My Golf Source

Revolutionizing Your Swing: Janean Murphy and the Future of Golf Tech

Darren Penquite

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What if cutting-edge technology could revolutionize your golf game? Join us as we engage in an enlightening conversation with Janean Murphy, the 2024 National LPGA Teacher of the Year, who shares her journey and insights into the future of golf instruction. We recount our Simulator League adventures at Torrey Pines, where camaraderie and friendly competition were at the forefront despite a few challenges. Janean reveals how her journey from Texas to a private country club in Missouri has shaped her approach to player development, highlighting the groundbreaking role of technologies like Sportsbox AI in offering new perspectives on swing mechanics.

Our discussion extends to the exciting innovations we've encountered, such as the Force Board Pro by SuperSpeed Golf, which enhances training through its versatile design. We introduce a four-week putting league and discuss plans for LPGA one-on-one classes, along with couples therapy sessions inspired by Brian Jacobs. These initiatives aim to improve communication on the course and offer practical advice for beginners. Janine's pioneering spirit and expertise underscore the importance of professional guidance, while her insights into technology offer a glimpse into the dynamic evolution of golf coaching.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to the MyGolfSource podcast. It's official. It's episode two of the MyGolfSource podcast. Welcome to the show. I'm Darren, along with Noah.

Speaker 2:

Here we go, buddy. Round two is coming up and we just got done playing some Simulator League. We did how did you do? I shot? A little under par today, buddy. How'd you do?

Speaker 1:

I shot a 46, hey you know what handicaps my whole team struggled today it was. It was a struggle, but but you know what it was fun. We drank a couple of beers. We just hung out. We had a lot of great conversation and we played golf.

Speaker 2:

Well, we played golf at Torrey Pines, which isn't the worst thing in the world.

Speaker 1:

One of my teammates said he's going to go home and complain to his wife that he had a bad night at the simulator league. I said you're going to be sleeping on the couch tonight?

Speaker 2:

I was going to say how's that going to hold up?

Speaker 1:

Yeah right, Not very well.

Speaker 2:

She's like I'm home with the kids. Uh, yeah, well, you know what we had a seven handicap, shoot one under today, really, yeah, but you know what we're in like fifth place. I think you guys are in first place, so I don't really feel bad for you.

Speaker 1:

Well, we were in first place.

Speaker 2:

I'm not sure we are now yeah, yeah, yeah, the goal is to catch up. Yeah, here we go right. Well, we promised some great guests.

Speaker 1:

Yes, we did and you didn't fall short. You came through for us.

Speaker 2:

Hey, you know what I'm super excited for tonight, and the guest that we're going to have on is the 2024 National LPGA Teacher of the Year, janine Murphy.

Speaker 1:

Welcome to the show, Janine.

Speaker 3:

Hi guys.

Speaker 2:

Hey Janine, how are you doing tonight?

Speaker 3:

I'm good. I'm good, I'm over here in Missouri.

Speaker 2:

Can you believe it? So 8 o'clock here. What is that?

Speaker 1:

10, 10.15 your time, yeah, you stayed up late for us, thank you.

Speaker 3:

I did Happy to. That was one of my bestie golf friends.

Speaker 1:

Welcome. It's a pleasure for me to meet you. I never met you when you were in town, I know.

Speaker 3:

I'm glad to have you here with us now. Well, thanks for the invite, guys.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, janine, we're super excited to have you. Obviously, you're one of my closest friends in the golf industry. We've known each other for what five, six years?

Speaker 3:

at this point, I think we met in 2018 at a proponent group summit.

Speaker 2:

Oh man, you got it down. Yeah, we were in Dallas, Texas, if I recall, at the Cowboys Golf Club.

Speaker 3:

Yep.

Speaker 2:

How fun is that.

Speaker 3:

That's it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they had all those funny, those silly little uh the helmets, but it was a. It was a pretty special place and we learned a lot together and from uh what. I remember you and I were both looking at our opportunities elsewhere at the time and so we were in an education together and that's where we really got to know each other on maybe our value. And you know, now you've kind of found your place in Missouri, so I would love a little backstory for our guests to hear about, kind of how you went from Texas to Missouri.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so it was, I guess 2021. And I was just at a daily fee. I'd been running my own academy for about five years and the only struggle I had is I was at three locations and that was really overwhelming to me. It just it was getting hard. So I just wanted to get back to one club, like well, why am I limiting myself just to Houston, texas? The United States is pretty big and my husband works remotely, so he's like just go out and see if there's something out there that'll fit. And so I ended up here in Missouri and it turned out to be a really nice private country club member owned we have a little right around 400 golfing members. And yeah, almost three years later, here I am.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and Janine, you know, obviously you're not just a golf professional, you are like literally a player development expert in my eyes, right Like I. I love calling and talking with you about you know what you're doing, what you know. You're doing what you know. You're always doing the next thing. It seems like you're an early adopter and you were just at the pga show.

Speaker 2:

Uh, obviously, you know getting your national award and again, congratulations, that's just like incredible um you know and for me, it seems like I'm always learning from you on what the next thing is. So can you tell us about the PGA show? I didn't go this year, obviously with the golf garage being open and I just wanted to know what's the new thing, what's the next best thing that you saw there and what are you looking forward to in 2025?

Speaker 3:

Gosh. A couple of things. I'll start with technology. So I'm an early adopter to Sportsbox and I know you just got connected with them.

Speaker 2:

But Sportsbox so, yeah, tell us about it, though Like I don't know if our listeners are going to know what Sportsbox AI is.

Speaker 3:

So it's a tool for instructors. You know they say the launch monitor tells us the ball and the club data. Well, sports box shows us the body data. So it's going to show you rotation, it's going to show you sway, it's going to show lift, it'll show thrust. So it just gives you and that's just scratching the surface, but it gives you a lot of numbers, wrist angles, um. That really helps the instructor find, like to me, I call it the big red flag or the red herring, um, and it gets you to improving quick. And the other thing I like it as an instructor and a tool for us is it helps me stay focused. Like I know not to move on, like if your sway numbers are off and I'm working on that lateral movement. I know not to move on Like if your sway numbers are off and I'm working on that lateral movement.

Speaker 3:

I know not to move on until I see those numbers get in the range that we're trying to get you to, yeah, and so that really keeps me on task where I think, as a younger instructor, I might would have week one worked on this week too. When I see I changed it and now we're going over here and like it wasn't a clearly defined path.

Speaker 2:

So I like it's like that accountability aspect, right, I mean it's like a you, you hit the nail on the head, having a tool that allows someone to have an actual assessment of their body where you can translate it to feel if that makes sense. I mean their body where you can translate it to feel if that makes sense.

Speaker 2:

I mean when I watched you, when you came out, I mean so you came out to golf garage a couple weeks ago or I guess just before the PGA show and I mean, yeah, you were a guest instructor and you know I remember our friend Brian Jacobs showing us, or talking to us at least about sports box early on. I know you were talking to him, he was talking to me about it and I was definitely weary. And they have come so far with this software that it's literally within 1% of like the best technology out there that you would wear. Is my understanding. Is that pretty accurate?

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that is, and so at the PGA show they launched the Sports Spark Studio that traditionally you would have to have all the high speed cameras in your studio. It's on the phone now. You can capture it on your iPhone or your iPad, oh my gosh.

Speaker 2:

So our phones are literally like more powerful than the Starship, right, I mean back in the day, because our phones are just as good as those high def cameras.

Speaker 3:

And so all that data that was captured, we can. We can now get it, and they have this awesome report. Uh, that, uh, it would be an actual extra charge, but they that you can do this report. You'd hit like x number of ir. So maybe you're hitting your seven iron and then X number of drivers and it just breaks down your swing and shows you exactly where you're inefficient, where you can get more efficient, where you can build more speed. Yeah, it's pretty impressive, yeah.

Speaker 1:

As an amateur. How often do you find now, with all this technology, versus before you were using this technology, that you find the technology is guiding you in a different direction than what you would have thought without that technology?

Speaker 3:

um, I definitely feel like I teach different when I use it. Yeah, I mean, I was just going by what my eye could see and then being able to put it in something in slow motion and slow it down, like we used to just look at the swing in a two-dimensional, but this puts you in a three-dimensional and then it gives you all the numbers and you don't have to wear sensors all over your body like the K-Vest, or if you had the numbers and you don't have to wear sensors all over your body like the k vest, or if you had the amm system.

Speaker 2:

um, so it's pretty impressive what, uh, sportsbox has been able to do and, um, I don't know, I feel like it's leapfrogged my instruction for the private lesson side a lot so, janine, like in simple terms, like to a you know, non, non golfer or someone that's taken lessons this could be a scary thought like this is technical, right, and I would say that when you brought it to my attention as another coach, it's more of.

Speaker 2:

This is such an amazing tool that anyone that is on the app can do this from their home, without hitting a golf ball in the driving range, and learn a better motion, a better golf swing and we get this term a lot and I hear it all the time in my assessments. I want to be more consistent, right. So yeah, darren's raising his hand in the studio. It's like what's consistent? Define that. So now, what's so cool from what I've found in Sportsbox is that you now have this profile that you send to your coach and you can make these golf swings literally in your backyard and then the coach can help them get better right then and there.

Speaker 3:

Yes, and, like I said, I feel it's because it shows you the 2D video but then translating that into 3D and you can move that avatar. So if I took you from a face on view but I want to see what happened down the line with your path, I can move that avatar and watch the club path and kind of it's like I had two cameras on you at the same time.

Speaker 2:

So like if you were defining yeah, if you were defining 2D and 3D right For our listeners, I mean, like 2D would just be like a camera, essentially Just like a face on that's what I see with my eyes and then 3D, you could literally go over the top of their head or under the ground and see every moving part right.

Speaker 3:

That's correct. Yes, so you can move around on all planes. I'm not going to go through all of them, but you can look, like you said, forward, back, from underneath, like you're under their feet, from above their head, like you're a helicopter behind their back, face on From the target. If you're standing on target side and watching them hit at you vantage points of the swing, that like I can't stand in front of somebody when they're hitting, but I can move their avatar and kind of see some movement and show them something that I traditionally can't do.

Speaker 1:

Hey, noah, was this, this the technology you used on me during that assessment a couple of weeks ago?

Speaker 2:

I mean you'd like to know right. I mean yes.

Speaker 1:

Well, it was.

Speaker 2:

Oh, you mean when I put you in front of all the professionals? Yes, yeah, it is you know what it?

Speaker 1:

I was more intimidated being filmed than I was being in front of 30 people. And I have to say, when you showed that avatar and broke down my swing with this avatar on there, that didn't look like me. It took that self-conscious aspect completely away and I looked at my swing with a completely subjective view, without the biased view of looking at myself. You know what I mean. Does that make sense?

Speaker 2:

That is actually great feedback, isn't it, Janine? It's like, here we go.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I was just thinking that.

Speaker 2:

I mean, we got a golfer in front of us that has an opportunity to break 80, so we have, like, in the future we're definitely going to be doing some uh, some swing tweaks and some tips with darren here and our goal is to be like the road to darren or whatever we're going to call it, but like yeah, I mean he immediately got better because of sportsbox AI and the idea of breaking down one small aspect and finding the root cause of the problem.

Speaker 1:

And being a big guy, I was always like, well, my back, I'm not limber enough, my back swing's not far enough, my elbows aren't in tight enough, my rotation isn't enough. Looking at that avatar, I'm going, wow, in tight enough, my rotation isn't enough. Looking at that avatar, I'm going, wow, it is enough. My swing actually doesn't look that bad. Where I'm actually watching a video of myself, I'm like, oh, I look like crap and I'm thinking about the wrong things.

Speaker 2:

So, janine, next steps for you, right Like you're an amazing coach. You're an amazing person, right like you care about every student. I mean, that's that's how I would definitely describe you just this amazing person that just continues to grow. You're always on the forefront of what's next. You're bringing in something new and exciting all the time. You're getting educated all the time, right? So what at the PGA show stood out? You kind of mentioned that there was a training aid that you bought. But like what are the things that are up and coming? Because a PGA show is like the epitome of like everything new and exciting in golf. They always hold, always hold out for us right in January down in Orlando. So what did you find? That was just awesome.

Speaker 3:

For me two new tools that I bought. Uh, one already came in. Uh, that is from super speed golf. I went ahead and bought the force board pro, so it's very similar to why golf's balance board so what is so?

Speaker 2:

what weight shift, so weight shift, okay. So if you, explained. It is like a teeter-totter board, essentially that you stand on so why?

Speaker 3:

golf is the teeter-totter board. But super speed took that concept and then made it like super uh, what would be a good word to describe it Like I'm going to say functional, but it's really versatile, that might be a better word. So it has these little holes like pegs, like you had a pegboard in your garage and you're going to hang your tools or something. So it has these pegs and from the underneath you can put what would make it teeter-totter and lift up the middle.

Speaker 3:

Well, because it's like a pegboard, you could move that to the back of the board and hit off a downslope. You could move it to the front, like your lead side, so now you're hitting off an upslope, that's cool. Then you could put it towards the balls of your feet, so you're hitting on a downslope or upslope. Then you could put it the other way, so that you're hitting on the downslope, so you can work on different slopes even though you're in the studio. And then obviously that can become drills for instructors. And then with the pegs, they they add these little force puddles, like like we have force puddles that you could put under the feet. They have some of these, that kind of stick in like a pegboard, and so maybe I want it under your trail heel so you can push off of it, or maybe I want it on the instep because you tend to sway too much in your back.

Speaker 2:

So I want it to be on your instep to feel pressure it sounds to me like this pegboard has the opportunity to pretty much fix any fault from like the ground up. Yeah, it's definitely for how the players using the ground for sure so what I really like, and then the other thing yeah, go ahead oh, go ahead.

Speaker 3:

Oh, I was gonna say even as simple as like, maybe I take off that thing that makes it teeter-totter and it has two little yellow pegs. So maybe I even have a brand new golfer and they're trying to learn stance with. Well, I could put those pegs in it, the yellow pegs. So maybe I even have a brand new golfer and they're trying to learn stance width. Well, I could put those pegs in it, the yellow pegs, and say this is where I want, like your big toes, to be, so that way they're learning how wide their stance should be. Or maybe I'm changing a player's stance, maybe they've been too wide and I need to narrow them up, or the opposite. So I mean, even for something simple as a dress position, I think it's going to be really nice.

Speaker 2:

So you have an indoor facility in your club in Missouri and I know it just got refinished. You've got Foresight software, just like I do. You know it's the best indoor outdoor in the biz. So this training aid sounds like it could allow you to simulate any lie out there. Yeah, yes that's incredible I need to buy 10 of those right now for my 10 base uh, it's pretty impressive and they had obviously a nice pga special.

Speaker 3:

They're probably still running it.

Speaker 2:

Noah, I'm sure if you reached out to them I'm gonna have, uh, I'm gonna have you hook me up with that, janine. I think you've probably got a better relationship with them at this point, but uh, yeah, we're gonna be talking more about that.

Speaker 3:

The force board pro is what it's called. And then the only other teaching aid I was overly impressed with that was new to me. My friend, lpga member Tiffany Fawcett, developed the mirror mat.

Speaker 2:

So I know I sent you a text.

Speaker 3:

So I was like I'm buying it, I'm sold. So you know how we head off mats. It's just turf and so it's the size of like if you're on a range, like a range mat. But somehow she invented, came up and found the right product. It's a mirror, but you can stand on it. You're not going to stand on it in dress shoes, but like a tennis shoe, something with a nice rubber bottom so you won't slip, but it has enough flex and I forget what she said it's made out of but it won't break. And then, for where you hit the hitting strip is one of those mats I forget what they're called but where you hit it and it leaves the path and then you can swipe it back the other direction.

Speaker 2:

But where you hit it and it leaves the path and then you can swipe it back the other direction. Oh, that's amazing, you know, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yes and uh, well that. And then she has these little things that you can extend out. So she talks about how visible, even though people learn by feel or like their their um, auditory but but she said 80 of our learning comes from visual and so in her lesson she was trying to make what she sees as the instructor but the player can't see it because she's like even if I put a camera over your head to try to show you, I can't, I don't have x-ray, I can't make the camera see, like where your hands are hanging. So she's like I'm gonna have you stand on a mirror and then you can kind of see these things and see like when you're putting hey, you're swaying a little, you need to stay still, or you know, when you're swinging, some people move their head with their upper body all at the same time. You can work path.

Speaker 3:

If somebody's like maybe their takeaway, they bring it way inside and the the clubs behind them too early in their takeaway. So this extends like a runway down your target line with these mirrors and the player can see that club face position. She put little two inch markers the width of a club face and so that way they can match up the toe and heel If it's somebody that needs to learn club face control. I mean, there's like so many cool things you can do with this thing. I'm barely scratching the surface, but I was like I'm getting it, so I'm waiting on that to come in. I hope it comes in next week well, janine, that's super exciting since it's a mirror.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it is an indoor tool, since it's a mirror, obviously the sun would blind you reflecting on that to it and, as a you know instructor, that is invaluable. I mean, I think what we're trying to do here is give some sort of a feel to our student that they can replicate. But, like you said, 80% of learning is visual, so no one that I've seen has created anything like this. I mean, we use cameras so much that sometimes we forget that the mirror is one of the best training aids out there. And for someone to put a mirror that allows you to look down and see everything, and then you can manipulate it to see the club, your face, your head, that's just incredible to me Instant feedback.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's real, real-time feedback and yeah, I so I can't wait to get it in and start working with the students. I mean, she was even talking about and I have one those little convex, concave mirrors that you put behind a player on the range, sure, but it does distort your view and so nothing of hers is convex or concave, so like it's like like a wardrobe mirror, you know how. You just lean it against the wall at your house or something and to check yourself out. So these mirrors are just you're seeing what you're really doing. And so when I tell my players, hey, you're still going inside, and they're like, really, and I show them on the video, but now they can actually see it in their takeaway, watch the hand path, or maybe they're watching the club head path. I think that's going to enhance and get them where we want them to be even faster.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, absolutely so, janine, tell us a little bit about what your plans are for 2025. I mean winning the National LPGA Teacher of the Year Awards, winning the national LPGA teacher of the year awards, kind of the yeah, I mean it's like the creme de la creme um of our profession. And and in ladies, golf specifically. So, like, again, you travel and play golf, you, you play golf, you know, in pro-ams, you, you're out there teaching every day. You're growing the game from grassroots all the way up to um, some of the best players in the world. So, like, what are you looking forward to? What are your goals here in 2025, after you've already kind of hit one of the apexes of your career?

Speaker 3:

Oh man, I am so jazzed about 2025. I just did five straight days of education in Orlando, so I'm pumped. I've already revamped my spring training program, so I'm really excited to be bringing out some new ideas for 2025 with my members One of my. The idea is something simple. I haven't thought of this before, but a putting league, a four week putting league.

Speaker 2:

Like you have bowling leagues, like you're doing simulator league.

Speaker 3:

Like, let's lower your, your putting handicap, in four weeks. So there's like one drill that you would have the group work on every week, but after they do that as their warmup, then you're doing whatever drill you're working on, maybe it's distance control, maybe it's short putt, you know whatever but then their handicap lowering that is going to be made based off of that one drill that they do every week. And obviously, if you really want to lower it and get the prize for the class, you're going to be out there practicing even more. So yeah, and then just, I haven't done any LPGA one-on-one classes in a while, so I'm going to kind of sprinkle those back in for the ladies and gosh, gosh, there's, there's. There's like, oh, couples therapy. I got that from brian jacobs, so I'm gonna offer some couples therapy classes. Uh, one will be on full swing, one will be on short game, but we'll meet at like we all.

Speaker 2:

We all need. We all need couples therapy.

Speaker 3:

Yes, yeah and so yeah, and then they can go up to the club and have dinner. But I thought, brian, that's a brilliant idea. Yeah, because how many of it there's, the one of the players is a little bit better a lot of the time and they can think they're helping, but maybe it's actually not helping and it's maybe intimidating or frustrating to the other golfer. So how do we talk to each other? And you know what I always love in that situation, when you get a golfer.

Speaker 2:

So how do we talk to each other? And you know what I always love in that situation when you get a golfer, where either the husband or the wife comes in and one of them's a little bit more dominant and helping typically the male right. So, um, it's one of those things where you say, hey, tell your significant other that you're paying X for this lesson and it's going to cost you about 10 times that much If you keep helping me. It works every time, absolutely.

Speaker 3:

So those are just a few classes, but yeah, I came away with a ton of fresh ideas. I'm real excited to put those into play. Obviously, I can't start until after the time changes, so probably in March, but that's right around the corner and I've decided to try to join the PGA. So I've reached out to them to find out what I have to do to become a dual member and well, that's exciting.

Speaker 2:

Are you kidding me? You know how lucky we are to have.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Jeez.

Speaker 3:

I'm like there's just I'm like I just need to expand my network, you know, and I'm like, why limit myself to just the LPGA when I have the opportunity to meet so many wonderful PGA members like yourself? So that's like I just need to get in there and do it. Quit not doing it.

Speaker 1:

Janine, what advice do you have for you know enthusiast golfers who are intimidated to seek help. They know they need help. They're sick to death of shooting in the high 90s, low 100s. They want to get help but they're scared to go in front of a coach and say where do I begin? What advice do you have for them to encourage to seek professional coaching?

Speaker 3:

Well I would say, like Noah, like myself and other pros, like we're we're just normal people. We're not going to laugh at you. We're going to listen. We're going to make sure we find out what your goals are. We're going to find out you know just who you are as a person, how you learn. It's going to be a very easy process. We're probably going to make you laugh and have a good time along the way and get rid of that stage fright. You can do it in a private setting. Some people might do it better in a group because they feel like the eyes aren't on them the entire time. So maybe that person might be a better candidate for, like, a small group of six training. So find that beginner type class. But some people are like, oh, I don't want to be in a group. So just know that that the professionals are there Like we care about you and we want you to be successful and we're going to do everything we can to make that experience very comfortable.

Speaker 1:

Even if it's just a quick 30 minutes Cause everybody's yeah everybody starts somewhere.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah, everybody starts somewhere.

Speaker 1:

So we've talked a lot about this amazing, amazing technology that's out there that helps coaches be better coaches, gives you more data and information to work from when you're coaching.

Speaker 3:

Is there such thing as a training aid that people can use on their own time, without the guidance of a coach, that's going to help make them a better golfer? I would say yes, something as simple as a rope. So I think, noah, you have some. I actually bought the one from Dr Kwan, I forget what it's called.

Speaker 2:

You could YouTube Dr kwan rope drill and um it was. Or you could go to home, or you can go to home depot and get one for about, you know, a dollar I think it needs to be.

Speaker 3:

He has a youtube video. If you want to make your own, like how long it needs to be, I want to say it's like seven or nine feet, um, and what type of rope, like the diameter of it. But, um, I just bought one from him because I didn't want to go to home depot. But yeah, just a rope drill where you're swinging it over your trail shoulder and it kind of it will hit your back and then you swing forward to your follow-through over your lead side and it's going to hit your back again. But is it hitting kind of in the same place? It's not hitting over your head or hitting you in the ear, like it should be. Like I always tell women, like around your bra strap, under your armpits for guys, so you could learn kind of just a basic motion. It's going to work on tempo. It'll help you learn a swing plane. Hopefully you'll start picking up a weight shift with that.

Speaker 2:

So I would say that's a simple and a low cost investment, janine you hit the nail on the head it's a three quarter inch rope by seven feet. I just looked it up online and that's exactly it. I didn't have mine in front of me, but it is amazing. You hit so many huge points there from a coaching perspective, and it's interesting to me, like if we started from the putting stroke and move back, how much tempo matters to a square clubface. And a square clubface means I hit it where I wanted to. And when someone comes to me and says I want consistency, if they look up and see the ball go in a direction they wanted to, even if they topped it, they're going to be a lot happier than if it went into the water or out of bounds. So I think that that rope could be, you know, one of the best investments we can make, and I think that might be a tip and trick in the future here on the podcast.

Speaker 3:

I mean, well, thanks, yeah, um, I just, I'm like for a low cost investment, and if you don't even want to buy a set of clubs but you want to see what golf is kind of like, swing a rope, it's not that much, you know, money involved, so you may even have one laying around your house, who knows?

Speaker 1:

Janine, it's been such a pleasure having you on the show and you've been such an amazing resource to us, and congratulations on all of your accomplishments this year. Do you have a website? Do you have anything where people can learn more about you and what you do? Kind of promote your business a little bit?

Speaker 3:

Well, I kind of took my website down just because I'm at a private country club. But I mean, I'm always like my cell phone is available. Anybody can text me at any time. I don't mind giving it out. So if y'all don't mind, I'll give it out really quick.

Speaker 1:

Go for it 832.

Speaker 3:

It's the Texas area code 832-326-2793. And I'm like shoot me a text, maybe don't call too late. But yeah, I respond to text pretty fast and I love chatting with people and connecting with other professionals. Um, tonight I actually connected with another midwest lpga professional for the first time, so I uh want to be accessible and get to hear everyone's story and see what's going on.

Speaker 1:

Excellent. Say that number one more time for us.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, 832-326-2793.

Speaker 1:

Amazing. Thank you.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, yeah. Hey Janine great talking with you, as usual.

Speaker 2:

And thank you for being on our podcast. Congratulations on the 2024 national lpga teacher of the year.

Speaker 3:

It's amazing congrats, that's huge thanks and congratulations to you two on launching your podcast. I mean, that's pretty impressive, very exciting thank you and I look forward to your next visit.

Speaker 1:

We hope you come back soon.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, invite me back, all right, good night, all right, janine good night, Thank you so much.

Speaker 1:

Thanks for joining episode two of the my Golf Shorts podcast. I am Darren and this is Noah.

Speaker 2:

And we are out. Thank you.

People on this episode