Performance = How You Aim Energy?


Let’s talk performance.

If you have a functioning power base — and understand how to influence it — you can do anything in golf.

Confidence grows.
Shot shaping becomes natural.
Pressure becomes manageable.

This is where the game opens up.


This article builds on the foundation laid out in the Power Blueprint:

  • Power Layers → how the engine is built
  • Release Styles → how power is transmitted

If you haven’t gone through those yet, start there.
What follows is Layer 4 and Layer 5 — where performance actually happens.


Layer 4 — Adding Achievable Performance

The goal is not to build a new swing for every shot.

The goal is to build a reliable power engine
— and then learn how to aim it.

At the highest level, this is what great players do.

They don’t add complexity.
They simplify and apply what already works.


Take a player like Scottie Scheffler.

He has a powerful, repeatable base.
From there, he can deliver different shots simply by changing how the energy is directed.

A slightly lower, more left-oriented finish.
A different intention through the swing.

Same engine — different outcome.


In my own swing, a stock shot can feel great.
High, clean, effortless.

But that doesn’t automatically make it a high-performance shot.

Now apply a small change:

  • Adjust the follow-through
  • Shift the directional intent
  • Let the energy move differently

Suddenly, the result changes completely.

A controlled pull fade.
A shot that hits the mark again and again.


This is the key:

Performance is not about doing more.
It’s about aiming what you already have.


Layer 5 — Add-Ons (When the Engine Works)

Once the engine is in place, a new world opens up.

Now you can explore more advanced athletic inputs — what I call add-ons.

These are not necessary.
But they can enhance performance when used correctly.

And most importantly:

They only work because the foundation is already solid.


Examples from my patterns:

  • Big Arc Swinger → adding extension and rotation through impact (V4 → V8 feel)
  • Trail Power Hitter → shoulder plane adjustments within a shallow protocol
  • Backside Chop & Push → open stance and aggressive target-directed push

Different looks. Same principle.

They all build on a functioning engine.


Final Thought

When your swing works, performance becomes accessible.

Not because you force it —
but because you can finally direct it.

That’s when the game changes.


If you want to understand this fully, go back to the foundation:

  • Power Layers (build the engine)
  • Release Styles (transmit the power)

Everything in performance comes from there.


All patterns and training are available inside the membership.

Check out all Video Articles on the Overview Page here.

Check out the Forgotten Master Moves homepage here.

In the FMM Academy I teach differnt patterns and it’s all about fit – has it’s overview page here.