Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Behind the Scenes: BOA

There will come a time when no one laces up a pair of golf shoes – at least not the way it's done now. It may seem difficult to fathom, but we've spent our entire lives surrounded by any number of emerging technological advances, which eventually render existing technology obsolete – lightbulbs, washing machines and HDTV are three I find particularly useful in my household. First-world comforts, I know.

Video killed the radio star and BOA very well might be the end of traditionally laced golf shoes. Some of you just asked, What's BOA? - And therein lies both the problem and motivation for BOA's unofficial, but still kind of official, relaunch.

The crux of the challenge facing BOA is one of identity and understanding. Despite its best efforts, market research performed by BOA recently revealed people could neither pronounce nor reliably identify the company based on its now former logo. BOA makes a product which millions of people use (and pay for) every day, yet consumers couldn't connect the product with the producer.

For BOA, that's a problem the size of Johnny Miller's ego.

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The issue is compounded by the fact that BOA is an ingredient company. Its final product is a component of the consumer end-product. As such, any recognition or consumer response is typically associated with the product (i.e.  Apple iPhone) rather than any of the composite pieces (e.g. A9 processor produced by Samsung). Exceptions occur only when one of the ingredient pieces is remarkable in a way which fundamentally changes the nature of the final product. If you’re searching for examples, GORE-TEX comes to mind. BOA has substantial ground to gain before if it’s to find itself in the vicinity of product/category synonyms like GORE-TEX, Kleenex, Xerox and Jet Ski.

At best, there's a general understanding that some golf shoes have fastening options other than time-honored laces. But those who can correctly identify BOA as the company who produces the patented closure system in select FootJoy, Adidas, Ecco, Under Armour, and Nike golf shoes – are in short supply. BOA's entire renaissance is dedicated to changing that.

Remember the 3M tagline “We don’t make the things you buy…we make the things you buy better?” Swap things for shoes and you have the message BOA is working to deliver to the entire golf footwear industry.

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WHY SHOULD YOU CARE?

The primary motivation behind BOA's rebranding efforts is largely self-serving. File that nugget of wisdom wherever you deem appropriate. It wants consumers to know what it does, why you should purchase shoes with a BOA lacing system and ultimately, create an identity as the premier closure system available.

So, while the immediate benefit of raised awareness favors BOA, there are two fundamental reasons it should matters to consumers as well. First, the technology is readily available, and evidence suggests proper footwear increases performance.

A shoe which provides the player the proper fit, desired amount of traction, and optimal stability is the first step towards better performance. Maintaining this fit throughout an entire round is where BOA shines. Consider the analogy of a knot. As it loosens, effectiveness is lost. BOA both keeps the knot tight while allowing for micro adjustments (1mm) to dial in desired tension.

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The benefits may not be as obvious or quantifiable as fresh grooves on a wedge, but it very well may give you more distance off the tee than a new driver.

The second reason is more esoteric. There exists a percentage of golfers who demand the best of everything.

But without a baseline or some competition, it's impossible to establish what best looks like. To date, BOA is the only such footwear technology utilized across multiple brands. Puma's Disc system, while similar in approach, is proprietary and has been adapted from its experience with high-performance running/track shoes.

It's possible that BOA remains unchallenged and creates a virtual monopoly in its space, but in speaking with several industry insiders, I won't be surprised if others try to mirror Puma's approach. Should companies do so, consumers will have more choices, but not necessarily better ones.

BOA Background

BOA employs approximately 200 people worldwide, 140 of which work the company HQ in Denver’s burgeoning River North Art District. It’s a quasi-urban industrial area, about 20 minutes north of downtown Denver with a clear view of the Rocky Mountains. The location and scenery fit well with the vibe and origin of the brand. Like so many other entrepreneurial successes, BOA’s launch point was the solution to a common problem. Founder, Gary Hammerslag wanted a quicker and easier way to lace up his kid’s snowboard boots. In 2001, the first BOA System launched with brand partners Vans and K2.

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The next 16 years saw rapid acceptance largely in outdoor adventure markets (snowboarding, hiking, biking) and while the growth has been welcome, managing and sustaining this growth isn’t without some challenge – chiefly, ensuring consumers understand BOA is a separate and autonomous company focused on making the highest quality and longest lasting closure system in the world.

HOW DOES IT WORK?

There’s genius in simplification and that’s what BOA accomplishes with its patented closure system. Instead of traditional laces, BOA uses a dial and flexible metal wire (7 sets of 7 strands are twisted together and wrapped in a nylon sheath) to tie the shoe. Because individual pieces of the system can’t be tightened independently, BOA engineers have to optimize how each part of the system works, with areas tightening at different rates to maximize stability without sacrificing comfort. From a user standpoint, it’s easier than turning on the microwave. To tighten, depress the dial and turn to the right (dial works the same on both left and right shoes). To loosen, release the dial by popping it up. That’s it.

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The complexity of BOA’s closure system is in the design – where each shoe goes through an exhaustive creation process, merging BOA’s technology with the existing shoe design. This is true in all cases except the adidas Powerband, which is the first BOA-only golf shoe.

On average, a BOA closure system adds $20-$30 to the cost of the shoe. If you’re expecting consumers to pay a premium, the product needs to offer something more – and preferably something better. With BOA, convenience is a feature, not the defining benefit. The BOA closure system comfortably locks the foot in place and provides a secure and consistent fit. This allows the rest of the shoe technology (particularly traction technology) to function optimally. BOA guarantees the dial and laces for the life of the shoe, which means the shoe will likely fall apart long before closure system does.

INSIDE INFO

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I took a trip to BOA’s HQ to get a first-hand look at BOA’s operation while spending some time with BOA’s Marketing Coordinator, Jason Peters, to discus the company’s plans for becoming the first and last name consumers think of in alternative shoe lacing systems.

The multi-level building is unassuming and is largely what one would expect of such an operation. Beyond the reception area (where you’re greeted by the company dog) is the quick visual tour of BOA’s history and a board displaying the gamut of brand partners. The rest of the space is organized largely according to product category (golf, hiking, running, etc.) or task (prototype creation, durability testing, marketing) The exposed brick, concrete floors and industrial ambiance give the entire set up a factory meets Generation X type feel.

To date, BOA works with 330 category leading brands across the world where nearly 83 million of its dials provide the closure system for footwear, medical devices and other utilitarian pursuits (e.g. gloves, workboots, and helmets).

During my visit, BOA was still in the process of replacing the old logo with the new one. The existing logo relied heavily upon two yellow arrows, which I can only think was meant to depict the movement of a twisting dial. The text "boa" was symmetrical and artsy, but clearly secondary to the brand name. The revamped logo focuses almost entirely on the brand name but is dynamic enough to suggest some element of movement or wrapping.

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Designing a new logo which avoided the pitfalls of the previous one wasn’t nearly as clean and simple as the new logo might suggest. After narrowing it down from hundreds of versions to a select few, BOA had to be sure that its message remained consistent regardless of language or target market. The logo had to be universal, simple, powerful and immediately recognizable across multiple continents and cultures.

If pressed to offer an analogy; it’s a bit like cutting down a sequoia and whittling away until you have the perfect toothpick.

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BRAND PARTNERS

When BOA takes on a new brand partner most of the initial collaboration happens on-site where all the requisite materials, production machinery and space exist to create prototypes on the spot. This facilitates a more efficient design process and, all things being equal, means less time to bring a final product to market. It’s also a confined space where the creative juices flow. As with any organic process, it can get a bit messy.

Each brand partner is a unique relationship with its own set of dynamics and idiosyncrasies.

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FootJoy is BOA’s heritage partner (going on 11 years) and currently offers the most BOA models of any vendor. The proprietary heel-mounted system wraps the heel “low and back” for a comfortably tight and secure fit.

As the elder statesmen of the BOA/Golf shoe collaboration, don’t expect Footjoy to drastically alter how it utilizes BOA, but that in no way suggests the current platform is anything less than stellar. Footjoy’s latest shoe – D.N.A. Helix - is billed as a collection of Footjoy’s best technology seamlessly integrated into to a single design - and it wouldn’t be complete without a BOA option. It also marks the first shoe in Foojoy’s lineup to feature the updated BOA dial which allows for precise micro adjustments in both directions (right to tighten and left to loosen).  Given the popularity of Footjoy in both the retail space and on all major professional tours, there’s not much incentive to mess with the solid recipe that the two companies have dialed in (excuse the lame pun) over the last decade plus.

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Ecco, Nike, and Under Armour are all recent partners and share a similar space in the BOA portfolio. Each offers a single model (for now) with BOA technology (Nike Lunar Command 2, Ecco Cage Pro, Under Armour Speith One), and based on the selection, it’s reasonable to surmise the intention was to match BOA with the model most likely to appeal to the majority of consumers. Or, in the case of Under Armour, to make sure it’s flagship model came with every feature someone looking to drop $200+ could conceivably desire.

I’d confidently wager a steak dinner that you’ll see BOA on a minimum of two models from each brand partner at next year’s PGA Merchandise Show. It might be a reach, but with Nike leaving the equipment space to focus intently and exclusively on soft goods, Nike (and its global presence) might be the brand which ultimately gets people asking, “What kind of BOA do you have on your shoe?”

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adidas is, according to Peters, “as collaborative as any of the brand partners we have.” The read-between-the-lines take away is that adidas is perhaps more willing to go some places and take more risks than some of BOA’s other partners. There’s no better example of this than the current adidas Powerband BOA Boost, which is the only model in BOA’s golf catalog designed from the ground up exclusively with a BOA lacing system. With multiple BOA models already available for men, women and juniors, adidas seems poised to leverage the full capability of BOA’s platform. adidas also provides BOA with a bold partner willing to try just about anything in pursuit of a better golf shoe.

TOUGH TO MEASURE

Given the way the golf industry obsesses over tour usage and market share, it borders on amazing nobody is exactly sure how many pairs of BOA-enable shoes are used by touring pros and/or sold in retail outlets. Neither the Darrell Survey nor traditional methods of accounting (metrics basic on SKU numbers and units sold) can accurately measure the precise number of BOA models either sold or in play. This doesn’t apply to the Adidas Powerband as it doesn’t have a non-BOA counterpart.

Tour usage metrics account for brand and type of shoe, but not closure system. So, for the time being, BOA can only rely on aggregate numbers (e.g., total sales) and attempt to distill information from available data, however incomplete it may be.

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To provide some perspective, 75% of cyclists in the Tour de France use BOA closure system footwear. BOA is to professional cycling what Golf Pride is to the PGA Tour.

The loudest criticism comes from the “I’m not so lazy I won’t tie my own shoe” contingent. While I find the curmudgeonly luddites somewhat entertaining, my guess is those people don’t manually open the garage door, sew their clothes or cook dinner over an open fire. As such, it’s simply a thinly veiled justification to remain anti-technology, because for some reason it appeals to them.

 

SUMMARY

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Personally, I don’t see myself ever going back to a traditionally laced golf shoe. It’s akin to switch to HD television. Watching live sports was always enjoyable, but clearly (again, terrible pun) the newer technology is universally better. For me, what BOA offers is worth a few extra bucks, and I believe we’ll soon see more BOA exclusive models and without a lower-price “traditional” option, the additional cost becomes a non-issue.

Let’s be clear – BOA is neither a new company nor is the technology fundamentally different. The micro-adjustment feature available on the FootJoy Helix is a new twist and makes the system even more accurate.

This is about identity and clarity. BOA can’t achieve the lofty goal of product/category synonym without a well-articulated branding and marketing approach.

The intention is to alter how consumers respond to the brand and with that, create an understanding of exactly what BOA is and, frankly, why you’re better off buying golf shoes with its technology.  To fully get BOA, consumers should understand BOA is much more than a golf shoe technology. Anything which needs to be tightened, closed, opened, released, or held in place can likely be made better with BOA technology. That everything from shoes to medical devices.

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BOA is an established company with a strong track record and a solid reputation as the premium closure system in a variety of product categories, but for BOA that’s not enough. It wants to become the product which defines and entire category – to become the standard by which all closure systems are measured.

I’m not much of a gambler, but I certainly wouldn’t bet against it.

What are your thoughts? If you’re on BOArd, what shoe should be next? If not, tell us why.

For more information, visit the BOA website.



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Tuesday, August 29, 2017

5 Benefits of Cold Showers

Content originally published and Shared from http://perfectbath.com

Showering is an essential part of a healthy routine, but depending on the temperature, your time spent under the water can offer different benefits for your skin and some bodily functions too. Learn about the surprising health benefits of a taking a cold shower in this article.

Image Source: Flickr

Increase Alertness
Taking a cold shower in the morning, and feeling cold water pour down over our body seems more horrifying than soothing. However, the deep breathing in response to our body’s shock helps us keep warm, as it’s increases our overall oxygen intake. Thus, our heart rate will also increase, releasing a rush of blood through our entire body. This gives us a natural dose of energy for the day. Source: MedicalDaily

Stimulate Weight Loss
Another way cold showers will make you look better, is by promoting fat loss.

Most people don’t know this, but there are two types of fat in your body. Brown fat & white fat. White fat is bad. It’s the body fat that we all hate so much. Brown fat is good. It’s function is to generate heat and keep your body warm.

When you take a cold shower, brown fat is activated, resulting in an increase in energy and calories burned to keep your body warm. So much so that according to this study, cold temperatures can increase brown fat by 15X the normal amount, which can result in 9 pounds of weight loss per year. Source: Menprovement

Refine Hair and Skin
If you’d like to reduce the appearance of acne, cold showers could do the job. Hot water dries out your skin, while cold water tightens your cuticles and pores, preventing them from getting clogged. You can also use cold showers for shinier, more attractive hair that your partner can’t resist playing with. Cold water will close your cuticle, making it less likely dirt can accumulate in your scalp. Source: Lifehack

Build Strong Will Power
The next day was more of the same, but I noticed I had more apprehension this time around before hopping in the shower. This trend continued throughout the following mornings as well. If I knew how great it made me feel, then why didn’t I eagerly throw myself underneath the icy spray? The experience reminded me of a famous old saying, one that has been attributed to a bunch of authors: “I don’t enjoy writing. I enjoy having written.” I don’t like taking cold showers, I just like the way they make me feel after I’ve already dried off.

The week has been a success, and I’ve assured myself that I will keep taking cold showers in the mornings. However, it won’t be easy. I mean, have you taken a hot shower? It’s the best.  Source: Prevention

Strengthen Immunity
According to a study done in 1993 by the Thrombosis Research Institute in England, individuals who took daily cold showers saw an increase in the number of virus fighting white blood cells compared to individuals who took hot showers. Researchers believe that the increased metabolic rate, which results from the body’s attempt to warm itself up, activates the immune system and releases more white blood cells in response. Source: Artofmanliness

 

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Cute Apple Name Puzzle Works on Cutting Skills

Click here to read Cute Apple Name Puzzle Works on Cutting Skills on Hands On As We Grow


We turned a pumpkin into an apple name puzzle!

Ever since I shared our pumpkin crafts with How Wee Learn’s pumpkin name puzzle, I’ve been wanting to try it out too!

These name puzzles are perfect for cutting practice, but are also great for name recognition! And bonus! It’s a cute craft too for the season!

This is the same concept, it’s just a red apple instead of an orange pumpkin!

And guess what!? Sarah of How Wee Learn has done these name puzzles in a variety of shapes for the different seasons. Check out her post of name puzzles for all the seasons.

Since it’s back to school time, I’m thinking apples!

And also this year, I get to partner up with Fiskars again, which is always a favorite of mine. I absolutely love their scissors and won’t use anything but Fiskars.

I can never have enough Fiskars scissors on hand, seriously, I like to have one for myself in about every drawer around the house (one next to my stove, in the junk drawer, in my office, in the garage, and I still want them handier)! Not to mention the kids’ scissors. I recommend the Fiskars Pointed-Tip Scissors, they’ve always been a fave. The blunt tip is good too for younger kids.

Create an Apple Name Puzzle

I grabbed one of my Fiskars scissors and cut an apple shape out of red cardstock, and a green leaf.

After that, I wrote Louis’ name across the apple and then drew lines to separate each of the letters.

Louis was not in the mood to cut anything. He thought the straight lines would be much too hard for him. He was convinced he couldn’t do it before he even started.

We actually didn’t come back to finish the apple name puzzle until the next day because of this. I wasn’t going to push him to the point of it being a fight. But the main strength of this activity is working on cutting skills (along with name recognition).

Find 42 Apple Crafts for Kids to Make

Louis has a thing with patterns all the time, taking turns. You brush my teeth today, tomorrow I’ll do it, and so on. You set out my clothes today, tomorrow I’ll do it. It goes back and forth, and this is a true pattern he does, in many things (and he sticks to it)!

So, when we came back to the puzzle, I made the first cut. We made a pattern to get him started.

Louis then cut along the next line with his Fiskars Pointed Tip Scissors to separate the next letter. And then I took a turn, and he took a turn. Getting back into the swing of things with his scissor skills.

Finally, when we were done cutting it apart, it was a puzzle!

He mixed them up and put them back together again by gluing them in place, topping it off with the green leaf.

Here’s a quick video of the process and what we did to make this apple name puzzle.

After the first time, Louis wanted to do it again, and this time he took more control of the process.

Child-led Apple Name Puzzle

He drew the apple on the red paper first and I cut it out (to make it look like an actual apple……. because it really, really didn’t).

Then Louis wrote his name across the apple.

I drew small lines, also in red so you could barely see it on the apple, as to where to write each letter. I did this to guide him so his name wouldn’t be scrunched together.

And then Louis made his own puzzle! He just started drawing lines!

They were curving all over to separate each letter of his name.

I extended the lines he drew so that the pieces cut through the apple.

It ended up being a very intricate puzzle! Thank goodness for the letters of his name to help him put it back together again!

This time, Louis was all over cutting the apple apart.

Even with curvy lines.

He took his time and followed along. I was quite proud that he held his Fiskars scissors the right way too! He’s getting the hang of this cutting thing.

Then…. the challenging part.

It was time to put this crazy puzzle back together again!

Have you seen our floor puzzle with blocks? It’s so easy!

He started with the ‘L’ and ‘O’, he knew where they went.

Well, he knew where all the letter went, but to match it up in the right way proved hard to do, especially since he got snip happy on the ‘I’ and we were missing a good chunk of the apple.

Let’s just call it a worm hole.

After a rocky start to this name puzzle craft, I think this apple turned out pretty cute!

And we got some serious cutting practice in (that’s been needed since he’s starting 4 year old preschool this week) and plus it was a great refresher to spelling (and writing) his name.

Be sure to stock up on the right scissors for your child’s age:



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Golf, Data & The Analytical Mind of Sal Syed

Three years ago, Sal Syed was a 7 handicap. Not bad for a guy who had never taken a lesson.

Today Sal is a scratch golfer.

Usually one has to take a chainsaw to their game to lop seven strokes off their handicap – we’re talking swing change, lessons and lots and lots of practice.

While we can’t speak for the practice part, we can tell you Sal didn’t change his swing, and he still hasn’t taken a lesson. Instead, Sal analyzed his game with surgical accuracy and let the data tell him what to do.

Sal, you see, is CEO of Arccos, and his journey to scratch shows just how valuable advanced analytics can be.

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“My Putting Sucks!”

Sal is a pretty smart dude, with a BA's in Computer Science and Math from Ohio Wesleyan and an MBA from Yale.

“As we started Arccos, I was golfing a lot at Yale,” explains Sal. “We started tracking traditional stats – fairways hit, greens in regulation and number of putts.”

That set of stats told Sal a very ugly, but very incomplete, story.

“I was hitting 14 out of 18 greens in regulation, but I’d have like 40 putts. So I was like ‘Oh my God, my putting sucks!’ So I practiced and practiced, but nothing was improving.”

It wasn’t until Arccos added a modified strokes gained analytic that Sal learned the truth behind the old Ben Hogan axiom - if you want to sink more putts, hit the ball closer to the hole.

“Arccos showed me my approach handicap was high – I was hitting my approaches like a 12 handicap,” he says. “But my putting was like a scratch, so I was working hard to improve something that was already pretty good.”

“My approach game was leaving stuff short and missing to the right, so I started working on stuff before a round. I’d hit more approach shots while warming up than I ordinarily would, where I used to be taking more putts, because I thought putting was my problem.” – Sal Syed, Arccos CEO

That, in a nutshell, is the difference between raw data and advanced analytics. Raw data tells you the what - that you're a 7 handicap averaging 40 putts per round, but a deeper dive can often tell you the why.

“It’s really about smarter decision making, knowing what my strengths and weaknesses are, and playing to my strengths,” says Sal. “I’ve had three holes-in-one in the past three years, and the only reason is that I know for sure how far my irons go. On a Par 3, I’ll pace back two yards at the teebox if I have 137 to the flag, to optimize my odds of a hole-in-one because I know my 9-iron goes 139.”

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MoneyGolf

Advanced analytics isn’t just knowing the numbers; it’s about knowing why the numbers are what they are and how to use that information to improve performance. Michael Lewis, Billy Beane, and Brad Pitt made advanced analytics famous with Moneyball, and it’s been just over the past 3 or 4 years that we’re seeing that same level of golf analytics becoming available for the likes of you and me.

“If you think about it, golf gives you an Excel spreadsheet for a score card. No other sport does that,” says Sal. “It’s just numbers and a grid, and then you’re putting more numbers in. Golf is all math, and whoever makes the better mathematical decisions is going to have a huge advantage.”

Syed says golf is even more suited to advanced analytics than baseball.

“I was speaking on a panel at MIT’s Sports Analytic Conference, and we were discussing the applicability of advanced analytics in terms of helping improve performance and analyzing strengths and weaknesses. On a scale of 1-to-10, baseball is a 10, basketball is a 7 and every other sport is from 1 to 5. Golf is like an 11, because every event is isolated and discreet. It’s not like you’re reacting to a pitch – you can get even more granular, advanced and accurate than you can with baseball.” – Sal Syed

A Caddie In Your Pocket

Yeah, Jordan Spieth won the Open Championship this year, but don’t for one-second discount the role caddie Michael Greller played in keeping Spieth’s head right in that final round.

“100 years ago, C.B. MacDonald – one of the founders of the USGA – wrote that the caddie is an institution and a mentor well versed in the game and the course,” says Syed. “And if you go against what the caddie recommends, you’ll invariably make a bad shot.”

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Most sports tend to be fluid and dynamic, requiring subconscious, instinctual decisions by individual players. Golf is different in that you have to make a deliberate and conscious decision before every shot. Bad decisions – and bad results tend to snowball.

“That allows you to get into your own head,” says Sal. “You get frustrated, and you continue making bad decisions and, as a result, not perform to the best of your ability.”

Arccos Caddie was introduced this past May, with the goal of bringing a Michael Greller or a Steve Williams to your right front pocket.

“Only 3% of golfers actually have access to a real caddie. That means 97% don’t – that whole experience has gone missing,” says Sal. “The ability to step back and objectively think about the situation goes missing. We’re trying to bring back something that’s gone missing in the sport.”

Arccos Caddie 3

Arccos partnered up with Microsoft in what is undoubtedly the deepest, broadest and widest real world application of analytical data in golf. It not only takes into account your past performance and your history on a specific hole, but it also looks at your history on similar holes on other courses.

“Golf holes have only so many distinct varieties. So when the dogleg happens here, what’s your tendency? It knows what clubs you’re better with - you might be better with your 9-iron than your wedge. It knows your unique strengths and weaknesses and it knows people who are similar to you and how they’ve faired on this hole. It knows the trouble spots and it knows where scoring comes from.” – Sal Syed

Arccos Caddie also checks in with the local weather bureau and knows what the wind is doing, how you perform in the wind and the impact of the wind. It then recommends an optimal strategy for that hole. And it’s all USGA conforming.

Plays Like

In the software/app world, if you don’t have something new every few months you can quickly become yesterday’s news. With that in mind, Arccos Caddie this month is adding a new feature, called Plays Like Distance.

“On TV, you can hear the type of conversations caddies have with their players,” says Sal. “The caddie will pace off the flag and say ‘It’s 148, but it plays like 132 because it’s downhill and downwind.’”

Arccos Caddie 2

Plays Like Distance takes into account elevation, wind and other environmental variables and gives you, as the name would suggest, what a shot will actually play like. Your typical GPS app or watch, of course, doesn’t know uphill from downhill, it doesn’t know what the wind is doing or in which direction it's blowing, and it doesn’t know whether it rained yesterday and how it would affect roll or how soft a green might be playing. Plays Like Distance does all that in real-time.

“We’re pulling in weather from multiple data sources, and running algorithms based on historical facts that are pretty darned good. It’s pretty accurate – basically better than any human can do under similar circumstances.” – Sal Syed

While Arccos Caddie is USGA conforming, The Plays Like Distance feature – at this time – is not. Syed says the application is in the works.

Too Much Tech?

How much info is too much? When does all this data become overwhelming? And at what point is the amount of work needed to collect the data (i.e., tagging or other in-round fussing) simply become more hassle than it's worth?

“The key is to collect and present information in a simple way,” says Sal. “Here’s an additional data point, then it’s up to you. You’re the CEO of your golf game; you make the call.”

“We’re always talking with users, and we want to simplify the golf experience to make it more enjoyable. I think it’s more complicated now because you, as a golfer, are completely alone and don’t have the input of a caddie. I feel golf is more complicated without a caddie than it is with a caddie, or with Arcoss Caddie.” – Sal Syed

Syed says Arccos is very much focused on the traditional golfing culture, and everyone in the company plays at least once a week. The goal is to make the system as seamless as possible, and Syed admits there’s still a little bit of work to do.

“For example, when you have a penalty shot you have to go into the app and do an add,” he says. “When you pick up a putt, we’re going to give you those one-tap gimmes, so you want even have to tell the system. It will know when that happens.

"It’s important to us to make a system that’s not getting in your way all the time. But the information has to be the right information at the right time. That’s why Plays Like is key because it’s born out of observation and conversations with real golfers. ‘What do you think it plays like?’ You hear that conversation 20 or 30 times a round. If you don’t have a caddie, you’re having that conversation in your own head.”

And although short on specifics, Syed does admit Arccos knows some golfers don’t like the whole phone in the front pocket thing. “As you’ve heard it, we’ve heard it too,” he says. “For this year you’ll have to keep the phone in the pocket, but hopefully we’ll have some cool announcements in the future.”

If you’re in to shot analytics technology, there’s certainly no shortage of options out there for you. Whether it’s Arccos, Shot Scope, Game Golf, Sky Caddie or any one of the others, the technology is evolving quickly and the challenge, of course, is how to make collecting and using that data simpler than just filling in your scorecard/spread sheet with Fairways Hit, GIR’s, Up ‘n Downs and Putts.

“When you’re out golfing, you’re out golfing,” says Syed. “You should not be collecting data. That should happen by itself.”

Price and Availability

Arccos Caddie is a premium purchase within the Arccos 360 app, and it accesses a database of over 75 million shots and 368 million geotagged data points on more than 40,000 courses. You get a 5-round free trial and then get to choose from a tiered subscription program: either $7.99 per month, $39.99 for six months or $49.99 for 12 months (plus a 30-day free trial). The Arccos 360 unit itself sells for $249.99.

For more information about the entire suite of Arccos products, visit ArccosGolf.com.



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Monday, August 28, 2017

102: How to Stay Safe During Tick Season & Avoid Chronic Lyme Disease with Dr. Jay Davidson

How to Stay Safe During Tick Season and Avoid Chronic Lyme with Dr. Jay Davidson

Do you suffer from unexplained headaches, joint pain, fatigue, or other autoimmune symptoms and suspect chronic Lyme disease might be at the bottom of it? Dr. Jay Davidson might just be the expert you need! There’s no better time to get educated on this topic, as Lyme disease is actually more common than breast cancer...

Continue Reading...102: How to Stay Safe During Tick Season & Avoid Chronic Lyme Disease with Dr. Jay Davidson



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An Uneven Book Trail for Gross Motor Fun

Click here to read An Uneven Book Trail for Gross Motor Fun on Hands On As We Grow


This simple uneven book trail from Lisa is a great gross motor activity that you can create with your child.

I am always looking for simple activities that will keep my two boys interested. This uneven book trail activity has an extra added element of fun built into it — they get to see a giant domino effect!

All that you need for this activity is a big stack of books.

gross motor unevenbook trail gathering books
My boys love books. We have quite a collection at home so we decided to use them in a very different but fun way!
I sent my four-year-old on a challenge to gather hardcover books from around the house. You can use soft covered books but I found hardcover to be more stable for little feet.
gross motor even book trail collecting books
Once he had gathered fifteen to twenty books, I had him stand them upright on our floor close to each other.
This is where the domino effect comes in!
gross motor uneven book trail stacking books
He was so excited as he tipped the first one and anticipated the cause and effect of each book falling!
gross motor uneven book trail domino
Once all the books had fallen, I encouraged him to walk across the trail he made.
He loved the challenge of maintaining his balance on the uneven surface and ensuring he did not fall off!
gross motor uneven book trail
The first one or two times across the trail, he exercised caution with his walking. After a few times across, he gained speed and efficiency.
This challenge worked his core muscles while he maintained his balance and coordination!
Also try these physical activities for toddlers with lots of energy!
After a few trips across his book trail, he wanted to re stack the books upright and create more dominoes.
This time I encouraged him to create a curved line instead of a straight line.
gross motor uneven book challenge curved line
Each time the books fell, it created a different trail for him to challenge himself on.
gross motor uneven book challenge
 This simple activity kept him busy for close to an hour as he came up with new patterns for the trail.
As he kept building, he created stories of where he was going on each trail and who he was going to rescue.
I love seeing my child’s imagination come to life in activities!

What simple activities have you created using items from around your home?



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First Look: Cleveland TFi 2135 Satin Putters

“It’s the Cleveland motto – we’re not going to overcharge someone for something that’s not going to actually help them make more putts or score better” – Zach Oakley, Cleveland Golf

When it comes to selecting a putter – do you look for something pretty or do you just want to get the ball in the damn hole?

Is something handcrafted and personalized up your alley, or do you just want to get the ball in the damn hole?

Does something premium-priced and custom-fit to your exacting specs float your boat, or do you just want to get the ball in the damn hole?

There’s an entire school of thought that claims price be damned, you have to love the looks of a putter to be able to putt well with it (our own #Datacratic studies show otherwise). Another school of thought believes in a strokes-per-dollar value matrix and thinks a high-dollar putter doesn’t always equate to fewer putts per round – they just want to get the ball in the damn hole.

If you’re a party of the first part, you may find today’s article challenging. If you’re a party of the second part, well, read on my friends. This just might make your day, as Cleveland is introducing some new weapons to help you get the ball in the damn hole: the TFi 2135 Satin putter line.

Cleveland TFi Putters - 2-1223

Putter Numerology

If there’s a late-summer leader for Golf Brand of the Year, it may very well be Srixon/Cleveland. Srixon’s drivers, irons, and hybrids have been atop the leader boards in MyGolfSpy’s Most Wanted testing this year, and Cleveland’s putters were solid performers in both our blade and mallet testing, with Cleveland’s Huntington Beach line providing remarkable performance for a $100 putter.

The new TFi 2135 Satin line will replace the existing TFi line, and there are three very specific tech changes that you’ll want to pay attention to. The first requires a quick explanation of just what 2135 means.

Cleveland TFi Putters - 6-1234

Specifically, 2135 refers to two things: the radius of a golf ball and the exact height of the putter’s alignment line – 21.35 millimeters. Zach Oakley, Cleveland’s Product Manager for putters, says since both are the same, you’re more likely to line the putt up accurately.

“When you try it you’re surprised at how much difference such a little thing like that can make when lining up a putt,” says Oakley, who adds Cleveland’s testing shows over 80% of golfers don’t have their eyes directly over the ball when they putt.

“Most have their eyes inside the ball, which creates a sightline more towards to the toe. Some have their eyes outside the ball, which creates a sightline more towards the heel. By raising the alignment line, the perception of misalignment is gone, so no matter where you’re standing at address, you’re going to have the right perception and your going to have correct alignment” – Zach Oakley, Cleveland Golf

Appearance-wise, the new Satin line represents a complete overhaul of the TFi series. Previous models featured a black head with a copper-colored face. The new line is, as the name would suggest, satiny in both body and face, but with a high contrast black backdrop to better frame the white sightline.

Cleveland TFi 2135 Putters - contrast

“It actually pops and has a lot more contrast,” says Oakley. “That contrast provides a 50% improvement in alignment.”

The new line features two blades – in Cleveland-speak they are the Anser-style 1.0 and the thicker, deeper 8.0 – and 4 mallets: the fang-toothed Elvado, the rounded Cero, the unique-looking Rho (more on that one later) and the Elvado CB (counter-balanced). While the 2-year old 2135 alignment aid is certainly different looking in the new line, Cleveland says it’s taking a major step forward with what it's calling model-specific face milling.

A Face By Any Other Name…

Distance control through putter face technology certainly is the thing in 2017. Evnroll‘s patented parabolic grooves and PING’s True Roll technology try to normalize ball speed across the putter face, even if you hit it a little off center. Cleveland’s Optimized Face Milling does the same thing, but takes the concept even further with unique milling patterns for each specific model.

“Based on the MOI and CG properties of each putter head, distance loss with off center hits is going to change,” says Oakley. “If you hit a putt off the toe with a blade it’s going to lose a lot more distance than if you hit a putt off the toe with a mallet. There’s kind of a mismatch if you stick the same face on both.”

Cleveland TFi Putters - 10-1250

At issue is contact surface on different parts of the face – the idea is to have less surface area contacting the ball in the sweet spot, with more surface area towards the toe and heel. The result is similar to perimeter weighting in irons – you’ll lose less ball speed when you miss the sweet spot and, in theory, the putt should roll the same distance as an on-center strike.

The faces on the Cero, Rho, and Elvado (all high MOI mallets) feature more gradual milling patterns (the Rho-specific patter is shown above). In theory, a high MOI mallet has a larger sweet spot, so the areas just slightly to the heel and toe of center have only slightly more material to come in contact with the ball. The further away you get from center, there’s more material to come in contact with the ball.

Cleveland TFi Putters - 7-1236

The lower MOI blades are just the opposite, with a much smaller sweet spot. The milling is much more aggressive (the 1.0-specific milling is shown above), with more and deeper grooves concentrated at the sweet spot for much less surface area for contact there, and a rapid increase in surface area as you move away from the sweet spot.

“Normalizing ball speed is important because let’s be real, most of us aren’t hitting the center of the face every single time,” says Oakley. “If you can have just a little bit of help, so you don’t leave that putt two or three inches short, well, that’s a stroke saved.”

The Klingon Putter?

The 1.0 and 8.0 blades are carry-overs from the previous TFi 2135 line, as are the Cero and Elvado mallets – all of which are fairly conventional putter shapes (the mid-mallet 6.5 model is not included in this release).

The Rho, however, is a little different.

Cleveland TFi Putters - 4-1228

“Usually the design team likes to kind of push the envelop with some of their designs,” says Oakley, “and then marketing has to reel them back in. But we wanted to have one shape in the line that’s different and not really traditional.”

Well, the Rho is definitely both of those. At first glance, the Rho looks like something a Klingon would putt with, but Oakley says the design team was thinking more Star Wars than Star Trek with the Rho.

“We call it the Tie Fighter because it does have that space ship look. It’s different, that’s for sure – there’s nothing out there that looks like it.”

Cleveland TFi Putters - 11-1253

Performance Vs. Value

To say Cleveland putters are underrated is kind of like saying the Jets have quarterback issues. If you pay attention at all, you know both the Huntington Beach and TFi lines were top-5 in MyGolfSpy's 2017 Most Wanted testing, with off-the-charts value given their specific price points compared to the competition.

“We’re for the golfer who is maybe into the techie side of things, but doesn’t want to spend $400.00 on a putter that may or may not help him,” says Oakley. “Putters are becoming like jewelry. A lot of our competitors are putting a lot of fancy looking bling on their putters. What we’re doing is putting stuff in the putter that’s actually helping performance.”

Cleveland TFi Putters - 14-1263

MyGolfSpy will put the new TFi’s through extensive testing soon, but early results show the entire line, from blade to mallet, to be remarkably stable and easy to stroke. These are fairly heavy putters – the 1.0 head is 345 grams, the Elvado, Rho and Cero mallet heads are 370 grams. The 8.0 blade and the Elvado CV heads are an ax-like 405 grams, with counter-balanced 148-gram grips. Speed control throughout the line seems spot-on, but further testing will be needed to compare Cleveland’s Optimized Face Milling to the Evnroll and PING technologies.

Another item of note is the Cleveland line is very much an off-the-rack offering. “Putter fitting hasn’t really been a focus for us in recent times,” says Oakley. “Most of that has to do with our price point. But a custom-fitting program is something we’re talking about, especially as we see more success in the putter market. It’s time to be taking that a little more seriously.”

Cleveland TFi Putters - 16-1269

For the custom-fit aficionado, if you do know your specs you can custom order any Cleveland putter for length, loft, and lie, with several grip options.

Price and Availability

The new TFi 22135 Satin line will be available starting September 15th. The 1.0, Elvado, Rho and Cero will retail for $149.99. Cleveland’s custom-designed (and Lamkin-made) TFi 2135 midsized pistol grip is standard, but you can order each putter with Cleveland’s oversized grip for an additional $10.00.

The counter-balanced models - Elvado CB mallet and 8.0 blade – will retail for $179.99.

Cleveland TFi 2135 Putter specs

And bad news for lefties – only the 1.0 blade will be available in a left-handed model at this time.

For more information, visit ClevelandGolf.com.



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