Golf Tricks for newbie Golfers
| Putting: Keep your shoulders on line One of the most crucial fundamentals of consistent putting is making sure your shoulders start and stay on-line during the stroke. Here's a drill that will help you see if your shoulder alignment remains consisten |
Putting: Keep your shoulders on line
One of the most crucial fundamentals of consistent putting is making sure your shoulders start and stay on-line during the stroke. Here's a drill that will help you see if your shoulder alignment remains consistent: Set up in your normal putting stance, then place the putter across your shoulders, parallel to your intended target line. Your right arm should remain in its normal address position. As a further alignment check, set your right hand perpendicular to your line--just as you'd square the putterface to the target.
Practice your stroke with the right hand only while holding the shaft along the shoulders. The shaft should stay parallel to your target line as your shoulders rock up and down to move your right arm through the stroke.
The in-to-in swing
Here's an easy practice drill for longer, straighter tee shots: Place one tee off the heel of your driver at address and another off the toe--just beyond the teed-up ball--that's the "gate" your clubhead swings through. Next, place a third tee about six inches inside your target line, about a foot behind the ball; a fourth tee goes a foot closer to the target than the ball and about six inches inside the target line. That's your path coming into and extending beyond the impact gate. Trace the tees with your clubhead, and you'll groove the proper in-to-in swing path.
How to stop swaying on short shots
Excessive lateral movement with the lower body on short shots can cause the arc of the swing to bottom out before the ball, leading to fat or bladed shots.
Often, amateurs try to correct this problem by widening their stance. Though this change may give you a feeling of being in better balance, it won't necessarily keep you from swaying.
Instead, try narrowing your stance to no wider than your hips. A narrow stance will make it easier to feel the lower body rotate through the shot, as opposed to swaying from side to side. A stance that's more narrow will also give you a more defined center of gravity. This improves your balance and stability, plus it moves the bottom of your swing arc forward, resulting in a more descending angle for crisp, solid contact.
Article Directory: http://www.articlecube.com
Get a FREE 30 minute phone consultation directly with Mike Pedersen a pro golfer and owner of the whole Book: golfimpacttraining.blogspot.com
interrelated Articles
SKIING
»Guide to Snowboarding
Snowboarding is a winter sport which bares many comparisons to skateboarding, or surfing, although is performed on snow....
read more...
»USA - Copper Mountain
Copper Mountain was referred to as the best ski slope in "North America" by the US Forestry Service, for its amazing res...
read more...
»Tremblant In Canada
Tremblant is based in Canada and has over 90 runs servicing millions of skiers each year. With 13 state-of-the-art ski l...
read more...
HORSES
»Horse And Rider Insurance Basi
Horse and rider insurance can be purchased as a combination of insurance protection, or as separate insurance products. ...
read more...
»Advantages of horse back ridin
For many centuries horseback riding has been much popular for many reasons. Soon, horse riding became a chief mode of tr...
read more...
»How To Make Profit Out Of Losi
With the advent of betting exchanges getting recognition for a more modular system for horse betting, more and more peop...
