The Man Ernie Els Claims Is “The
Best Player-Coach
On The
Champions Tour” Finally Breaks
His Code Of Silence Saying:
“If You’re Over 50,
Steal This
LPGA DISTANCE
SECRET
To Immediately Hit
250+ Yard Drives“
In 3 minutes or less, the “Speed
Quadrant Sequence”
adds
20-40 laser-accurate yards to
your drives…
No matter what
your size, strength, or age
In This Video, You’ll Discover:
- What the “speed quadrant” is (and why you haven’t heard of it YET)
- The 1 thing Brian Mogg discovered while working with the longest drivers
on the LPGA Tour (and how this one breakthrough is the secret for golfers
over 50 to add 40 yards off the tee) - The real reason you’re suffering from inconsistent ball striking and short
drives (Brian is longer now, playing on the Champions Tour, than he was on
the PGA Tour in his 30s) - Brian Mogg’s speed quadrant sequence that naturally increases your swing
speed in the one area of the swing where almost all power is either gained
(or lost) — and the fastest way to fix the root cause of your distance issues.
About Brian Mogg

You may see Brian Mogg in Champions
Tour events around the country…
Or you may have heard how he coached
Y.E. Yang to his historic victory over Tiger
in the 2009 PGA Championship.
But what you may not know is that —
despite Brian’s academies producing
more tour winners than any other —
Brian is most proud of his work with over
50,000 amateur golfers, giving them the
confidence and secret to gaining
distance as they get older.
Because with this one breakthrough, he
realized that older golfers don’t have to settle with shorter drives with each passing year…
Instead, they can follow the exact sequence that many LPGA Tour players are using to hit the ball 250+ yards off the tee…
… without having height, strength, or weight on their side.
That’s why today, Brian is sharing his discovery with you that allows any amateur to increase their distance by maximizing swing speed in what he calls the “speed quadrant”.
And it doesn’t require a young man’s strength, a big rotational swing, or even banging thousands of balls on the range.
In fact, it only takes 3 minutes each week and you can start seeing longer, more accurate drives the very next time you play a round.