Hank Haney
Hank Haney | |
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Hank Haney with Tiger Woods | |
Born |
Lake Forest, Illinois | August 24, 1955
Nationality | American |
Occupation | Professional golf instructor |
Hank Haney (born August 24, 1955) is an American professional golf instructor best known for coaching Tiger Woods[1] and two-time major championship winner Mark O'Meara. A graduate of the University of Tulsa, Haney owns and operates four teaching facilities in the Dallas, Texas area.
Philosophy
Haney says, "My philosophy as a teacher is to teach my students to become their own best teacher by getting them to understand the flight of the golf ball and how it relates to the swing, with emphasis on swinging the golf club on their own correct swing plane".[2]
Haney changed Tiger Woods' swing from an upright to a flatter golf swing. His wrist cock is much less obvious than it was with his previous coach Butch Harmon. Woods' swing is much more around his body, Haney tries to get his students to swing on the same plane angle which the golf club is on at address.
In 2008, Haney started working with former NBA star and current NBA analyst Charles Barkley on the Golf Channel's The Haney Project: Charles Barkley, an attempt to fix Barkley's infamously bad swing. In late 2009, Haney was quoted by reporter Mark MacDonald as saying, "Charles' swing looked worse than Helen Keller trying to read."[3] Haney's show continued in 2010, this time with comedian Ray Romano. The third season, in 2011, featured talk radio host Rush Limbaugh. Series 4 (2012) featured a four-player shootout in Mario Batali, Adam Levine of Maroon 5, Sugar Ray Leonard, and Angie Everhart. Series 5, to debut in 2013, features all-time winner of the most Olympic medals, Michael Phelps.
On Monday, May 10, 2010, one day after Woods withdrew in the final round of The Players Championship, Haney informed Woods that he would no longer be his coach.[4]
Haney has a videogame of his own, Hank Haney's World Golf, that was released for Windows on November 16, 2010.[5] A Mac OS X version was released under the name World Challenge Golf 2011 by Virtual Programming on September 28, 2011.[6]
Awards
- PGA Teacher of the Year (USA) - 1993
- PGA "Harvey Penick Award for Teaching Excellence" - 1984
- North Texas PGA Section "Teacher of the Year" - 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993
- North Texas PGA Section "Horton Smith Award" - 1990
- North Texas PGA Metro Chapter "Horton Smith Award" - 1991, 1992
- Gulf Coast PGA Chapter "Teacher of the Year" - 1984
- Federazione Italiana Golf "Top Teacher" - 1989, 1990
- NCAA Division I Golf Coach of the Year - 1998
- Golf Digest Top 25 Teacher, 1984 - 1992
- Golf Digest Top 10 Teacher, 1993 - 1999
- Golf Digest Number 4 Teacher, 2000, 2002
- Golf Digest Number 6 Teacher - 2001
- Golf Digest Number 5 Teacher - 2003, 2004
- Golf Magazine Top 100 Teacher, 1984 - 2004
- Golf World's Top 50 Golf Personalities Worldwide - 2000
- D Magazine (Dallas) "The Best of Dallas" - "Best Golf Instructor" - 2003[2]
References
- ↑ Van Sickle, Gary (November 7, 2005). "Getting his groove back". SI.com. Retrieved 2008-04-26.
- 1 2 unknown. "Hank Haney - Biography". golflink.com. Retrieved 2008-04-26.
- ↑ unknown. "Hank Haney's Arrogance and Ignorance - Biography". Bleacher Report. Retrieved 2012-03-26.
- ↑ Haney walks away from Woods
- ↑ "Hank Haney's World Golf (PC)". Gamespot. Retrieved 2011-10-17.
- ↑ "Virtual Programming Releases Three New Game Titles". Inside Mac Games. Retrieved 2011-10-17.
External links
- Official website
- Hank Haney on Twitter
- Hank Haney's channel on YouTube
- Marketing Agency for Hank Haney
- Hank Haney International Junior Golf Academy
- The Haney Project on The Golf Channel
- Hank Haney PlaneFinder
- Haney and Woods break
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