Titliest Performance Institute coaches do not guess they asses, I will be traveling the world. Helping golfers to experience better Golf.
-coach Ken
Experience Better Golf Mach3 Speed Training
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Experience Better Golf Mach3 Speed Training, Canada/Philippines/Thailand and, Ottawa, ON.
MACH3 SPEED TRAINING & GOLF PERFORMANCE
SPEED development, movement screening, and performance programing using MACH3 speed training and Titleist Performance Institute principles i work alongside coaches to improve how players move and generate speed.
06/09/2026
Here’s the swing of your US Open winner, as well as her results this season. Eight tournaments, 4 wins, plus three seconds and a T8. Historic stuff!
06/09/2026
As part of my Experience Better Golf series, today I’d like to recognize two of the best short game coaches in the world: James Sieckmann and Dan Grieve.
If you’ve followed me for any length of time, you know I believe golfers should learn from a variety of great coaches and viewpoints. There is no single path to better golf.
When it comes to the short game, these two have made a tremendous impact on golfers around the world.
James Sieckmann has helped change the way many golfers understand wedges and scoring shots. His ability to simplify complex concepts and help players develop consistency around the greens is second to none.
Dan Grieve has become one of the most respected short game coaches in the game today. His practical approach, creativity, and ability to help golfers save shots around the green have made him a favorite among players of all skill levels.
What I find particularly interesting is that, despite their own unique styles and teaching methods, both coaches share a common thread. Both have studied, admired, and been influenced by the legendary short-game artistry of Seve Ballesteros.
Seve didn’t see obstacles around the green. He saw opportunities. He played with imagination, creativity, feel, and a willingness to hit whatever shot the situation required. That philosophy continues to influence great coaches and players today.
While James and Dan each teach in their own way, you can see that same appreciation for creativity, adaptability, and scoring reflected in their work.
Most golfers spend far too much time chasing the perfect golf swing and not nearly enough time learning how to score. These two coaches understand that golf is ultimately about getting the ball in the hole.
Experience Better Golf is about sharing great information wherever I find it, and James Sieckmann and Dan Grieve are two coaches I highly recommend following.
Thank you, James and Dan, for helping golfers everywhere become better short-game players and better scorers.
Standing on the tee box today, one thing was impossible to ignore…
CRACK.
CRACK.
CRACK.
One after another, great players launching golf balls with incredible speed and efficiency.
That sound is different.
It is not just strength.
It is not just technique.
It is not just equipment.
It is speed, sequencing, timing, ground force, and years of training all coming together at impact.
The best players in the world make it look effortless, but the sound tells the truth.
CRACK.
Energy transferred efficiently.
CRACK.
The club moving faster.
CRACK.
The golf ball leaving with authority.
If you want more distance, don’t just watch where the ball goes. Listen.
That sound is what efficient movement, speed, and solid contact sound like.
And the good news?
Every golfer can improve those qualities.
Experience Better Golf.
Move Better. Swing Faster. Play Better.
06/05/2026
Hunter Mahan. Was at Mach3 headquarters for a tool fitting session, and ended up talking for almost an hour before he even got started. He mostly talked about the golf swing (we both view it as largely non-technical), how people learn it, and what we feel are easier ways it can be learned. When we finally got around to the fitting session, he ended up with a Loop Bomber (best for body-driven swings), a Strong Jetstick (best for high swing speeds), and an Extra-Heavy Iron Whip (best for golfers who are strong and already have excellent arm structure through impact). I learned a lot today, and also congratulations to Hunter’s boys high school team who won their state championship this Spring 💪🏼💪🏼
One of the commitments I've made through Experience Better Golf is to share great information from great coaches.
The first coach I've chosen to feature is Lance Gill of Lance Gill Performance.
Why Lance?
Because in an industry filled with opinions, Lance has spent decades helping golfers understand the connection between movement, physical limitations, and golf performance.
Lance is a Physical Therapist, one of the original members of the Titleist Performance Institute team, and someone who has helped shape the way many of today's coaches think about screening, movement, and player development.
More importantly, he genuinely cares.
He isn't interested in chasing social media trends or creating complicated swing theories. His focus has always been helping golfers understand their bodies so they can move better, play better, and enjoy the game more.
The video below is a perfect example.
Many golfers are told what to do in the golf swing, but very few are taught whether their body is actually capable of doing it.
Before changing technique, it often makes sense to understand the movement first.
That's one of the many reasons I respect Lance and the work he continues to do.
Take a few minutes to watch this video and consider giving Lance Gill Performance a follow.
There are many excellent coaches in the golf industry, and when I find information that can help golfers Experience Better Golf, I'll be sharing it.
https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1CxtJ2h2Pk/?mibextid=wwXIfr
Most golfers think speed comes from trying harder.
It doesn’t.
The fastest players in the world aren’t simply stronger than everyone else. They create speed through efficient movement, timing, and sequencing.
Watch closely and you’ll see a blend of lateral force, rotational force, and vertical force working together in the right order.
The body shifts, rotates, pushes against the ground, and transfers energy through the chain into the club.
No excessive effort.
No violent swinging.
No trying to hit it hard.
Just efficient movement producing extraordinary speed.
When the sequence improves, speed often shows up without adding strength.
Speed is a skill.
05/29/2026
Let me be clear before anything else:
I still coach golf.
I believe in golf coaching.
I also believe there are some genuinely brilliant coaches out there who have helped players at every level unlock things they never thought possible.
But this post is for the golfer who has been standing in that right-hand line for years and still feels completely lost.
I have been there.
I have sat through lessons where I walked away with six new swing thoughts, a drill for my takeaway, a tip for my transition, and a completely different grip.
By the time I got to the range, I could barely hit a golf ball.
Not because the coach was wrong.
Because my brain was overloaded and my body was not ready to execute what I had been told.
That is one of the reasons I believe so strongly in assessment before instruction.
The best coaches in the world understand this.
I watched Butch Harmon build a career around simplicity.
Whether it was working with Tiger Woods or a weekend golfer, the philosophy was often the same:
Find the one or two things that matter most.
Don't overwhelm the player.
The great coaches understand that less is often more.
The best coaches also understand the role the body plays in performance.
As a TPI Level 3 Certified Professional, Certified Functional Strength Coach (CFSC), and Functional Movement Systems (FMS) practitioner, I use TPI and FMS screening to understand how a golfer moves before deciding what they need to work on.
Those assessments help me identify mobility restrictions, stability issues, balance challenges, strength deficits, and movement patterns that may be influencing the golf swing.
That information, combined with decades of coaching experience and advanced golf-specific education, allows me to connect the dots between how a golfer moves and how they swing the club.
If your hip mobility is restricted, being told to clear your hips may not solve the problem.
If your thoracic spine is stiff, maintaining posture can become a challenge.
If your body cannot perform the movement, more swing thoughts rarely provide the answer.
Look at the PGA Tour.
The best players in the world do not rely on one person.
They have a team.
A physiotherapist.
A strength coach.
A nutritionist.
A sports psychologist.
And a golf coach.
The swing coach is an important piece of a much bigger picture.
That is the approach I believe in.
Understand the golfer.
Assess the body.
Identify the limitations.
Build a plan.
Then coach the swing.
A clear strategy.
A body built to perform.
A simple process.
And a coach who knows how to keep you focused on what matters most.
Confused about your game?
Not sure where to start?
Want a simple process that removes the guesswork?
Reach out.
I don't guess.
I assess.
— Coach Ken Loewen
TPI Level 3 Certified (Golf, Fitness & Junior)Certified Functional Strength Coach (CFSC)Functional Movement Systems (FMS)Mach3 Speed Training Certified
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