Low Back Pain in Golfers: Part 1 – My Experience

Low Back Pain in Golfers: Part 1 – My Experience

A Personal Setback Turned Into A Learning Moment

 

Each year, my annual golf excursion marks the culmination of the season—a highly anticipated event where preparation, friendly rivalry, and passion for the game all come to a head.  It’s not just another round; it’s the focal point of our golfing calendar, where pride, performance, and bragging rights are all on the line.

It’s our Major.

It’s our Tour Championship.

It’s our Ryder Cup.

It’s our Marquee Event.  And this year, it’s all going down in Pinehurst, North Carolina.

 

The months leading up to this competition are filled with countless hours on the range and putting green, refining swing mechanics, testing equipment upgrades, practice rounds, and mental rehearsal after mental rehearsal.  I go as far as to study course layouts, understand grass types, check forecasts, and consider every possible factor, determined to prepare for anything the game—or Mother Nature—might throw at me.

 

Yet no matter how carefully I prepare, the path is rarely perfect. This year, my momentum has been tested by injuries, limited time, and the constant push to balance recovery with preparation. Instead of uninterrupted progress, I found myself navigating setbacks, adapting my training, and learning firsthand how time management and resilience can be just as vital as mechanics or strategy.

 

I’ll admit it—my road to preparing for this year has not gone as smoothly as I had planned.  Where do I begin…

(1) At the very beginning of the year, I sustained an injury to my back, shoulder, and neck (feel free to ask me about this in person…fun story to tell).

(2) Once fully on the mend, a previous left knee injury started to act up limiting my ability to fully pivot on the lead leg during my swing.

(3) And recently, during one of those weeks with increased practice and a subsequent golf outing, I felt a gradual onset of discomfort settle into my lower back. At first, I brushed it off as normal stiffness, but as the days went by, it was clear this was more than the usual “wear and tear.” I was experiencing true pain.

 

For a moment, I worried this might derail my progress and preparation for Pinehurst, and briefly considered shutting things down completely until the event.  Instead, I took the opportunity to re-evaluate how I was training.  After some careful thought, I built myself a routine emphasizing mobility drills, total body strengthening, balance work, a better nutrition plan, a consistent sleeping schedule, and smarter practice loads. I also layered in recovery strategies—static and dynamic stretching, movement prep, and active rest. Through just the first two weeks, this training plan not only settled the pain, but I began feeling stronger than ever physically, mentally, and spiritually, which has indirectly influenced other parts of my life (marriage, children, friendships, work, etc.) in such a positive way!

 

The icing on the cake—not only does my body feel 100% pain free, but my game has actually sharpened. My swing feels smoother, I’m no longer fatigued down the stretch, my body recovers faster between sessions, and I’m seeing the payoff on the scorecard. What started as a setback turned into a lesson: injuries are common in golfers, but with the right approach, it doesn’t have to sideline you. In fact, it can be the very thing that forces you to build a stronger foundation, protect your body, and even unlock better performance.

 

This experience reminded me that no golfer—no matter how dedicated—can avoid the realities of injury, recovery, and the constant balancing act of preparation.

In my next post, I’ll take a deeper dive into the types of injuries golfers commonly face, followed by practical management strategies that can keep you on the course and performing at your best. After all, it’s experiences like mine that highlight exactly why this clinic exists: to help golfers and active individuals address these challenges head-on and return to the game stronger than before.

 

👉 Until then, if pain or setbacks are keeping you from playing your best, reach out—I’m here to help you get back on the course better than ever.

When Perseverance Pays Off: Lessons from Tommy Fleetwood’s First PGA Tour Win

When Perseverance Pays Off:  Lessons from Tommy Fleetwood’s First PGA Tour Win

A Breakthrough Moment Years in the Making

 

Tommy Fleetwood had long been one of golf’s most talented players—a regular presence in tournaments, often on the leaderboard, but without a PGA Tour title to show for it—until his first-ever PGA Tour victory (and FedEx Cup) at the Tour Championship in Atlanta this past Sunday. That breakthrough didn’t come by accident; it was the result of years of hard work, near-misses, and quiet determination.

With that said, here are some simple, practical considerations both player and parent should consider in his or her athletic journey…

 

1. Embrace Defeat as a Stepping-Stone

 

For Fleetwood, coming close but not quite getting there was not a failure—it was preparation.  Each runner-up finish, every close call, sharpened his focus. For a young athlete:

  • Losses are lessons: Rather than feeling crushed, reflect—What did I learn? What can I do differently?
  • Parents, your support matters: Encourage your child to talk about setbacks. Help them see how much they’ve grown—not just where they fell short.

 

2. Seek Challenges—Don’t Avoid Them

 

Elite athletes aren’t defined by comfort zones. Fleetwood stepping into high-pressure environments taught him how to handle tension. For youth athletes:

  • Play up—not down: Facing stronger competition, or pushing your limits, helps you grow.
  • Normalize discomfort: Parents, help your child understand: it’s okay to feel uneasy. That’s when growth happens.

 

3. Keep Chasing Excellence—Every. Single. Day.

 

Even after winning, Fleetwood didn’t rest on his accolade. His win wasn’t a finish line—it was a milestone. For families:

  • Focus on continuous improvement: Set short- and long-term goals: your technique, strength, flexibility, mental resilience.
  • Celebrate progress—not just podiums: Compliment effort, growth, attitude—and remind them that mastery is a marathon.

 

Putting It All Together:  A Real-Life Model

Here’s how you—young athlete and parent—can embody the same spirit that led to Fleetwood’s breakthrough:

Principle What It Looks Like in Action
Overcoming Defeat Review matches/games and pinpoint one area to improve next time.
Accepting Challenges Practice under pressure: simulate game-day conditions in training.
Pursuing Improvement Set measurable targets—performance, technique, mental composure.

 

A Personal Note to Young Athletes & Parents

 

Dear young athletes, remember: setbacks are not the end—they’re signposts pointing toward what needs work. Let Tommy Fleetwood’s first PGA Tour victory remind you that brilliance often happens after the grind, not before it.

Dear parents, your belief fuels your child’s perseverance. Help them reframe “I lost” into “I learned,” and celebrate the small wins along the way—because those pave the path to greater triumphs.

 

Takeaway: Whether it’s golf, soccer, basketball, or dance—talent is just the start.  It’s the daily commitment to get better, the courage to face failure, and the grit to chase excellence relentlessly that turns potential into achievement.  Let Fleetwood’s example be your inspiration: it’s never too early (or too late) to breakthrough.

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