The C3 Method analyzes golf performance through three fundamental elements (the 3 C’s) that directly influence ball flight and scoring.
This framework provides a simplified but comprehensive approach to golf improvement.
1. CONTACT – That crucial instant when your club strikes the ball
Want to pure your irons? Flushing shots is all about nailing two things at impact:
- Face Contact: The location of impact on the clubface
- Center strikes maximize energy transfer
- Off-center strikes reduce distance and accuracy
- Critical for consistent distance control
- Ground Contact (for shots from turf)
- Ball-first contact
- Proper divot after impact
- Essential for clean, compressed shots
Performance Impact:
- Primary influence on distance control
- Major factor in consistency
- Affects both distance and accuracy
2. CONTROL – What the club head is doing at the moment of truth
Want to hit more fairways and greens? Accuracy and ball flight is all about your club’s movement through impact:
- Face Direction: Where the clubface is pointing at impact
- Primary determiner of initial ball direction
- Most influential factor in shot shape
- Critical for accuracy
- Swing Path: The direction the club is traveling through impact
- Influences shot shape (draws/fades)
- Affects ball flight curvature
- Key for intentional shot shaping
Performance Impact:
- Primary influence on accuracy
- Determines shot shape
- Essential for course management
3. CLUBHEAD SPEED – How fast the club head is moving at impact
Want to add more yards to your drives? Speed is the secret sauce of distance and scoring:
- Pure Clubhead Speed: How fast the club is moving at impact
- Primary determiner of potential distance
- Affects spin rates
- Influences shot options available to player
- Speed Control: Managing speed for different shots
- Partial shots
- Distance control
- Shot variety
Performance Impact:
- Primary influence on distance
- Affects strategy options
- Important for scoring ability
Application Framework
Every golf shot can be analyzed and improved through the 3 C’s. When applying the C3 Method, consider:
- Which of the 3 C’s is most relevant?
- How do proposed changes affect each of the 3 C’s?
- What is the primary C goal for a particular improvement effort?
Core Principles
- Skill over mechanics – All technique changes only matter if they improve the 3 C’s
- Impact is everything – the only thing that matters is what happens when club meets ball
- Different swings can work if they create good conditions in the 3 C’s
- Improvement should be measured through results in the 3 C’s
- Practice should target specific elements of the 3 C’s
Target Outcomes
Contact
- Consistently centered face contact
- Clean ground interaction
- Predictable distance control
Control
- Predictable ball flight
- Intentional shot shapes
- Improved accuracy
Clubhead Speed
- Optimized speed for skill level
- Consistent speed delivery
- Appropriate speed for situation
This framework provides a foundation for analyzing, teaching, and improving golf performance through the lens of what actually matters at impact.