Virginia Golfer September / October 2014 | Page 10

Mondy’s MAKEOVER Reigning VSGA Amateur champion Jake Mondy has revamped his swing to achieve more repeatable results | by NICK CLINARD, with JAKE MONDY Photography by SCOTT K. BROWN B lacksburg’s Jake Mondy, a rising junior at Auburn University, won this summer’s Virginia State Golf Association Amateur Championship with a swing that might be best described as “under construction.” For much of Jake’s golf career, his father, Dave, was his only swing coach, before he passed away in 2010. Jake’s instincts were sound and his shear natural talent and physical frame allowed him to hit the ball prodigious distances. For much of his career, Jake had a weak grip and a clubface that was shut on the takeaway, with very little wrist hinge, and the clubface remained closed at the top of his swing. He’s such a talented player that when he timed his arms and body up, he’d hit the ball 300-plus yards with his longer clubs. It was an old-school, Julius Boros-type of handsy swing that served him very well. He won back-to-back VSGA Junior Stroke Play titles (2010 and 2011) with the motion, and captured the VSGA Amateur in 2012 with a swing that was slightly better mechanically, though not too dissimilar from the one he grew up with as a kid. Basically, Jake was eliminating one side of the golf course because most of his shots curved from right to left. For much of his career, he’d had a difficult time hitting a fade if the shot required that kind of ball flight. “I always used to play a draw growing 8 up and if anyone ever watched me play junior golf, I never hit fades unless I absolutely had to because it just wasn’t a shot I trusted a whole lot,” Mondy says. Truth be told, he could’ve retained that very same ‘grip it and rip it’ swing and remained a very good player because he never knew anything else. But he’s taken ownership of the improvement process in an effort to reach a new level with his game. Jake has made alterations that initially felt a bit unnatural to him but are technically correct. On the takeaway, for example, the club has more of a ‘swing away’ feel to it and, as a result, the clubface is more square, rather than shut, at the top of his swing. On the descent, Jake tended to have the club and his right elbow stuck way behind his body. We’re working on feeling as though the club is more in front of him and releasing to the left through impact. Ultimately, this will enable the club to exit on a lower and more correct plane. His new swing takes out wasted, compensatory movements and he’s able to hit the ball straight more consistently. In addition to improved mechanics, Jake has terrific competitive instincts. We know it wasn’t easy to win the VSGA Amateur in late June, especially against a tough opponent like Jordan Utley. He prevailed thanks to an uncommon desire to win and a swing that we believe is better than it’s ever been in his golf career. VIRGINIA GOLFER | SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 w w w. v s g a . o r g