Our Story

Two golfers. Too many wrist injuries. One obsession that refused to quit.

Anthony and Luke had always practiced the same way every serious golfer does — relentlessly, and at the cost of their bodies. When injuries started threatening the thing they loved most, they stopped accepting the status quo and started building something better.

The result is a training platform designed from first principles: real feedback, real conditions, real improvement — without the punishment of conventional practice. No fillers. No shortcuts. Just the tools we wished we'd had from the start.

Built by golfers who needed it. Refined by everyone who's used it since.

— Anthony & Luke

 


Luke Lasso

Luke's golf journey didn't start with talent. It started with stubbornness.

When Luke began playing seriously, he was a 24 handicap — a number that would discourage most people from investing another hour on the range. But Luke isn't most people. He became consumed by the game, not just playing it but pulling it apart, studying it, obsessing over what makes a golf swing actually work.

The problem was his technique. Like most high-handicappers, Luke had developed a scoop — a desperate, wrist-driven flick through impact that robbed him of compression, consistency, and control. The ball would go somewhere, but rarely where it was supposed to. Distance was unpredictable. Ball-striking felt like guesswork.

Fixing it wasn't comfortable. Retraining a deeply ingrained movement pattern never is. But Luke committed to understanding the why behind every change — the mechanics, the physics, the cause and effect of what happens in the fraction of a second the club meets the ball. He studied. He drilled. He practiced with intention rather than just volume.

Gradually, the scoop disappeared. In its place: a descending strike, proper shaft lean, and true ball-first contact. The kind of impact that serious golfers spend years chasing.

The results followed. From 24 down to 2.5 in a few years — not through luck or raw athleticism, but through deliberate, intelligent practice and an honest understanding of his own swing.

Today, Luke's passion is swing mechanics. He can break down a movement flaw the way an engineer reads a blueprint — spotting the root cause rather than chasing the symptom. And his own swing? The kind of smooth, effortless-looking motion that only comes from someone who has spent years understanding exactly what should happen at every point in the sequence.

He built this platform because he lived the problem. Every feature reflects what actually moved the needle — for him, and for every golfer who's tired of spinning their wheels.

 

Anthony Sacris 

Coming soon