Take an alignment stick and place it on the club shaft extending it longer than the grip end. Set up to the ball with the stick touching your lead side. Make your backswing. Now make the shaft pivot behind and touch your trailside, which will work the club out into the correct arc to run into the ball. This is a feeling that offsets the change of direction and gets the club in the correct arc, rather than dragging the handle forward and having to catch the club up.
When setting up to the ball, first make sure that you are balanced. You are bending from your hips, but your toes are quiet. You need to make sure your arms have room to swing back. Set up with your lead arm on top of your left breast and your trail arm is on the side of your trail breast or on ...
In golf, for most shots, you want the back of the ball to hit the center of the face. Place a dot on the clubface, four grooves up from the lowest groove and in the center of the face. Put a dot on the back of the ball. The game is to connect the dots. This visual is critical to the task your bra...
The trail arm works the same in most shots. It lines up with the shaft of the club you are hitting at impact. Start with your putter. Set up with just your trail arm. Your wrist is parallel to the clubface. Hit putts just using your trail arm. Your forearm should line up with the shaft. It pushes...
22 Comments