|

Excellent golf comes at a price, especially when a golfer wants to become the best.
Buried within the bright lights of the Las Vegas valley sits Butch Harmon's School of
Golf, located at the Rio Secco Golf Club. If the name Butch Harmon sounds familiar, it's because Harmon has become arguably one of the world's most popular golf
instructors since David Ledbetter began schooling aspiring golfers a few decades ago. The name still doesn't sound familiar? Harmon is also the private golf instructor for a
little known golfer by the name of Eldrick "Tiger" Woods. "As a golfer, it's an honor for me to work with someone like Butch Harmon," said former collegiate golfer Jeremy
Anderson, who trains at the school on a regular basis. "He's so renowned that he's got hundreds of people calling each day to work with him."
While holding court with Harmon for a personal lesson costs a little more than your average golf instructor (three-day
lesson packages cost $4,800), his past and present students have no problems putting their trust in the golf instructor's sage advice.
"I've always loved to teach and it's something that I have always wanted to do," Harmon said. "I'll be 60 years old this year,
so I'm not getting any younger but I'll probably never not teach. I feel very comfortable in my position in life and I'm very
happy with the way things have worked out. I have been a very fortunate person because of the great game of golf to be able to travel all over the world and meet some wonderful people."
Harmon has called the Rio Secco Golf Club in Henderson, Nev., his home since 1997 when he opened the popular school
to the public. Teaching packages from the school generally include intense instruction from Harmon and his handpicked
staff professionals, computerized video analysis and on-course playing lessons on the beautiful Rio Secco course, which was named as one of the top courses in the world by GOLF magazine.
"Video is wonderful for the students because it reaffirms what you are telling them," Harmon said. "It lets them see
instantly the things you're trying to tell them and it makes it easier for them to accept change because in reality, feel and
real aren't necessarily the same thing. I can tell you that you are doing this and that and then I can show you on the film. It
makes it easier to understand. My philosophy in teaching is I try to get the best out of what an individual does. I don't want to change what they do naturally. I want to improve on it."
Ranked as one of the top 100 golf teachers in the world by GOLF Magazine in February, Harmon has coached a handful of
the world's best golfers including former No.1-ranked golfer Greg Norman, Justin Leonard, Mark Calcavecchia, Darren Clarke, Jose Maria Olazabal and most notably, Woods.
"I probably will always be linked with being the guy who taught Tiger Woods," Harmon said. "That's probably isn't fair either
because I took Greg Norman to the No. 1 spot in the world and I have had success with other players. But Tiger is the
greatest player who ever played and from the 10 years that we have been together, I probably will be linked to him that way
." Harmon has even taught kings when in 1971, he began personally teaching King Hassan II in Morocco at the Royal Dar Es Salam in Rabat.
"It was great because I moved to Morocco when I stopped playing on the PGA Tour in 1971 and I lived there until 1975,"
Harmon said. "It was just a wonderful and a great experience. King Hassan II was probably the greatest man I have ever
met in my life. He probably did more for me understanding life in many different ways and seeing it from many different
perspectives than anyone in the world. He was probably the most influential person, other than my father, on my life."
As an instructor at the school, Harmon strives to make simplify a game known for being extremely complex.
"The one thing I learned from my father is to make it as simple as possible," Harmon said. "Golf is a difficult enough game
and we don't need to confuse our students. My dad had a great line, he said 'You need to teach golf at a second-grade
level,' meaning a person in second grade could understand what you're saying. They learn easier and they don't get their
mind cluttered. That's been my philosophy and it has been a successful one so I am going to keep on doing it."
|