Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
3/14/17 - Adams Event #1 Wrap Up
Hello future me and interested readers. Here's what happened at The National Golf Club of Louisiana in Westlake, LA for Adams Event #1 3/6/17-3/11/17.
Drove from Dallas to Westlake on Monday before event for practice round. Made notes on pre-made yardage book (primarily green contours and where various clubs/shots traveled). Ate dinner with Neal Ajubita at Luna Grille in downtown Lake Charles where I learned there is apparently a crab moratorium in LA due to overfishing. Regardless of the lack of crab, I achieved a burger and fries much to Neal's chagrin (he called me a northerner). After dinner we briefly visited with our host who was a friend of a friend. Our host showed us to our domecile which was quite choice with a full kitchen, beds, and lakefront access including fishing gear and fishing lights (attract fish at night). I caught a 14" speckled trout with a spoon and Neal caught a similarly sized Redfish on the same lure.
Tuesday was rainy so we worked out in the AM and got a 9 hole practice round in the afternoon. We got lunch at a restaurant where I was laughed at by the server for asking for a side salad. Afterward we went to the grocery store to acquire pb&j essentials and other salty treats. Upon returning to the lake house, we packed lunches for the week and watched the rain.
Wednesday, I arrived at the course 1 hour before my 8:40 tee time in order to prepare myself for the day. It was cold and windy. It took longer than I thought to get all my stuff together for the day (mark your golf balls with a sharpie, gather appropriate layering clothing from the hang bar in the RAV4, assemble your push cart, heed nature's call) so I need to prepare for these things going forward. After slashing some balls on the range and rolling some putts I walked over and met my playing partners Eric and Mike. I hit the ball nicely for the majority of the first round, sticking to the game plan and the yardage book. I hit a couple of big misses out to the right early into our back nine which caused some unfortunate scores. Overall the ballstriking was solid, short game was medium, and mental game was medium on the way to a 76. I tried to show off with driver on one hole which was illogical and lead to a double bogey which was the most glaring mental mistake.
Thursday, I hit it on the green on all par 5's in 2 shots, playing them in -5. I made a total of 5 birdies and 1 eagle en route to a 73. This means that I had a feast or famine round where I was either doing cool stuff or bad stuff. I need to learn how to turn the bad stuff into medium stuff then I'll be rocking. I shot +5 for the event and missed the cut by 9 shots. I was on the wrong end of the tee time draw (playing early day 1/ late day 2), but the guy who ended up winning was in the same wave. I did however hear an unsubstantiated claim that 90% of those making the cut played late/early. Who knows, I don't like excuses. I made a couple of overly aggressive decisions in moments of turmoil, did not take advantage of some situations, and showed hubris in another. These are moments I will remember and avoid in the future.
My ballstriking as a whole was solid thinking about the racketball move and clearly visualizing the target moments before pulling the trigger, in some instances even muttering the intended target to myself before the shot. The rule of 12 produced some great chip shots including a chip in, and overall pitching/putting left something to be desired. Putting with the right hand only was surprisingly accurate and I think I'll pursue it on left to right putts to make sure the toe beats the heel of the putter to the ball to avoid missing these putts low.
After the event, I drove to New Orleans to stay at Neal's apartment until this week's event. I plan to apply the lessons learned from last week to this week's event. Looking forward to it.
Drove from Dallas to Westlake on Monday before event for practice round. Made notes on pre-made yardage book (primarily green contours and where various clubs/shots traveled). Ate dinner with Neal Ajubita at Luna Grille in downtown Lake Charles where I learned there is apparently a crab moratorium in LA due to overfishing. Regardless of the lack of crab, I achieved a burger and fries much to Neal's chagrin (he called me a northerner). After dinner we briefly visited with our host who was a friend of a friend. Our host showed us to our domecile which was quite choice with a full kitchen, beds, and lakefront access including fishing gear and fishing lights (attract fish at night). I caught a 14" speckled trout with a spoon and Neal caught a similarly sized Redfish on the same lure.
Tuesday was rainy so we worked out in the AM and got a 9 hole practice round in the afternoon. We got lunch at a restaurant where I was laughed at by the server for asking for a side salad. Afterward we went to the grocery store to acquire pb&j essentials and other salty treats. Upon returning to the lake house, we packed lunches for the week and watched the rain.
Wednesday, I arrived at the course 1 hour before my 8:40 tee time in order to prepare myself for the day. It was cold and windy. It took longer than I thought to get all my stuff together for the day (mark your golf balls with a sharpie, gather appropriate layering clothing from the hang bar in the RAV4, assemble your push cart, heed nature's call) so I need to prepare for these things going forward. After slashing some balls on the range and rolling some putts I walked over and met my playing partners Eric and Mike. I hit the ball nicely for the majority of the first round, sticking to the game plan and the yardage book. I hit a couple of big misses out to the right early into our back nine which caused some unfortunate scores. Overall the ballstriking was solid, short game was medium, and mental game was medium on the way to a 76. I tried to show off with driver on one hole which was illogical and lead to a double bogey which was the most glaring mental mistake.
Thursday, I hit it on the green on all par 5's in 2 shots, playing them in -5. I made a total of 5 birdies and 1 eagle en route to a 73. This means that I had a feast or famine round where I was either doing cool stuff or bad stuff. I need to learn how to turn the bad stuff into medium stuff then I'll be rocking. I shot +5 for the event and missed the cut by 9 shots. I was on the wrong end of the tee time draw (playing early day 1/ late day 2), but the guy who ended up winning was in the same wave. I did however hear an unsubstantiated claim that 90% of those making the cut played late/early. Who knows, I don't like excuses. I made a couple of overly aggressive decisions in moments of turmoil, did not take advantage of some situations, and showed hubris in another. These are moments I will remember and avoid in the future.
My ballstriking as a whole was solid thinking about the racketball move and clearly visualizing the target moments before pulling the trigger, in some instances even muttering the intended target to myself before the shot. The rule of 12 produced some great chip shots including a chip in, and overall pitching/putting left something to be desired. Putting with the right hand only was surprisingly accurate and I think I'll pursue it on left to right putts to make sure the toe beats the heel of the putter to the ball to avoid missing these putts low.
After the event, I drove to New Orleans to stay at Neal's apartment until this week's event. I plan to apply the lessons learned from last week to this week's event. Looking forward to it.
Sunday, March 5, 2017
3/5/17 On the road again
Hello! I'm sitting here on the back patio of Trophy Club CC watching a deluge, so I thought I'd record some recent memories and observations from my trip to Florida as well as my preparations for the Adams Tour season beginning tomorrow in Westlake, LA.
FLORIDA
I spent a significant chunk of last month staying with friends and family while competing in Florida. I played the PGA Winter Series Stroke Play Event in Port St. Lucie, and some cash games/ 2 Moonlight Tour Events in Orlando. Cathy and Jack O'Neill, (my sister in law's grandmother's cousin- how awesome is that!) graciously hosted me in Port St. Lucie for the 4 day stroke play event with 36 hole cut. I played a stress free first round bogeying 2 of my last 3 holes to shoot -3 69. I was committed to my targets all day long and putted well after randomly deciding to set everything up on the toe of the club (seems to counteract my natural slash motion across the ball when under pressure). The second round started smoothly until the evil little man in my head decided to remind me of the 36 hole cut. Approaching the 9th tee still 3 under par for the tournament, I crushed my 3 wood on the straight away 430 yard downwind 9th hole. The ball traveled nearly 300 yards and I was left with one foot on the cart path bisecting the split fairways. The ball was sitting up nicely and I probably could have hit the ball, but I decided to take free relief from the path to avoid injury. The nearest point of relief was behind the path in a sliver of rough on a severe downslope. I dropped the ball in a divot and proceeded to skull the shot into a pond right of the green and made double bogey. My flaw here was that I felt entitled to a better position in the fairway after a great drive and I allowed my frustration to manifested itself in a poor thought process which proved a costly error. I should have taken more time to see if I could have hit the ball as it lied without hurting myself or taken more time to understand what to do to give myself the best odds out of the divot on the downslope. Hooray learning experiences!
The wheels continued to wobble as I made the turn to the back nine. Hole 10 is a straight away 390 yard par four with a lateral hazard down the left side of the fairway and trees/bunkers on the right side. The fairway is relatively wide but narrows significantly about 300 yards off the tee. Still reeling from making double bogey from 130 yards on 9, I decided to play ultra conservatively on 10 to make sure I didn't get any more bad breaks by hitting the ball too far. This conservatism while well intentioned resulted in a tentative swing and a borderline shank 3 hybrid. I couldn't believe this was happening again. I was cruising along playing so well and had now allowed one bad break on 9 to carry over to 10. My disaster of a drive left me in the fairway bunker on 18 roughly 180 yards from the pin. With a perfect 6 iron I theoretically could have covered a grove of tall palm trees with brush underneath in line with the pin but any slight mishit could have been a lost or unplayable ball. I was furious and decided to chip out sideways back to the proper fairway. I was so mad I randomly chose a 52 degree wedge without much commitment to a target for the routine chip out and I bladed the ball directly toward the hazard on the left side of the fairway. The ball miraculously hit the 1 inch lip of the cart path bordering the hazard which rebounded the ball back in the fairway. I laughed, shrugged, and tried to re commit to my targets for the rest of the round. I limped in with a 78 but ended up making the cut by several shots. It was amazing the change of mentality between the free wheeling first round and the hold on for dear life second round. Looking back I learned a lot about staying in the moment and not getting emotional about bad breaks. After making the cut, I returned to a relaxed style of play and finished the remainder of the event 1 under par. This was my first 72 hole event and I am very thankful for the experience.
I crashed with a high school friend in Orlando for a week or so following the Port St. Lucie event. Orlando is like Mecca for mini tour players. Many aspiring professionals hone their skills on one of Florida's developmental mini tours. Between The moonlight tour, west florida golf tour, swing thought tour, florida professional golf tour, and a few others, you can basically play a competitive event every day. Florida golf is considered to be some of the most difficult anywhere in the world because the wind often blows pretty hard, the courses have lots of water hazards, you get a lot of mud balls in the fairway, many of the chip shots around the greens are from wet surfaces into severe grain, and the ball doesn't travel as far due to the humidity. Coming off a relative success in Port St. Lucie, I decided to tee it up in a couple Moonlight tour events. The field and I shot a million in the first event as the wind blew a constant 35 with gusts to 45. The winning scores was 75 in a field of 30 legitimate plus handicaps where the winning score on a calm day would have been 65. I played with a great guy from Korea with a beautiful golf swing but after 9 holes in the hurricane winds, he said to me in broken English and a wry smile that he would like to end the game. I would have ended the game too but I'm cheap and wanted to at least see the back nine. It was brutal and would have been unplayable if the greens were any faster. I'm not sure what I learned from the event other than a bit more patience could have gone a long way.
The weather for the second event was a bit more reasonable and I was able to cash a check with a score of -2 70. I learned the value of a good green reader thanks to the help of "Tee Time" a buddy of a buddy with one of those cool young kid short on the sides long on top comb over style Justin Beiber haircuts. Tee Time calmly pointed to a spot where I needed to roll the ball, and I made way more putts than I usually would on a new-to-me course. You never know who you will be paired with in these Florida mini tour events, as big names like Kevin Na, Sean O'Hair, and Ty Tryon will routinely play on off weeks to keep their game sharp. In the second event, I was paired with Emanuele Sesia, an Italian who played on the Palmer Cup and caddied for Matteo Mannasero at the Masters. He had a powerful high draw motion and a super rad wool sweater that I imagined was from a 19th century Italian loom although it could have been from TJ Max. He was a cool guy with a great golf swing and I remember thinking that he sounded a lot cooler cussing his ball in Italian than I do in English. He also said, "AHHHHHH BAGGIE!!!" when he made a "bogey" which made me chuckle.
BACK TO TEXAS
For the past couple weeks I've been doing all I can do to get ready for the Adams Tour Season. The Adams Tour is a 14 event regional mini tour played in Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Missouri. Playing well on the Adams Tour doesn't qualify you for bigger and better things, but if you are cashing checks, you are playing some good golf and getting ready for the next level. If you can win on the Adams Tour, you can win on PGA Tour Canada or PGA Tour Latinamerica which is the next rung up on the way to the big dog tour. The Adams tour events are scheduled with Web.com and PGA Tour qualifiers in mind so players can kill two birds with one stone while in a region of the country. For instance, I will be attempting to qualify for the Web.com event in Alexandria, LA following the Adams Tour event there earlier that week. And by attempting to qualify I mean making it rain birdies. My first goal for 2017 is to make a cut on the Adams Tour which requires 2 solid rounds. Depending on the difficulty of the course and playing conditions, the 36 hole cut is usually anywhere from even par to 6 under par. Here's the full Adams Tour schedule in case you want to check it out and send me and my boy Neal Ajubita some positive mojo.
https://agpts.bluegolf.com/bluegolf/agpt17/schedule/index.htm
Golf swing wise, I've been working hard to find a comfortable swing thought to allow me to make a repeatable, technically sound swing which eliminates the left side of the course. After searching for a while and listening to some advice from some great friends and fellow PGA pros, I finally melted everything together into what feels like a figure 8 motion to me. Lee Trevino's golf swing is my favorite and after watching lots of youtube on him, I was inspired to try a figure 8 style motion which feels like a side-armed baseball pitcher or what you'd need to do with your right hand to go down and smash a low tennis or racketball. Initial signs are good as the positions in the swing are improving dramatically with a motion that feels very natural, repeatable, fluid, and powerful. I finally understand how to consistently shallow out the shaft on the downswing which is critical when playing in the wind. Additionally, this figure 8 motion keeps me "on top of the plane" which helps to eliminate the left side of the course. I've been doing yoga daily which seems to have helped strengthen and loosen my hips, core, and hamstrings which helps maintain your posture during the swing. Yoga revolution with adriene on youtube is my jam, namus day. Additionally, I've found that hitting balls while listening to Chopin or Ed Sheeran helps me stay loose, almost like I'm dancing on the range, it's fun. When I am hitting the ball my best on the range, I am visualizing my hands tracing a figure 8 in space in front of my body and also thinking about returning a tennis forehand as an overall inspiration for the move.
I happened upon some more great Trevino videos on youtube which have helped my putting and short game tremendously. Lee described never "manufacturing a shot" when pitching or chipping. To him, this meant that you dictate the path of your swing with your feet. Whatever line your feet are on, you need to follow with your path thru the hit. In pitching and standard bunker play, he describes keeping whatever loft you start out with at address for the duration of the swing. This is a little different to what I've been doing prior as I tried to add loft during the backswing by rolling the forearms. To achieve the feel of keeping the loft you start with until impact, you really need to feel like you are picking the club straight out and away with a very open stance. After taking the club straight out and away with very little if any wrist hinge, you simply hold the angle with no release of the hands as you aggressively swing left on line with your feet. This thought process has completely opened up a new "hold" or "chop shot" which is amazing around the greens on pitches and mid to long range bunker shots. The ball comes consistently low with tons of spin without much effort. I'm now hitting bunker shots with this method with lob wedge all the way thru 9 iron for long 30-40 yard bunker shots.
Putting wise Trevino provided some insight I haven't heard in the modern teaching manuals. For left to right putts he basically is trying to get you to pull the ball by putting the ball position further forward than usual in your stance with a significant forward press. Forward pressing the putter allows you to feel the toe of the putter to beat the heel to the ball which will keep the ball left on those left to right putts most righties leave low under pressure. For right to left putts, he wants you to push the ball by setting the ball position back and keeping a firm left hand so there is no cupping of the wrists. It's old school but I dig it.
LOUISIANA TOMORROW
Time for bed, I'm headed to Westlake, LA first thing tomorrow for the first Adams Tour event of the season. I'm going to bring some old podcast equipment along to possibly document the journey. Hope everyone is doing well.
Love, Clay.
FLORIDA
I spent a significant chunk of last month staying with friends and family while competing in Florida. I played the PGA Winter Series Stroke Play Event in Port St. Lucie, and some cash games/ 2 Moonlight Tour Events in Orlando. Cathy and Jack O'Neill, (my sister in law's grandmother's cousin- how awesome is that!) graciously hosted me in Port St. Lucie for the 4 day stroke play event with 36 hole cut. I played a stress free first round bogeying 2 of my last 3 holes to shoot -3 69. I was committed to my targets all day long and putted well after randomly deciding to set everything up on the toe of the club (seems to counteract my natural slash motion across the ball when under pressure). The second round started smoothly until the evil little man in my head decided to remind me of the 36 hole cut. Approaching the 9th tee still 3 under par for the tournament, I crushed my 3 wood on the straight away 430 yard downwind 9th hole. The ball traveled nearly 300 yards and I was left with one foot on the cart path bisecting the split fairways. The ball was sitting up nicely and I probably could have hit the ball, but I decided to take free relief from the path to avoid injury. The nearest point of relief was behind the path in a sliver of rough on a severe downslope. I dropped the ball in a divot and proceeded to skull the shot into a pond right of the green and made double bogey. My flaw here was that I felt entitled to a better position in the fairway after a great drive and I allowed my frustration to manifested itself in a poor thought process which proved a costly error. I should have taken more time to see if I could have hit the ball as it lied without hurting myself or taken more time to understand what to do to give myself the best odds out of the divot on the downslope. Hooray learning experiences!
The wheels continued to wobble as I made the turn to the back nine. Hole 10 is a straight away 390 yard par four with a lateral hazard down the left side of the fairway and trees/bunkers on the right side. The fairway is relatively wide but narrows significantly about 300 yards off the tee. Still reeling from making double bogey from 130 yards on 9, I decided to play ultra conservatively on 10 to make sure I didn't get any more bad breaks by hitting the ball too far. This conservatism while well intentioned resulted in a tentative swing and a borderline shank 3 hybrid. I couldn't believe this was happening again. I was cruising along playing so well and had now allowed one bad break on 9 to carry over to 10. My disaster of a drive left me in the fairway bunker on 18 roughly 180 yards from the pin. With a perfect 6 iron I theoretically could have covered a grove of tall palm trees with brush underneath in line with the pin but any slight mishit could have been a lost or unplayable ball. I was furious and decided to chip out sideways back to the proper fairway. I was so mad I randomly chose a 52 degree wedge without much commitment to a target for the routine chip out and I bladed the ball directly toward the hazard on the left side of the fairway. The ball miraculously hit the 1 inch lip of the cart path bordering the hazard which rebounded the ball back in the fairway. I laughed, shrugged, and tried to re commit to my targets for the rest of the round. I limped in with a 78 but ended up making the cut by several shots. It was amazing the change of mentality between the free wheeling first round and the hold on for dear life second round. Looking back I learned a lot about staying in the moment and not getting emotional about bad breaks. After making the cut, I returned to a relaxed style of play and finished the remainder of the event 1 under par. This was my first 72 hole event and I am very thankful for the experience.
I crashed with a high school friend in Orlando for a week or so following the Port St. Lucie event. Orlando is like Mecca for mini tour players. Many aspiring professionals hone their skills on one of Florida's developmental mini tours. Between The moonlight tour, west florida golf tour, swing thought tour, florida professional golf tour, and a few others, you can basically play a competitive event every day. Florida golf is considered to be some of the most difficult anywhere in the world because the wind often blows pretty hard, the courses have lots of water hazards, you get a lot of mud balls in the fairway, many of the chip shots around the greens are from wet surfaces into severe grain, and the ball doesn't travel as far due to the humidity. Coming off a relative success in Port St. Lucie, I decided to tee it up in a couple Moonlight tour events. The field and I shot a million in the first event as the wind blew a constant 35 with gusts to 45. The winning scores was 75 in a field of 30 legitimate plus handicaps where the winning score on a calm day would have been 65. I played with a great guy from Korea with a beautiful golf swing but after 9 holes in the hurricane winds, he said to me in broken English and a wry smile that he would like to end the game. I would have ended the game too but I'm cheap and wanted to at least see the back nine. It was brutal and would have been unplayable if the greens were any faster. I'm not sure what I learned from the event other than a bit more patience could have gone a long way.
The weather for the second event was a bit more reasonable and I was able to cash a check with a score of -2 70. I learned the value of a good green reader thanks to the help of "Tee Time" a buddy of a buddy with one of those cool young kid short on the sides long on top comb over style Justin Beiber haircuts. Tee Time calmly pointed to a spot where I needed to roll the ball, and I made way more putts than I usually would on a new-to-me course. You never know who you will be paired with in these Florida mini tour events, as big names like Kevin Na, Sean O'Hair, and Ty Tryon will routinely play on off weeks to keep their game sharp. In the second event, I was paired with Emanuele Sesia, an Italian who played on the Palmer Cup and caddied for Matteo Mannasero at the Masters. He had a powerful high draw motion and a super rad wool sweater that I imagined was from a 19th century Italian loom although it could have been from TJ Max. He was a cool guy with a great golf swing and I remember thinking that he sounded a lot cooler cussing his ball in Italian than I do in English. He also said, "AHHHHHH BAGGIE!!!" when he made a "bogey" which made me chuckle.
BACK TO TEXAS
For the past couple weeks I've been doing all I can do to get ready for the Adams Tour Season. The Adams Tour is a 14 event regional mini tour played in Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Kansas, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Missouri. Playing well on the Adams Tour doesn't qualify you for bigger and better things, but if you are cashing checks, you are playing some good golf and getting ready for the next level. If you can win on the Adams Tour, you can win on PGA Tour Canada or PGA Tour Latinamerica which is the next rung up on the way to the big dog tour. The Adams tour events are scheduled with Web.com and PGA Tour qualifiers in mind so players can kill two birds with one stone while in a region of the country. For instance, I will be attempting to qualify for the Web.com event in Alexandria, LA following the Adams Tour event there earlier that week. And by attempting to qualify I mean making it rain birdies. My first goal for 2017 is to make a cut on the Adams Tour which requires 2 solid rounds. Depending on the difficulty of the course and playing conditions, the 36 hole cut is usually anywhere from even par to 6 under par. Here's the full Adams Tour schedule in case you want to check it out and send me and my boy Neal Ajubita some positive mojo.
https://agpts.bluegolf.com/bluegolf/agpt17/schedule/index.htm
Golf swing wise, I've been working hard to find a comfortable swing thought to allow me to make a repeatable, technically sound swing which eliminates the left side of the course. After searching for a while and listening to some advice from some great friends and fellow PGA pros, I finally melted everything together into what feels like a figure 8 motion to me. Lee Trevino's golf swing is my favorite and after watching lots of youtube on him, I was inspired to try a figure 8 style motion which feels like a side-armed baseball pitcher or what you'd need to do with your right hand to go down and smash a low tennis or racketball. Initial signs are good as the positions in the swing are improving dramatically with a motion that feels very natural, repeatable, fluid, and powerful. I finally understand how to consistently shallow out the shaft on the downswing which is critical when playing in the wind. Additionally, this figure 8 motion keeps me "on top of the plane" which helps to eliminate the left side of the course. I've been doing yoga daily which seems to have helped strengthen and loosen my hips, core, and hamstrings which helps maintain your posture during the swing. Yoga revolution with adriene on youtube is my jam, namus day. Additionally, I've found that hitting balls while listening to Chopin or Ed Sheeran helps me stay loose, almost like I'm dancing on the range, it's fun. When I am hitting the ball my best on the range, I am visualizing my hands tracing a figure 8 in space in front of my body and also thinking about returning a tennis forehand as an overall inspiration for the move.
I happened upon some more great Trevino videos on youtube which have helped my putting and short game tremendously. Lee described never "manufacturing a shot" when pitching or chipping. To him, this meant that you dictate the path of your swing with your feet. Whatever line your feet are on, you need to follow with your path thru the hit. In pitching and standard bunker play, he describes keeping whatever loft you start out with at address for the duration of the swing. This is a little different to what I've been doing prior as I tried to add loft during the backswing by rolling the forearms. To achieve the feel of keeping the loft you start with until impact, you really need to feel like you are picking the club straight out and away with a very open stance. After taking the club straight out and away with very little if any wrist hinge, you simply hold the angle with no release of the hands as you aggressively swing left on line with your feet. This thought process has completely opened up a new "hold" or "chop shot" which is amazing around the greens on pitches and mid to long range bunker shots. The ball comes consistently low with tons of spin without much effort. I'm now hitting bunker shots with this method with lob wedge all the way thru 9 iron for long 30-40 yard bunker shots.
Putting wise Trevino provided some insight I haven't heard in the modern teaching manuals. For left to right putts he basically is trying to get you to pull the ball by putting the ball position further forward than usual in your stance with a significant forward press. Forward pressing the putter allows you to feel the toe of the putter to beat the heel to the ball which will keep the ball left on those left to right putts most righties leave low under pressure. For right to left putts, he wants you to push the ball by setting the ball position back and keeping a firm left hand so there is no cupping of the wrists. It's old school but I dig it.
LOUISIANA TOMORROW
Time for bed, I'm headed to Westlake, LA first thing tomorrow for the first Adams Tour event of the season. I'm going to bring some old podcast equipment along to possibly document the journey. Hope everyone is doing well.
Love, Clay.
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