Mar 2, 2026
What’s This?
Audens Golf Performance has launched its Jacksonville studio, offering high-performance management programs designed to address the thin performance margins that define modern competitive golf.
During the 2025 PGA Tour season, the difference between a top-five player and the golfer ranked 100th in adjusted scoring average was just 0.4475 of a stroke per round. For elite and aspiring players alike, that margin can determine tournament outcomes, career progression and long-term success.
According to a release, Audens’ performance model is engineered to help players win that margin. Its model brings Tour-level systems into a structured, data-driven environment built to develop the complete athlete — integrating biomechanics, strength and conditioning, coaching, rehabilitation, recovery, and on-course execution into one coordinated strategy.
“Professional golf has evolved into a performance management model,” said Nic Catterall, founder of Audens Golf Performance, in the release. “It’s no longer about isolating one swing flaw or one physical limitation. Sustainable performance requires coordinated oversight across biomechanics, physical preparation, recovery systems, and execution under pressure. Our role is to manage that equation with measurable precision.”
Catterall works with a number of touring professionals, including Cam Smith and Marc Leishman from LIV Golf and Adam Scott and Karl Vilips from the PGA Tour. Audens is bringing this level of performance management to competitive golfers at every stage of their development.
Core technologies include:
Bringing its professional-level training directly to the broader golf community Audens will provide guided studio tours, on-site functional movement clinics at local clubs and immersive, coach-led performance workshops throughout the Jacksonville area.
The program is designed for competitive juniors, collegiate players, elite amateurs, professionals and dedicated golfers who want a more structured, data-informed approach to long-term development. “High performance rarely happens in isolation,” Catterall said. “Mastery happens when technical coaching, physical preparation, medical insight, and performance strategy are aligned under one system.”