Excellence in Golf
Executive Summary
Based on my medical knowledge and training as a physician, I have developed a theory that virtually all modern golf clubs have design flaws that interfere with how the brain and body function together to make the golf swing.
Standard scientific data models indicate that there is a 90% probability that the theory is correct.
If the theory is correct, I know how to build better golf clubs than anyone has ever been able to build.
Prototype testing will conclusively prove whether the theory is correct or not. Like EIB, EIG is a relentless pursuit of the truth.
I have already proved that steel shafts (1925) and the sand wedge (1932) were the last two significant golf club inventions that can be proved to have actually lowered golfers' scores.
If the theory is correct, clubs built using EIG's designs will be capable of lowering the score of every golfer, including Tiger Woods or a forty handicapper.
If the theory is wrong, my designs are completely worthless. If correct, the value of the designs is essentially priceless.
There are valid reasons for my choice to initially seek "Brand Name" protection, rather than patents to acquire a sustainable competitive advantage.
While the background and the theory behind Excellence in Golf are surprisingly simple and easy to understand, it will take more than a fifteen second sound byte. Excellence in Golf is not a company or a business. It is simply my name for the theory and the ramifications that spin out of its existence assuming it is proven to be correct.
There are four distinct perspectives with regard to Excellence in Golf: the scientific, the effect on golf, the economic, and by far the most potentially far reaching, the political perspective. Excellence in Golf is not a leap of faith. It is a series of logical steps, which become the foundation for taking the next logical step in the progression.
Rush, you are not being asked to buy Excellence in Golf. It is being offered to you as a gift.