Craig Bocking
The Ledges
32 Castle Down Drive
Huntsville, AL 35802
(256) 616-5525
cbocking@theledges.com
Milo Lines Golf at Superstition Mountain
8000 E Club Village Drive
Gold Canyon, AZ 85118
(801) 400-3161
milolines@me.com
NorCal Golf Academy
1557A Third Avenue
Walnut Creek, CA 94597
(925) 937-6242
info@norcalgolfacademy.com
Chris Banard Golf
Orinda, CA 94563
chris@terraforzagolf.com
MHPO Golf
Rio Bravo Country Club
15200 Casa Club Dr.
Bakersfield, CA 93306
1grfpro@gmail.com
Jeff Lombardo
JL Golf Academy
75 High Ridge Rd.
Stamford, CT 06902
(917) 957-1000
jeffreylombardo@yahoo.com
Forefront Golf and Fitness
3920 RCA Blvd. Suite 2000
Palm Beach Gardens FL, 33410
(561) 677-9335
info@forefront.fit
Connor Asarch
Atlanta, GA
connor@terraforzagolf.com
Pure Golf Lab
4918 Bellemeade Ave
Evansville, IN 47715
puregolflab.com
harold@purgolflab.com
Larry Hamilton Golf
232 South St
Rochester, MI 48307
(248) 605-2201
LarryHamiltonGolf@gmail.com
Chris Foley Golf
Madden's on Gull Lake
1664 Pine Beach Rd.
East Gull Lake, MN 56401
(218) 820-9426
cfoley@chrisfoleygolf.com
San Pedro Golf Course
6102 San Pedro Ave,
San Antonio, TX 78216
(210) 349-5113
Dead Solid Perfect Golf
16900 Blanco Rd
San Antonio, TX 78232
(210) 332-5094
dg@dspgfit.com
Tour Proven Golf
6000 Colleyville Blvd #150
Colleyville, TX 76034
(469) 390-1300
Steven@tourprovengolf.com
Neil Oster
Austin,TX
(512) 705-3369
nsoster@gmail.com
Terra Forza's Patented Shaft Fitting System is built upon the utilization of ground force pressure torques and center of mass movement patterns. This system captures these dynamics using ground force pressure plates to measure every golfer. In as few as five swings, it recommends the optimal Terra Forza Golf Shaft that best fits each individual.
Terra Forza believes that ground pressure provides an extremely consistent way of measuring the golfer's movement.
For many years some have said that the shaft is the engine of the golf club.
Thinking logically this cannot be true, the club cannot move on its own - it’s the golfer that makes the movement, the shaft simply ‘translates’ the players movement to the club head and ultimately the ball.
Once a golfer places their hands on the grip the golfer and club becomes one unit and should be evaluated as such, evaluating each segment (player, shaft, head) does not take the whole picture into account.
The golf swing is a motion, a moment in time when the actual player only has two contact points - The grip of the golf club and the ground.
If we spend so much time working on the club as a contact point would it not make sense to evaluate the movement with the ground?