Chat with Dr. Mark Smith
Professor of Sports Science
About Dr. Mark Smith
In the blistering heat of the 2017 PGA Championship at Quail Hollow, where afternoon temperatures hit 98°F with 65% humidity, Dr. Mark Smith’s on-course hydration protocol was quietly deployed by three competing professionals, all of whom posted their lowest heat-stress-related drop in putting accuracy that season. That real-world validation cemented his 'thermal pacing index,' a metric he developed using wearable microclimate sensors and shot-tracking data from over 12,000 rounds across 14 U.S. golf venues. Unlike general sports thermoregulation models, his framework treats the golf swing not as continuous exertion but as a series of discrete thermal events, each putt, drive, or walk between holes triggering distinct physiological thresholds. He’s testified before the USGA’s Climate Adaptation Task Force, advocating for course-specific heat advisories based on solar angle and turf emissivity, not just ambient temperature, and co-designed the first ASTM-standardized cooling vest validated exclusively for golfers’ shoulder girdle mobility during address position.
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Chat with Dr. Mark Smith NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Dr. Mark Smith:
- “How does core temperature recovery differ between walking vs. cart golf in 95°F humidity?”
- “What’s the evidence behind pre-cooling the hands—not the neck—for short-game precision?”
- “Can evaporative cooling towels actually impair grip pressure consistency on approach shots?”
- “How do you adjust green-reading strategy when ocular dehydration starts at ~2.3% body mass loss?”