun to be in the lab with the crazy guy that he is, um, but that sort of started to shift my focus of like. Itās like, yeah, I mean I honestly remember having like an epiphany of like, yeah, I forget I was in the car and driving. I was like man, I just wish I could find something like because I love training, you know, with the school, just like you know, you know, at the high school, like Getting into weightlifting, getting hurt, and then you know like having the old, like the old, like Hershey Walker, like the calisthenics, like you know pushups and the side like a body weight stuff, yeah, like doing that as a young kid.
And then like getting and getting the college and lifting heavy and like getting big and strong, like I loved it all. Okay then, I loved it Just the fact that you know itās preparing me For the sport and because you know baseball was life and itās just like over the years, get beat up, and it was just like sort of having this little reservations and Iām like on paper Iām strong like bench in 315. Like you know Iām not I know what. I backslotted power clean and stuff like that, but like strong, but like just felt like I was you know kind of stiff when I was going to swing and run and Things like that, and it just like it was like the more I did of that, the stiffer I was getting, you know and without having to do a bunch of, like you know, hip mobility stuff. So that just is a seed that was planted in my head and then getting exposed to to Jorge and like.
Oh, like this is different, like this is like itās the same stuff, like itās squatting, itās the basics, right, itās squatting, itās benching, itās, itās itās pushing, itās pulling, itās rotating and itās like oh, like this feels different and it was one of those things like it.
Just I Work there as an offseason job like shipping orders, and then, like then started, then started kind of finishing my degree and then started training intern there and then sort of was going around it and so was there, you know, director of education, that going overseas teaching it and and then just again getting winning a long drive, getting in the golf world, sort of looking at through the golf lens and and just getting putting all the pieces together.
Itās been a bit of interesting, like, looking back, itās always pretty interesting to see how it all falls together, but itās it just always goes back to like, yeah, itās funny, the people that I I exposed to it myself, included Jorge, like Jorgeās in a five-time Olympian In in in martial arts.
So itās like itās rotational athletes, itās just like it just it fits for for for that approach and Iāve sort of you know again, kind of doubling down on Stickin ball, sports, golf and baseball, like Iāve sort of you know, tweaked some things and and you know itās itās evolved, but it all goes back to just building a rotational athlete. And itās like Iām use this with NFL players, like you think about you know I can get making the case right now Iām making the case, but like if I was to to talk to an NFL guy, like if youāre running cutting change of directions, like you got to be able to get in that hip, you got to be able to rotate the torso, or itās like those forces in your, in your, your knee and back, or like our. There are a lot for big and strong guys. So itās that ability to be soft but also training hard, lifting heavy, you know good. Again, itās like those sort of traditionally sort of Opposing viewpoints can try to meld those and bring those a little closer together.
0:30:29 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, I would imagine with somebody like that, that maybe has trained kind of that you know straightforward way their entire life. Just Implementing some of these rotational pieces just you know different angles and directions, I mean just having them do a little bit of that stuff could Really really increase the effectiveness of them. Out on the turf and running and cutting and and you know, jumping, I mean everything and in and injured and thatās like itās the. Itās just that, itās that itās a piece of the.
0:30:59 ā Jeff Flagg
Itās just that. Itās that. Itās a piece that I see is missing. I feel like itās just again. You see, and this is, you know, rotational athletes included, I mean again working with some college guys. Itās like to see, itās like what I went, like itās itās, you know, itās kind of a football workout and then letās throw some med balls or letās do some like immobility stuff and thereās a golf workout now, you know, but itās like kind of Looking at all of it and being like all right, do we should? Does a golfer really need to like barbell bench? Thatās all itās got like.
You know, pressing strength is important, but like if you have a cable or band or a suspension trainer or something like that, like to be able to do unilateral work, to be able to like it incorporates some of that. Itās just our bodies are just you look at everythingās just twisting and wrapping around. You like it just again. Itās like I just feel like thereās gaps, you know, and I donāt know if you felt it, or or just when you, when you sort of add some of that stuff in it, it it just ties everything together, right, and thatās a kind of my goal with anybody, right.
But you know athletes that you know make a living doing it, itās, itās. You canāt be injured and you know we canāt leave any stone unturned as far as you know your health and your performance and we, thereās a lot of things that you, you know. Itās that the benefits of loading the body and Doing it in a way that you move, and you know flow and move in your sport and itās kind of just again trying to Check both of those boxes and not one or the other, and it seems like weāre learning so much more about the body and really like the fascia and how that connects everything.
0:32:40 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
So you know, when we went through school we saw our anatomy charts and we saw the muscles and they the origin is here, the insertions here, and and we kind of thought, straight planes and okay, this muscle moves this, this muscle moves this. And now itās like, oh my gosh, everythingās connected and weāre seeing that some of the most effective ways of training for Athleticism and just to have that we like call that elasticity or hyper elasticity is you have to move in these different directions. You have to to build the, the fascia and the connective tissue so it itās able to move differently and accept all these different stresses for injury prevention, but also for that, that speed and that explosiveness that youāre so yeah, absolutely.
0:33:19 ā Jeff Flagg
I mean, itās just itās that, that that interconnected and itās like just kind of tapping into, like, yeah, and itās kind of what I preach to people too is just that that, yeah, I want people to like push back on, like this is what I think, but Iāll, you got to feel it like, you got it like and thatās like, again, a lot of the feedback I get is like Iām Iām freed up a little bit like and itās like and then Iām not talking like, you know, 25 year old professional athletes, Iām talking like you know, 70 year old men and women. Itās like theyāre, you know, because we had golf and I feel like you can, you can just everything is, you know, I need to be tight with my, with my form. I canāt take the club out, I canāt take it in, I got to take it here and then itās like I got a, you know, I got to have, I got to have the posture and everythingās almost like shrinking, shrinking us a little bit In the sake of VR, in the name of control, or, you know, itās just to be able to, because, again, training is important and itās like for overall health. But if we can make that training, help them dude, because obviously youāre working with golfers like myself and itās like thatās such a huge part of their life theyāre going to spend, theyāre going to invest some time with you to get healthy. But itās like you want I always preach, like you should be able to hit balls when we get done, like I donāt care how many pounds weāre moving over the course of 30 minutes or an hour, itās like you should be able to walk out and, because golf is the sport you play every day, like I canāt blast you, take three days to get that sort of out and then blast you again.
Itās like thatās not a sustainable practice and the more it again what Iāve seen like the more you train in this free. Itās controlled, but itās free. Weāre not just rolling around the ground and some of those free flowing workouts which, again, if thatās your jam, go ahead, but itās freedom, but youāre low in the body and then again itās going to in applicable ways to how you use it. Thatās where, with the golf swing, I kind of look at it like get zooming out. What are we doing? Right, weāre leveraging a tool, we are rotating and we are have to sync all that up and weāre interacting with the ground, right. So itās like all right, let me check those boxes while Iām training and I can lunge, push, pull, rotate and then check all those boxes as well. Itās like, okay, weāre preparing for imposed demands. So thatās kind of. Again, thatās what I have tried to and Iām always sort of tweaking it and trying to poke holes in it. But itās been fun to sort of apply it across all populations and as people enjoy it and get better.
0:36:26 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Letās take a second to thank our sponsors over at 1st Phorm, and this week I want to highlight their Formula One post-workout protein shake. I use this thing pretty much every day after my workouts because, letās face it, being here in a gym working all the time with clients putting on a podcast, it can sometimes be tough to get my protein in on a regular basis. And so I know that with the post-workout shake the Formula One, first of all, itās fast-acting. So right after your workout itās a great time to get your protein in to help build your muscles, get yourself stronger and repair what youāve done in the gym. But also, if you donāt know if youāre going to be able to get your protein in in your regular meals, itās just a great way to make sure that youāre supplementing and hitting those marks.
So be sure to go over to 1stphorm.com forward slash 18STRONG to get your 1st Phorm Formula One protein shake, and everyone that enters through that link is going to be put into a drawing every single month for free 1st Phorm products. So again, go over to 1stphorm.com forward slash 18STRONG. For those of you listening, check out Jeffās page so you can see some of the stuff weāre talking about. For those that are just listening, jeff, weāve mentioned pure motion and some of their tools a little bit. Just give a little bit of an idea so people can kind of understand whatās different about what you guys have or what Jorge has built.
0:37:45 ā Jeff Flagg
Itās also kind of funny about that is when you really distill it down. Itās literally what the Egyptians used the most primitive tools. Obviously they look a little different in a trading setting, but itās literally like pulleys, levers and free weights. Thatās literally it. And honestly, the cable machines is like thatās my favorite piece of equipment in any gym and itās hilarious because you go in a lifetime where you go in an equinox or something like that and you go in. Itās like the dual cable machine is like sitting in the corner, like nobodyās using it, somebodyās doing chess flies on it.
Itās like to me itās the most personal piece, just because you can change vectors, you can change angles and itās like a more of an applicable angle to how weāre moving. In sports itās like in golf. I mean that golf club is moving diagonally around us and itās like nothing is like the play of the glass that we learned in school. Iām like you know sagittal play. Itās like weāre interacting with the ground differently. Weāre interacting with an outside resistance. So itās like the cables and the attachments. With the cables that get simple stuff. Itās a longer bar so you can have two hands on it. Itās a longer bar so you can kind of increase the leverage and get that resistance away from you a little bit, which forces the core to work more.
The landmine, called the renegade in pure motion terms, but the landmine system, like in all the attachments that go with that, itās like itās so funny because itās so simple. Itās like the attachment that goes on the user end. Literally itās just allowing you to have the width or the grip of an Olympic bar, just on that end. Itās just a handle and itās all it is, and then a longer one so you can load it on your shoulder and do lower body stuff, the different. I know Iāve used the Omega a lot. Thatās kind of a little more advanced, but itās the same sort of thing. Itās just increasing leverage, kind of get your arms out of the way from you a little bit.
Some of the Olympic variations are pretty sweet just because itās the handle swivel kind of on that landmine setup where itās just allowing you to keep your wrist neutral, like I mean, working with football guys are like you know, our hands are like linemen and stuff Our hands at risk get crushed in practice. And then itās like Iām going to go in the gym after practice and do cleans and have to catch it and itās like, again, the form of cleans is super important and itās like cleans are valuable but itās like can we do it in a way thatās like not going to beat you up as much, you donāt have to learn the skill as much, and thatās kind of what you know heās accomplished there. And then, like suspension trainer, itās like you know itās got a pulley so you can do one arm, you can do rotational stuff you can do. Youāre free to move a little bit where itās like itās just like you know the straps arenāt going to rub your arms raw, like itās just giving you like more options out of like kind of simple tools. The mopping bar is a great one.
I donāt know I havenāt posted down in a while. I got to. I got to.
0:41:17 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
I remember seeing that I havenāt seen it recently. I got to show you that one. I got to post something.
0:41:22 ā Jeff Flagg
Yeah, yeah, which, again, itās like itās just your ground based. Youāre having to like load your body rotation. I mean itās really nothing that Iāve ever done that hits the trunk like that. We call it the short bite, but like itās, you load that up and I donāt care. Like itās a, itās a different kind of strength that you need to to do some of those moves and itās like, and thatās again to be able to like load it up and again like to train those patterns hard.
And itās like nothing, nothing on the golf course is going to like put you in a vulnerable spot, like itās. Itās like you know the foot pivoting movements and the wide stances and the big. Like you know rotational arcs and bending and flexing and itās anything else. Thatās like if I can do all that or build myself up to do that, itās like you know hitting 500 golf balls is not going to, not going to move the needle. Itās like itās just so. Itās again, itās just building your building that engine to to withstand what youāre, what youāre trying to do, what you, where you want to go.
0:42:31 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, I love it. The, the one that Iāve been seeing, the itās like the elbow slings where youāve got them like in a plank position. So is that just a?
0:42:39 ā Jeff Flagg
pulley thatās attached. Itās called the air fit, but yeah, itās like. So itās. Itās suspension trainer, but itās got a pulley right and itās like itās. And the slings again are sort of designed to just sit on your arms. So again, pushing exercises and I use it. I got clipped off and used on a cable machine too, but the whole idea and itās like a seat belt material where itās not going to rub your arms like like, like another, like sort of strap would on some suspension trainers, so itās like youāre able to put your shoulder in a stronger position.
One and then two, the core stuff that the sling allows you. I mean that like thatās like I got to. I got to, I got to come out there in person and like bring you through some of that. Cause itās like thatās another, thatās a strength, thatās a core strength that itās so untapped, I guess to say cause. Itās like. Thereās not many things that Iāve found that that can you know some like hanging leg raises maybe can, but itās like thereās a. It itās those lower abs and hip flexors and itās kind of itās in a supported position, right. Itās not like Iām isolating that specifically. Itās like Iām. Iām technically, Iām on my feet Right. But and when I talk to you know, and usually across the board, when I put golfers on that initially, itās like they they can do five and theyāre crushed and itās just like cause. Itās just a different strength and itās like itās and how I explain it is like itās itās a strength where you can. When you build it up, itās like youāre youāre supporting your back from the front and you think about, I know some of the bass, I kind of a reverse sit up move where you sort of like a pike is kind of you know for not having video of it itās, itās kind of a pike motion. But what Iām sort of what accentuates is that sort of eccentric lengthening of the abs on the way out and that redirects into flexing the hips and the trunk.
And when you think about the golf swing, Iām you know everybodyās talking about speed, you know ground forces, extension and busting up and through it. Itās like I donāt want all that go, I donāt want just my spinal extensors to like be fired, that I need to have that eccentric strength on the front to protect, you know to, to build that armor. I think I I was kind of the theme last time I was on here is, like you know, building that armor to be able to because, again, you want to increase speed, you got to bang drivers like, and you got to like get crazy, you got to like step into it and you got to like recoil and like do all kinds of crazy stuff and getting your body in a position to withstand that. Like we got to layer those, those, those sheets of armor on you, and thatās especially one that that Iāve found, like guys, a little back and hip stuff sort of Iāll say itās not immediate, but sort of melt away when they have that strength that that that can protect.
0:45:43 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, I, I could see that being super beneficial and and I so, for those of you listening and hopefully watching, weāll have some videos. But you know, youāre like the one that I watched. You had one of your guys in a plank position and youāre there, their elbows are in like straps right and you had them doing kind of that pike.
But then you also had them do like a rotation like getting their shoulder blades like rotating, and I was like, oh, that that looks so good, cause youāre stabilizing with the shoulders, youāre getting the the shoulder blades moving, youāre rotating that thoracic spine, but again youāre on your feet still, youāre, youāre in a plank position, so youāre having to hold everything still and and taught, and youāre teaching them how to just separate that upper, upper torso. Really get in the serratus, Like I well.
0:46:26 ā Jeff Flagg
I call it the riblets, but the riblets.
0:46:29 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
I like it.
0:46:30 ā Jeff Flagg
And yeah, itās just itās. Itās kind of you know you hold that itās. Itās forcing you to sort of keep the hips up, cause a lot of times itās that feel of it. Itās kind of youāre in a you know a horizontal plank position. But I still like to think of it as, like youāre, youāre engaged with the grounds, like your, your feet are active, like holding yourself up and contributing to that, like a lot of times people get in those slings and the back sort of sags, and so itās like itās. Itās just a you know you get the feel of it and itās like that itās. Itās you know then go ahead and do you know 50, 100, 200 reps of it, you know good luck, yeah.
0:47:09 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Iām going to come. Iām going to come.
0:47:10 ā Jeff Flagg
Itās miserable and awesome at the same time. Well, Iām going to bring some of my toys.
0:47:16 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Letās set it up. Weāll definitely do it. Weāll get to have a little 18STRONG seminar here from with Jeff Flagg. Thatād be, thatād be awesome. So youāre down at the Bears Club now in Jupiter, right? When did, when did you shift down to there and tell us a little bit about whatās going on? I mean, youāve got a new training program coming in. That was 2018.
0:47:32 ā Jeff Flagg
I was in Chicago, I think, the last time I talked to you. I donāt know how I have to get one. The last time was long yeah. Episode episode 170. And where we? What is this?
0:47:42 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
0:47:51 ā Jeff Flagg
So I was. I got the opportunity to come down here and I mean itās just, itās itās not very lucky to be here. Itās pretty fun. Our members are great. I mean just to you know, again, itās like kind of you got to pin yourself to like you know Iāll be in there working with somebody and Jack walks through like itās kind of itās like, you know, get to pick his brain on you know golf courses or yeah, itās, itās. Itās itās pretty wild but they give like membership is great, you know itās out for it. Itās itās, you know, not bad this time of year and I donāt want to rub it in, but yeah and and kind of you know itās taken me longer than it should, but I probably talked about it last time I was on this, but I getting finally getting an online program up and running, launching that in the next short little bit, hopefully. And yeah, itās just kind of how I guess kind of how I framed it was you know what no-transcript If I was to work, if somebodyās gonna walk off the street right and and and work with me, and kind of all the things that I look at.
Kind of like we talked about. Itās like what, what can, what can I do to sort of, you know, coach that and and Push that like what, what? What would be the ideal scenario? Itās like, hey, they came in and like theyāve done all these things are good. All these movements like Okay, like now we can roll, like so itās like itās. Itās again, itās my mind online program. Iām sure you can relate like I can think of every way people do it wrong. I can think of all the things. I think of all that if somebodyās got a bum shoulder, like all right, you gotta change this, tweak this, like the in-person, the art of it in person, you sort of got it back off of that a little bit. But but yeah, hopefully, hopefully, people like it. Itās again a lot of the movements.
Again, at the end of the day itās like kind of Kind of a tagline. But you know youāre just moving different, right, like you got to move different. Like you know kind of Setting it up where itās simple again, everybodyās got cables at their gym, everybodyās got free weights. Like if you donāt have cables, use bands. Like kind of giving those solutions to Get your body.
It get sort of your mind wrapped around training differently and loading the body differently and just did not only get, obviously, build strength for what youāre doing, but given that confidence and you know it, that bleed over into, you know, into your golf game, into your, into regular life, itās like itās itās sort of, you know again, kind of wrapping it all up when you donāt have any gaps, you donāt have any weak links like thatās. Thatās thatās my goal for, for this. So, you know, can kind of I kind of positioned it as, like you know, you know, you know it can be standalone, it can be, if you love, you know, power cleaning and and barbell benching, you can add this to what youāre doing and and Round out, round out everything. So you have tried to make it as like, versatile as possible, just because I think itās just, itās valuable ways to load the body and and Iāve had success with it and hopefully more people can, can try it and and you know I donāt know if say, enjoy it, but you enjoy it when youāre done, yeah.
0:51:05 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, yeah, well, definitely let us know when it. When is the launch officially to be? Next to heaven day for it?
0:51:11 ā Jeff Flagg
I believe I got a double check, but hopefully at the see Masters at the latest, I would say. So thatās, thatās thatās.
0:51:21 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Thatās. Thatās at the latest. Yeah, itās a good launch time.
0:51:24 ā Jeff Flagg
So, uh, yeah, and itās, and itās kind of we get it sort of designed in a way like from a sustainability perspective. Itās like it doesnāt have to be all season, right. And itās another sort of kind of viewpoint on it that I have is like you know, if itās important, you got to do it consistently and itās not just like Iām sure you see that a lot. Itās like I want to come in and work out for the next three months when itās snowing and then when itās golf time, Iāll see you.
0:51:47 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Iāll see you in October, november, you know, and itās like thatās not no, no, you, usually itās, usually itās golf, golfās coming in two weeks. Like what can we do in these next two weeks, because I havenāt done anything all winter.
0:51:59 ā Jeff Flagg
Yeah, so itās like itās itās designed to, to be like whether itās the middle of the season.
Itās like you can plug it right in and itās not gonna you know itās, you should feel like you could go hit balls when youāre done, but you can also train hard and thatās those are kind of the two big rocks that I itās not interfering with the skill at all, so, um, trying to Really be kind of as precise as I can with you know, being able to implement at any point, um and for again, as for as many people as possible, like I said, Iāve sort of stress tested it from, you know, 15 years old, 80 years old, pro golfers, club golfers, kind of everything in between. So, um, so yeah, so again, I hope I hope people like it and I hope, uh, hope, itās received well, hopefully, um, you know we can, we can get people moving different.
0:52:57 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Thatās awesome. You know itās, itās tough and I donāt know that the the general public understands how tough it can be to create a program like that. For Because golf is such a broad spectrum, like you just said, you know high schoolers up to 80, plus your old golfers and and as a coach, and you can even hear it when youāre talking about. Itās like Youāre going through all those little things like, oh, but I donāt want to do this because this you know, because it could influence this person or that person. So itās tough.
So kudos to you for for putting together a family poem trigger because, um, itās a lot of itās a lot of work behind the scenes that people donāt, yeah, I mean you, you know better than anybody.
0:53:34 ā Jeff Flagg
So, um, so yeah, I mean itās like, again, itās, itās, yeah, and I think one thing that I ran into is like thereās a, thereās a freedom to Kind of you know, using a cable machine. Itās like itās, itās the the, the movement is, is free, but you have to sort of impose, sort of the the, the barriers yourself. Right, you got to, you got to load in that front leg and you canāt let it pull you around. You got to control your spine angle. You canāt like, you know, if youāre pulling or pushing you canāt be like wobbling all over the place. So itās like itās, itās sort of itās thereās, thereās freedom in it, which again, on the other hand, is like you can do a lot wrong, um, but but I think, Iāve tried to Distilled it down, um, and so hopefully presented it in a way that is going to.
You know, itās easy to. I kind of one of the taglines or I just find myself saying it a lot with people in person is itās intuitive once you get it. Itās kind of an oxymoron, but itās like. Itās like yeah, itās like, yeah, you feed here, you just dance here, you hold it like this, then itās like then, when they start moving, itās like, oh, okay, like I, it feels right.
0:54:45 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
You know, itās not like you have to Stay braced up or itās like a really strict form, so itās like thereās always wiggle room in gray area, um, but uh, yeah, itās intuitive once you get it, awesome before, before I forget to ask you weāre gonna jump into these last questions here but where, where will people be able to go get it, or whatās the best place to kind of keep track of of you and find you and so, um, instagram, probably because youāre you know.
0:55:10 ā Jeff Flagg
Now youāre watching me like a hawk, so now I gotta.
I gotta, I gotta post consistently now at your, at your advice so, yeah, instagram, and then itās gonna be Flagg performancecom, real, original, but yeah, and then you get just kind of launch and get it out there and then you know, hopefully it grows and and you know iterations of it and you know, kind of have in my mind I want it to be as as high touch as possible. Um so, um, you know, I got it set up in a way where, like people can give their feedback and like they can, yeah, itās almost like you know, Iām ideally Iām coaching them, um, remotely. So because itās again thereās I I love the, the coaching part of it and seeing it, that ability to open up for people, like thatās thatās sort of why Iām doing this. So, to make sure that, like you know, itās even to the, to the yeah, I even got something built in there. Weāre like, yeah, you kind of Let me know what Stuff youāre working on your sling, if you want to put swing video in there too.
Itās like a sort of like I kind of had those options because itās just like I just want to make the gym is like Seamless as possible, like your goal is itās to be a better golfer and and again, at, like the gym should, you know, be pushing you in that direction. So, um, so, yeah, yeah, thatās where, thatās where. Thatās thatās my story. Iām sick of doing.
0:56:42 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Very cool. All right, my friend, weāre gonna close up. I know we asked you these on episode one seven.
0:56:46 ā Jeff Flagg
Yeah, some. Of them.
0:56:47 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Some of them are a little bit changing difference. Yeah so, uh, so letās have some fun with it. First of all, caddy shacker happy, go more.
0:56:54 ā Jeff Flagg
I mean I got a stick of caddy shack. I think thatās my. Thatās just so good, so good. Yeah one of the best ever.
0:57:03 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
What would your? Whatās your walk-up song to the first I got?
0:57:06 ā Jeff Flagg
a question on this. So are you talking like a competitive rounds, or like a like a, like a round buddies, like youāre like a sort of hanging out?
0:57:15 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
I donāt want to both now, now that you maybe specify Well.
0:57:18 ā Jeff Flagg
I got, I think, the one like, if itās itās competitive, I mean I donāt want to be that guy that hard though that like has a bunch of like yeah, because Iām like Iām like a you know gym, like rap guy, like you know, sort of like itās you want to have a little bit of you know something with swag to like put you, you know, to get you, you get them right mindset. But itās also, I think, what I said last time, my last year baseball call me baby, call me babies, like itās like yeah, oh, like this big guyās coming to play and like Call me baby, just a banger anyway. So I got the timeless banger. So I think I might have just stick with that.
I looked it up and Iām like dude, Iām wondering if youāre gonna change it. This is all the opponent, all right. Oh, itās like.
0:58:02 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
I like it.
0:58:04 ā Jeff Flagg
Six, six monster coming in, call me baby.
0:58:07 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Okay, the crowd loves it. The crowd loves it. All right, and if, if youāre just, if youāre just hanging with your boys, oh, man um.
0:58:17 ā Jeff Flagg
You know, like Countryās pretty chill, like you know, you know, letās say, rapās not really appropriate for golf course. Um, you know, get, uh, you know I like Eric church, um, yeah, probably something along those lines. Like country kind of chill, like nothing too too too crazy, because weāre not, weāre not Trying to be crazy, weāre just just having fun. But yeah, um, perfect, yeah, thatās what Iām going with.
0:58:43 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Youāll have to come on our Nashville trip next year. You have to get right in. All right, is there a book that you like to recommend to people, something that has meant a lot to you Golf wise, fitness, wise, life wise that you have, uh, have like to recommend, or even given it is a gift, to somebody else?
0:59:01 ā Jeff Flagg
One that I liked, um, that Iāve sort of recommended to some people like young players and stuff. Itās funny because the the title almost sort of doesnāt ruin it but it sort of gives it. It sort of um, framed it for what it is is, uh, it takes what it takes. I donāt know if you, if youāve come across that, um, the guy, I think the guy in the last couple years actually Passed away Trevor boad, it was his name Um, itās like a performance coach For, like any Russell Wilson like wrote the the forward or whatever.
But itās like and I know nix saven has a blurb in it, I think, or has referenced it, and and and itās you know, itās basically like kind of talking to guys you know, young pros and stuff. Itās like you know. Itās like I think thereās a quote of saven, you know, I guess kind of talking along the lines of you know, you, you think you have options, Like if you want to be good or great at something, like you think you have all these options, all these things to do. Itās like the you.
It takes what it takes, like itās kind of this, the simplicity of it, itās pretty uh, itās pretty incredible, but itās you look at the greats and you look at what all they did and itās like anybody in any realm. Itās like itās itās sort of laid out for you and itās like you canāt, especially golf, I mean. Itās like you know, setting expectations. Itās such a big part of it. Itās like you want to be here. Thereās people that have been there before. You can see what theyāve done and youāre not willing to do that, like, okay, but thatās what it takes, like it takes what it takes. Again, they can be applied any, any role life. I mean itās talking about um, thereās another book that I from him that I havenāt read, but it the concept is in this book too. Itās like give, like stinking neutral, you know not.
1:00:49 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, getting in neutral, yeah.
1:00:51 ā Jeff Flagg
Not, you know, bad or good, high or low, itās just, itās neutral. Being able to assess sort of where youāre at and what youāre doing, where to go, like thatās going to give you the best chance. So, um, yeah, thatās like I find that Iāve Iāve referenced that to people a few times. I got it on the bookshelf somewhere, but uh, yeah, yeah, thatās a good one.
1:01:14 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Cool, all right. Whoās your dream celebrity? For some these days, you could pick four guys.
1:01:21 ā Jeff Flagg
Weāll give you four, three or four, whatever you want. Letās see, I was thinking about this and like, obviously itās like ideal for some. I got a. I got a almost three year old now, so itās like heās definitely going to be in it with me. But if youāre talking celebrity and like historical, like why donāt we get what? Do we think? We got Tiger Jack and whatās another? I guess one more all time great. We talking Hogan, because weāre arguing. Everybody argues about all the different generations. Right, itās like put them all together, put them in a group.
1:02:00 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Put them in the prime.
1:02:01 ā Jeff Flagg
You know, I mean, jack, itās a long, and like do it out and Iāll just watch. Iāll just keep the clubs in the cart, like I donāt even need to play and just to watch, just get all the arguments. Itās like the LeBron MJ, like letās just have a play and see, see the best of the best and kind of see who comes out on top. Itās like that would be if I had to get a magic lantern. That would be my group.
1:02:31 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
I like that one. What are they Hogan, snead? All right If we probably I throw Hogan in the mix, yeah, throw maybe Snead in there. I think those are probably the. Iād say Hogan, tiger, jack, if I had to pick three, three dudes there, yeah For sure, all right If we had the 18STRONG jet fueled up ready to go. Iām like, jeff, weāre going wherever you want to go. Whatās the bucket list course that weāre going to today?
1:03:06 ā Jeff Flagg
Iām, I guess, pulled towards like terrain or like parts of the world that Iāve like, Iāve never been like or like you know, Iām never been abandoned. Iāve heard band is amazing. I just saw recently that new course. Thereās a new course, see, lucia. Like on the ocean, like that oneās pretty sick, looks sick. Yeah, I mean, thereās just so much like, I guess, to me Iām like a big like, I guess nature guys, not nature guy, but like you know it, if itās, if itās a golf course sort of tucked in the terrain of mountains or ocean, or like thatās just like that, thatās like, thatās it for me, like any, any and all of those, everybody stops you want to make, Iām good. As long as itās on your tab, weāre good.
1:03:59 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
I dig it, I like it. Whatās the best piece of golf advice youāve ever been given?
1:04:07 ā Jeff Flagg
Probably have to say play golf, not golf swing. You know we can. We tend to get super technical in our, in our, in our profession and you know when, when you think about you know, I was sort of self-taught grown up so like being able to just think it back and like what was I doing? I was just like hitting wiffleballs in my front yard, just like trying to hit it over that tree and trying to hit it around the house, like you know, and itās like I wasnāt been care where I was the top, like I didnāt care what my takeaway looked like, and itās like that could just that could just like overpower us sometimes and when we work on it and we want to get better, but itās just like go out there again, youāre in a, youāre in a beautiful, keep the property, like donāt just like go play golf, go hit shots.
1:04:57 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Yeah, I would imagine like me when I was a kid you know you, especially being a baseball player like just going on pretending like you were a different guy at the plate, you know, and like you could, you could mimic different swings and and itās like why do we not do that with golf, where itās just like have some fun with it, you know? I mean, yeah, thereās technical things that are you know better ways to swing, but like being able to go and just and just act like youāre Andre Dawson at the plate, you know, and you got his high, you know. King of Virginia.
1:05:28 ā Jeff Flagg
Like King of Virginia, like I remember that, and itās just like, yeah, what are we doing? I have to get like I mean, I love, like the old, like, and I never really was kind of into golf, like you know or watch Seviply, but like to watch, like the, the short game, like the, the, the, the. Thereās like hitting flop shots with a four iron and, like you know, curve it like bubble Watson. Now he hits ball and itās just like, yeah, you can be the robot or attempt to be the robot. Itās like, and that may work for a select few, but itās like have fun, try to hit it over that tree, like, try to. You know, itās just hit shots and I feel like the enjoyment of the game, like itās a game at the end of the day. So, so, yeah, just go go play.
1:06:19 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
All right, last one whatās a social media account that youāve kind of been into lately that you think the 18STRONG crew should go to check out?
1:06:28 ā Jeff Flagg
And I actually looked at this earlier and I think you had him on early, early on. I followed him for a little bit.
now that Austin Einhorn oh yeah your notes, I think, is how youād say. Heās like, hey, itās like his, his posts and his blog and things like that. Itās like it sort of makes you think it sort of has a little bit of an outside view of things, like you know, and itās like kind of doesnāt look traditional. But, like you know, itās like you get results and itās itās again sort of a different lens, like you were talking about earlier, like looking at things and thatās a good one. What else? Oh, I mean itās like I got another guy. I met him at a photo shoot. Heās great. Christian Hafer is his name. Heās a. I get the 18STRONG crew weāre all golf nuts, right. So like heās like a. Heās a photographer that works a lot of tour events and goes around all these places and itās like that heās part of the the golfers journal.
So he does a lot of the photography for that, and itās like man, like some of the like swing videos he gets, and itās like I get the art of golf and that like heās really showcasing like the, the, the properties and the, the, the, the holes, and just looking at it from different angles, and itās like the, the art of it, and itās like, yeah, I feel like, if Iām not like an architecture nerd by any means, but Iām, Iām learning, but like itās just, Iām just cool, like a cool account to follow, like heās the man, so great dude too. So thatād be my two.
1:08:06 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
Thatās one of those things that I wish I had, just that, that artistic view, the ability to use a camera, like some of those guys do video and and just still pictures. Itās just they make things look so great and cool. Dude, you know, Iām trying to.
1:08:18 ā Jeff Flagg
Iām wracking my brain, putting my pictures in the black and white, like thatās all I got. Thatās the extent of my photography knowledge, so, so, yeah, I would say Iād learn a few tips from him, but I got no chance, so Iāll leave it. Iāll leave it to the professionals. Yeah, same here.
1:08:36 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
All right, my man. Well, it was great catching up with you. Itās great to have you on. I canāt wait to see the program that you put out I know itās going to be great and to see all your Instagram posts that are that are coming up all those black and whites. But congrats on everything youāre doing. Sounds like things are going really well down there, and just just keep it up, thank you, man, thank you for helping me.
1:08:54 ā Jeff Flagg
This is, this is always fun. Look forward to doing it again and again. Like all, congrats on all your, your success too. I mean 365. Thatās, thatās a lot. Thatās a lot. Thatās a lot of episodes. Thatās a lot of episodes, itās a lot, itās a lot.
1:09:09 ā Jeff Pelizzaro
And weāre just getting started, baby, just getting started. Thanks, thanks, jeff. Thanks for listening to the 18STRONG Podcast and if you found this episode helpful, donāt forget to share with your friends. And, of course, go follow us over on Instagram at 18strong. Thanks again, weāll catch up with you next week. Train hard, practice smart and play better golf.
Transcribed by https://podium.page