According to American professional golfer and occasional TV golf analyst Paul Azinger, he believes that Tiger Woods is "over engineered" with his swing but he also has a fix for the professional golfer and take note; it will only take 10 minutes.
Azinger spoke with GolfChannel.com and said "It doesn't mean he doesn't have to work on it, but the fix should be able to be explained in minutes. And then you work on it. You dig it out of the ground yourself."
Not to brag of Azinger's background in golf but he spent almost 300 weeks in the top-10 of the Official World Golf Ranking between 1988 and 1994. Azinger was a bit surprised over Woods decision to part ways with his coach Sean Foley while still visibly injured.
Azinger said "But it doesn't mean it's not the right thing to do. It's pretty obvious the success he was having on the range with Sean wasn't transferring to the course. Tiger detractors think it's Sean Foley, and Tiger lovers say it's Tiger's back."
So what is Azingers professional opinion on the matter?
He said "Foley is a great coach, and he's had a lot of success, but the combination of he and Tiger together just wasn't great. Saying that, Tiger won five times last year. I think he won in spite of. Tiger finished last in fairways hit and won at Bay Hill."
Azinger thinks that Woods does need to change his swings saying "Tiger doesn't need to revamp or rework anything but his head and his thought process. Really, in the end, great players don't miss it left. They figure out how not to hook it. They figure out how not to miss it left. When you know you can miss it left, you miss it to the right. That's simple."
He added "Tiger's got a two-way miss. He's got to have somebody stand there and show him quickly, either physically, by putting his hands on him, or by talking him into not hitting it left anymore. I don't think you physically have to put your hands on him. You just talk to him about the mental aspect of not hitting it left."
He said that Woods has never been on his own and thinks that he does not trust himself that much.