Bolingbrook, Ill. – Liv Golf Chugs on, this week stopping at Chicagoland for her 12th season. Similar to last year, there is already an overwhelming favorite for the crown of the season, thanks to Joaquin Niemann five Wins at 11 begins.
Earn so much and you’ll get a press conference or two, but Niemann doesn’t exactly want to go deep into its shape or what he has to do specifically every week. However, he gave a fantastic answer to a very simple question:
Why do you love golf?
Niemann was a little amazed. “Why do you love it? I mean, it’s just everything,” he said.
Golf will say almost everything in his life, of course, but for Niemann it seems that what he enjoys most are the positive results that follow a long line of special inputs. They can be genuine results in a score card, or more theoretical features developed over time.
“Whenever I’m playing badly, I feel like I understand something that makes me enjoy it in a way because I know when I’m not at the maximum or I have a difficult week, I know there is something there to learn,” Niemann said on Wednesday. “And I feel like you just build a character from you, playing this game. I feel like giving you a lot of values that will help you in whatever situation you have taken before your life.
The victory of Liv Uk and Joaquin Niemann brought Bold Jon Rahm taken, the same question
Seduce
“In this game, you will feel uncomfortable maybe 90 percent of the time, and trust yourself and have that commitment to know that what you are doing is right, and commit to it in a situation that is really uncomfortable – I feel like you really talk about yourself.
Comforter comforting knowing that another winner 5 times this year needs improvement in the Department of Self-Love. Most players do.
“Yes, too, when you are playing your best game and your best golf, it’s also a lot of fun,” he continued. “You are able to hit the shooting you are seeing. I really like to play with trajectories and be able to see it in my head first and then go there and give the goal. Whenever the same blow I hit before, I don’t think there is anything more satisfying than that feeling.”
There is nothing more relevant to the sport than that – increasing a blow, imagining the way to a target and then pulling it. Fesi with whom everything works means that you are more jubilant when you actually do. Even for a world beater like Niemann.
I had to ask Livi’s potential individual champion if you feel it like us. He certainly has different standards and expectations than the rest of us, but does that white ball often follow the path he wants?
“Not too often,” he said with a smile. “I think that’s why it’s really enjoyable. Of course you can get choices, and I feel like the goal. I feel like I can get there on the course and say I will hit a draw in green. You will hit a draw and hit it in green. That’s the goal I am trying to do.
Niemann seemed to transport himself while describing his favorite feelings on the course; He sat himself in front and center in the room, transmitting the lights that illuminated the background, but felt like it was on the road. He looked away in the distance, moved into his chair, raised his right hand, and began to take imaginary objectives with imaginary trajectory.
“Yes, I want to see it starting in that tree or the cloud I see there getting up in the air – the window I see – going down where I want to see it down, and judge the wind that it will affect the same amount of curve I see in my head.
“There are so many factors, and then lower it to the same place I love it. I feel like you will never hit that stroke, but almost trying to follow that stroke.”
The endless tracking, filled by some moments, flown to catch what you are behind. Golf at his best.
Sean zak
Golfit.com editor
Sean Zak is an old writer and author of Looking at St. Andrews, which followed his trips to Scotland during the most important summer in the history of the game.

