News Update :

Swing hard for better drives

Penulis : Unknown on Tuesday, December 3, 2013 | 3:58 PM

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

By Les Miller
Contributor
Watch the longest hitters on the PGA Tour and what do you see? Players like Tiger Woods, Bubba Watson, Vijay Singh and J.D. Holmes all hit their driver as hard as they can. Why? Because today's big headed drivers have sweet spots larger than the golf ball itself, so you can swing for the fences and still hit it solid.
To hit your driver as far as possible, swing longer and faster, letting yourself release the golf club through impact. Worry about control issues later.
Tee it high and play it forward
Today's drivers are 45 inches long, so the optimum ball position is forward (off your left toe, for right-handed golfers). Tee the golf ball high so you'll catch it on the upswing for a longer carry and roll - the best of both worlds.
Trajectory: high launch, low spin
Through a combination of finding the right driver and hitting the ball more on the upswing, you will begin to launch the ball much higher. This will improve the final one-third of your ball flight, creating longer drives, with no loss of accuracy. When you hit your driver on the range, watch how the ball behaves toward the end of its flight. If you notice it's falling abruptly from its peak, test a driver that launches it higher with less spin.
Tip: Find a good lie on the tee
Most tee boxes are imperfect: They slope in one direction or another, have divots, etc. Tee up in a place where your feet are even and level, even if this means teeing up right next to one of the markers or moving back a club-length or two.
Another tip is to make sure you tee up on the same side of the tee box as where the trouble is. So, if there is water or out-of-bounds on the left, tee up on the left side of the box. If there is trouble on the right, tee off on the right. This will allow you to hit away from the trouble instead of hitting at the trouble.
Test-drive some drivers
The great thing about golf today is most golf courses have "demo" drivers you can test. Also, most golf equipment companies have "demo days" where they have sales reps who furnish "demo" clubs for consumers to test. Whenever you can, take advantage of these opportunities. I know from experience that testing will help you find the perfect driver, the one that magically produces more yards.
Tip: Know your driving days
When you go to the range before a round, you're never sure what your shot shape will be: could be a slice, draw or a straight shot. Every day is slightly different. If you want to avoid "bad driving days," where you hit the ball all over the place, pay closer attention to what you showed on the range.
On the course, plan and execute your tee shots based on your tendencies that day. Your misses will be more manageable, and you'll avoid a lot of stress. You'll at least be able to get the ball around the golf course.
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Don't overlook proper club position at address

By Les Miller
Contributor
Proper placement of the golf club during the address position is an area that is overlooked by most golfers. This position can determine why you hit some clubs better than the others or why you slice long clubs and hit the short ones straight.
In the set-up position, knowledge of where the golf club should be positioned with the use of each club is very rarely discussed, but the fact is the club hits the ball; therefore, proper club placement is equally as important as learning how to set up to the ball.
Begin with the lie angle of the club. If the lie angle is too flat, golfers have a tendency to catch the heel upon impact, turning the blade over, causing hooks or shots to the left. If the lie angle is too upright, the toe of the clubhead will catch the turf upon impact causing the clubface to open creating shots to the right or a slice.
When purchasing clubs or taking lessons, "always" have a professional properly fit your clubs. Always place the club properly on the ground first, and then step into your stance. This way, your body will adjust properly to each club in the bag.
Next, find the proper place to set the clubhead behind the ball. If you tend to hit shots on the toe of the clubface, try addressing the ball in the heel area of the clubhead. Players who hit shots on the toe usually are pulling the club in toward their body upon impact.
Next time you see Senior PGA Tour player Fuzzy Zoeller on TV, watch how he has the ball placed next to the hosel at address position. He sets up like this because he straightens up slightly during his swing, which pulls the clubhead in during impact. Instead of trying to "fix" his swing, he simply addresses the ball in by the hosel. This goes to show that there are many ways to hit better golf shots.
Finally, if you have trouble making a full shoulder turn on your backswing try, placing the clubhead two to three inches back behind the ball at address. This will set your shoulders back to a closed position and allow you to make a full shoulder turn. When PGA Tour player Fred Couples feels he is not making a full shoulder turn on his backswing, he uses this tip.
Try these tips, and see your ball striking improve.
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What it takes to be the best golfer you can be

By Chuck Evans
Special Contributor
If players want to be the best they can be, they should mimic what the best golfers in the world do. This means they have very specific routines they go through when they practice, pre-tournament practice rounds and post-tournament practice.
But none of these things matter if you don't first work on your pre-swing adjustments and setup. This means you learn to set up and look as good as any PGA Tour player at address. This includes grip, posture, ball position and alignments.
When you're practicing, work on the things you're having trouble with. If your putting and chipping are good but you're driving is off, then work on driving.
Always have a plan when you're practicing. Practice with a purpose. It is of no value at all to stand on a range and just beat golf balls! There is also no value in practicing if you don't have a plan and you're not focused. You are just wasting time.
The best players in the world have very specific routines that they do on a daily basis. Again, if you're practicing and not playing golf, then you are working on mechanics. If you're warming up to play golf, then the focus is on target acquisition.
If a particular golf course favors lots of high approach shots to the green, then those are the kinds of shots you need to be working on. Players need to be able to hit the specific shot the hole calls for.
One thing you want to do with each and every round and each and every practice session is that you want to walk off the golf course knowing you've done the best you can. You didn't let down, you stayed focused no matter what the outcome was.
How many times have we heard the world's No. 1 player in an interview after his round say that he just didn't have it today, but he was proud of the way he hung in there and just kept fighting?
Never quit, never give up, and always hold your head up high. Whether you shoot 80 or 60, if you know that you have done your absolute best then you can be proud of whatever happens, and you'll never think to yourself, "I wish I would have tried harder, or I wish I had not given up during a round."
The one thing we see over and over again, at AJGA events and other junior golf events, is that the majority of the players have very mediocre short games. They all strike the ball about the same, but it is the player with the best mental attitude, course management and short game that brings home the trophy.
Part of the pre-shot is to make practice swings to program what you are trying to do for the shot at hand. These rehearsals are designed for a specific purpose, and that is to get the feel or sensation, what it is you're trying to do on that shot.
So, if you're just rehearsing something or just doing something that really has no purpose, then you're not rehearsing properly in your pre-shot. Another part of this reversal is to not only get the feel of what you want to do with the golf club but to visualize and see the flight of the golf ball and get a clear picture of what you are trying to do.
Every player is going to hit bad shots, accept it and move on. The very best players in the world will tell you that they only hit four or five shots a round exactly the way they wanted, their misses are just closer than everybody else's. The other thing that great players do exceptionally well is to play one shot at a time.
Your next shot is the most important in golf
The most important shot of the day is the shot you're getting ready to hit right now. You can't go back and replay the hole that you made bogey on, and you can't transport yourself magically into the future to birdie the last hole, but what you can do is take control of the shot you're getting ready to hit and put all your focus and energy into that shot.
When you are practicing, work on the weak parts of your game and ingrain your strengths. Get a picture of what you want to do. See yourself making perfect strokes, whether it be putting, chipping, pitching or even full swing. As a player, you have to capture that "Kodak" moment, as we call it.
This means seeing a picture in your mind of yourself doing precisely whatever it is you're trying to do. Once you can see that picture, your body can duplicate it. But if that picture is fuzzy, then there is no signal to send from the brain to the body.
The next big key is to realize that you don't always have to stand out on the range pounding golf balls. You can visualize and think about your swing, do mirror drills, flashlight drills, racquet drills and many more inside without hitting golf balls. You can build a great golf stroke, and a great golf game, by doing lots of mirror work.
Great players are always working on different shots, whether it is high, low, fades, draws or whatever. There are going to be times when you need to play a specific shot, and you need to have already worked on that shot so that you can pull it off.
Are there players that just play one particular shot? Certainly, BUT how they play the golf course is limited by their ability to not shape shots.
When you are loosening up before a round, start with the heaviest clubs in your bag, which are your wedges. Hit a few short shots with those, and then move up to a different club like an eight iron and hit a few with it, then move up to a 4 iron and hit a few shots. Then go to your hybrid or fairway woods and finally the driver. Then work your way back down again to wedges. The last club you should use is the club you hit on the first tee.
Your pre-tournament practice round is designed to map your strategy out for the golf course: what club to hit off the tee, what angle to hit the fairway to give you the best angle into the green and the different pin placements on the green.
You pretty much know where the pins will be; they are always in the toughest spots. So, divide the green into quadrants, and hit putts to each of those quadrants to the toughest hole location for that quadrant. Make notes of where the ball starts to break, how far from the hole and the amount of the break. On slow greens, be an aggressive putter. On fast greens, be a defensive putter.
Do these things, and you will become a better player. If you work hard on your short game, you will drop 5-7 shots per round even if your ball striking does not improve.
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Be a stepper: The three responsibilities of a golfer's set-up footwork

By Kellie Stenzel, PGA
Special Contributor
After you set your golf club behind your golf ball and your hands onto the grip of the club, you should be a stepper. Your feet have three responsibilities and in order to accomplish each of these it can and should take as many steps to do so:
1. Ball position
2. Proper distance from your golf ball and club
3. Alignment
Ball position
When stepping your feet, it is important that you accomplish proper ball position for the club and the situation at hand.
If you are hitting an iron, hybrid or fairway wood, with your golf ball on the ground in a relatively flat lie, you should step your feet equidistantly apart as you widen them so that the club is centered in your body at the completion of your stepping.
The ball position should be more in line with the forward instep, the left step should be smaller and the right, widening step should be wider.
The proper foot work will accomplish the right ball position, making proper contact possible.
Proper distance from your golf ball and club
When stepping your feet, you must also adjust your distance from your club and ball so that you are in the proper posture (bowing forward from your hips) and adjusting your feet to the point where you feel your hands hanging directly below your shoulders.
With each club, you should consistently be the same distance from the end of the grip of the club to your body. This is the measuring point, rather than to the ball, which should change as the length of each club changes.
Alignment
When stepping your feet, after you've properly aimed your clubface to the target, you need to stand so that the line through your toes is parallel to the target line, thus left of the target. This line through your toes should be "parallel left." This line is parallel to the target line but left of the target, much like railroad tracks.
As you can see, your feet have many responsibilities during your set up routine. Therefore, I like to see a minimum of four steps to adjust and prefer six to eight steps. The first couple of steps may be larger to get you in the rough vicinity of the right distance, and the remaining make the smaller adjustments necessary to be particular about ball position, proper distance from the golf club and proper alignment.
You will also tend to see better players taking more steps. Besides accomplishing each of these responsibilities, it can also serve to relax the body and help with rhythm.
So, mimic the good golfers and become a stepper.
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Drive like Lorena Ochoa with a proper set-up

By Karen Palacios-Jansen
Special to WorldGolf.com
Although not the longest driver on the LPGA Tour, at 5 feet 5 inches tall and 125 pounds, Lorena Ochoa can belt it out with the best of them. Lorena's 270.6 yard average driving distance ranks third on the LPGA Tour.
So how does an average size woman hit it so far? With a lot of practice and a rock solid set-up that promotes power. If you are looking to increase distance off the tee try this power set-up.
The Correct Angle of Attack at Impact
Angle of attack is the way the clubhead approaches the ball at impact.
To hit the ball correctly in the sweet spot you must understand how the clubhead should approach the ball.
When you hit a driver, the angle of attack is shallow. The clubhead should arrive to the ball at the same level.
This sweeping motion assures that you will hit the ball in the sweet spot.
Set-up Correctly for Power and Distance
In order to achieve the correct angle, you must set-up "behind the ball at address." To do this, play the ball off the inside of the left foot and tilt slightly into your right side so that the head starts behind the driver. You want to have the ball in line with your left ear. This position will help you turn and sweep the ball off the tee at impact.
The most common fault I see with high handicappers is that they have the wrong angle of attack with their drivers. This happens when they set up incorrectly with too much weight on the left side, causing the head to be on top of the ball or even in front of the ball at address.
A reverse pivot follows this set up and causes too steep of an angle of attack. When the clubhead approaches too steeply or from the outside, you will end up hitting the ball on the toe or on the top of the clubhead.
Try This Drill
Practice setting up behind the ball with the driver. Place a club behind your back and make sure that your right shoulder is lower than the left. This angle should set your head behind the ball at address. Practice making a level turn, at the top of your backswing and make sure your left shoulder is over your right knee. If your left shoulder is still over your left knee, then you have a reverse pivot.
Practice your driving set-up in the mirror. Check your alignment and make sure that you are set-up behind the ball at address. Your set-up should promote a sweeping motion.
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Get more power on your golf swing

By Karen Palacios-Jansen
Special to WorldGolf.com
You've heard that a golf-specific workout will help you get more distance, so you're pumping iron, jogging religiously, stretching - but you still haven't gained any distance off the tee. What's the deal?
Well, I will be the first to tell you that a golf-specific exercise program will help you gain distance, but you also need to have good swing technique to take advantage of your strength and flexibility.
If you are losing power in your golf swing, it may not be because you are not strong enough; there may be a flaw in your swing. You may need to examine your golf swing more carefully and figure out where the power leaks are occurring. I have assembled a list of seven factors that may be causing power loss, with tips on how to get more distance.
Seven reasons you're losing power
1. You may not be making solid contact with the sweet spot, or center of the clubface. For every quarter-inch you hit the ball outside of the sweet spot, you lose 12 yards of distance. If you hit the ball off the toe of the clubface, which is three-quarters of an inch outside the sweet spot, you'll lose 36 yards of distance.
Concentrate on hitting the ball on the sweet spot. Buy special clubface tape available at the pro shop that will mark your strike point when you make contact with the ball. Work until you can make solid contact with the ball right in the middle of the sweet spot.
2. You may be coming over the top on the downswing. Specifically, your arms are swung away from your body on the downswing, resulting in an "out to in" clubface path. This produces very weak shots. To fix this problem, concentrate on your right elbow (or left elbow if you are left-handed) on the downswing. Try this drill: Swing to the top of your swing and pump your arms down half way, so that your right elbow points away from your body. This will make your arms come closer to your side and make the clubhead stay behind your hands so that you can hit the inside of the ball for solid contact.
3. You may be turning your shoulder incorrectly on the downswing. If you throw your right shoulder (left shoulder if you are left-handed) toward the target as you start your downswing, the result is an over the top motion with the club. To fix this problem, concentrate on making your right shoulder rock down instead of out on the start of the downswing. This will help the arms stay closer to the body and initiate an "in to out" swing instead of over the top.
4. You may be hitting the outside of the ball at impact, imparting left to right spin. To correct this, you need to hit the inside of the ball at impact instead. To help you achieve this position, have the butt end of the club pointing inside the ball-target line as you swing your arms down. This will help you hit the inside of the ball.
5. You may be initiating your downswing with your upper body instead of your lower body from the top of the swing. This will cause your arms to swing away from your body, creating a power loss. To correct this, you must initiate the downswing with your lower body first and let the upper body follow to the finish. Concentrate on leading your downswing with your legs instead of your upper body.
6. You may be making contact with the ball at the wrong point. If your clubhead makes contact with the ground before the ball, you will lose power and hit the ball fat or thin. To make correct contact, play the ball farther back in your stance. This will help you achieve a downward blow and give you more power. Usually the ball is placed in the middle of the stance for a mid iron, but to improve contact at impact, move the ball back of center. This will help you make better contact. As you gain confidence, you can move the ball back to the center of your stance.
7. You may be pushing the ball down the fairway with your arms instead of swinging the clubhead. If your left or lead arm looks like a chicken wing on the follow-through, the club is cutting across the ball, resulting in a power loss.
To adjust, you'll need to release your forearms. Try the split grip drill to get the proper feeling. Without a ball, slide your right hand down until your index finger is on the shaft. This will make your right arm longer on the club. Take practice swings and you will feel how the right arm folds over the left one on the follow-through. Practice this until it becomes automatic and then practice hitting shots with your regular grip.
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'Swing Essentials' start with grip

By Karen Palacios-Jansen
Special to WorldGolf.com
This is the first part in golf instructor Karen Palacios-Jansen's "Swing Essentials" series on building a fundamental golf swing. Here, Palacios-Jansen focuses on finding the right golf grip for your game.
My teaching philosophy is to instill the importance of the basic fundamentals, or "swing essentials" as I call them, to my students.
Once people have mastered the "essentials" of a good full swing and are confident with their ball striking, I like to work on other parts of the game: Teaching the short game, specialty shots, mental toughness and good course management. These all help people lower their scores and increase their level of enjoyment on the golf course.
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PGA instructor Kellie Stenzel helps a reader overcome fear on chip shots

By Kellie Stenzel, PGA
Special Contributor
Most PGA Tour players and professional golf instructors will tell you your short game can be the difference between saving and losing strokes. A great short game requires mastering several specific shots for a variety of situations: The wedge approach, the bump-and-run, the release or spin, the bunker shot and the simple chip. That last one is vexing WorldGolf.com reader Patsy Fournier, who wrote to me recently.
Dear Kellie,
I need help with chip shots. I liked your idea of the visual tip about the bunker shot. I am hoping you can provide something similar that I can visualize when I have to chip. I tend to freeze when the shot calls for a chip.
Thanks,
Patsy Fournier
Dear Patsy,
You are not alone in feeling like you "freeze" when you need to chip. Here are the two things I would check.
1. Your set up posture
Be sure that, at address, you are in the proper posture where you are far enough away from the ball with your feet that you can bow forward from your hips. If you are properly bowing forward from your hips at address you should feel that your chest is over your toes. This will allow your arms to have a postion to hang straight up and down. You may also check to see that your arms do not touch your torso or your legs if you are bowing forward properly.
2. Keep your lead arm moving forward
Your putting motion and your chipping motion are virtually the same from a slighly different set up. Remember when you chip you should be gripping low, stance narrow and your weight should favor your forward foot. When you putt you do not use your wrists, but rather move the triangle formed by your arms and shoulders as a unit. Make this exact same motion when you chip.
Be sure that your lead arm (the arm closer to the target) also continues to move forward toward the target. Your left arm should finish left of your left leg. You can check this by holding your finish. This is a good habit and you can see whether or not you have allowed you lead arm to move forward.
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Six ways to hit better 'long' clubs

By Karen Palacios-Jansen
Special to WorldGolf.com
For women and probably for the majority of high-handicappers, the long clubs are the most difficult clubs to hit. A lot of people lack confidence with the driver and fairway clubs. They are more difficult to hit because they have less loft. They slice more often than not. Here's some tips on how to hit them.
1. Learn the difference between hitting an iron and wood. When you hit an iron, you want to have a steep angle of decent to get the ball up in the air. When you use a driver, the ball is teed up, so you want to sweep the ball off the tee, not hit down. If you hit down, the ball will pop up in the air. Ball position is critical. Play the ball opposite your front foot which will encourage a sweeping blow. Since you play the ball more forward in your stance your back shoulder and hip will be lower at address. This tilt is critical for you to sweep the ball.
2. To be a good driver, you need to have clubhead speed. You need at least 80 miles per hour of clubhead speed to hit a 15-degree lofted club or less. To help speed up your clubhead speed, you need to have light grip pressure. Tight grip pressure kills speed. Hold the club above the ground and feel the weight of the clubhead. If the clubhead feels light, you are holding it too tightly. Adjust your grip pressure until you can feel the weight of the clubhead.
3. To hit a driver and your fairway woods, it is important to shift your weight on the downswing. This move will help create clubhead speed and attack the ball at the correct angle. If you have a reverse pivot at the top of the swing, you will never be able to shift your weight on the downswing. A reverse pivot will cause your weight to hang back at the moment of impact. This robs you of power. At the top of your swing, the majority of your weight should be on the inside of your back leg. This position braces you to push off on the downswing. If your weight stays on the front leg at the top of the swing, then you have a reverse pivot.
4. If you slice your driver, consider using a 3-metal off the tee instead. The 3-metal has more loft and it is easier to control than a driver. You will get more distance from a straight ball with a 3-metal than a sliced driver.
5. If you top your driver or fairway clubs, you may be losing your spine angle at the top of your swing. To correct this, work on your body motion and keep the same level throughout your swing. Avoid bobbing up and down. Do not lift the club up in the air with your arms; try to keep the clubhead low to the ground at least until it has passed your right foot (if you are right-handed) so that at the top of your swing you have made a full turn with your shoulders and your weight is predominantly on your back leg. When you make a turn you will stay at the same level, so that you will not top the ball.
6. Good drivers of the ball never take a divot with a driver. If you are striking the ball correctly, you will be sweeping the ball off a tee. Never hit down with a driver and take a divot. Hover the clubhead above the ground before you hit your drive, which will help alleviate tension and encourage more of a sweeping blow. Take practice swings brushing the ground with the driver, but never taking any turf.
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Fight your way through a golf slump

By Chuck Evans
Special Contributor
As many of you know, this year Steve Stricker managed to rise from the land of, "What ever happened to...?"
Back in the early 90's Stricker was on top of his game and was one of the players that was consistent in almost every category. Then suddenly, he disappeared. He lost his game like Ian Baker-Finch and David Duval. Stricker seriously considered retiring from the grind of tournament golf and doing something else to feed his family. But in his heart he still had the desire to play golf. The problem was his golf game would not allow him to.
Living in Wisconsin, the hub of winter golf, he set out to be the player he once was. Stricker's biggest problem was controlling his driver. So for three hours a day, in the winter, he hit practice balls from a heated, converted trailer to find the solution. The results are what we have seen this year.
Stricker is one of the PGA Tour's nice guys and is genuinely liked by other players. He has risen to #4 in the world.
What does Stricker's story mean to other players? You have to work through those rough periods in golf. Here are some tips to get you through your next golf slump:
1. Never give up. We all go through periods when we are not playing particularly well and the key is to find the weakness that is cause of that. Sometimes it is ball striking and other times it is the short game and in rare cases it is both!
2. Always practice with a purpose. Virtually all players practice incorrectly, they go to the range and hit balls, which is only exercise, but they almost always do not have a plan for improvement. I recommend rehearsal swings then hit one ball, rehearse and hit one ball, and so on to build a feel for what you are trying to accomplish.
3. Driver, wedge, and putter account for approximately 78 percent of all strokes, so spend the majority of your practice time with these clubs.
4. Work on distance control. If the best 5-iron you have ever hit in your life is 180 yards then your 5-iron distance is not 180 yards! It is generally less then that. Hit 12 shots with each club, take out the longest and shortest and average the remaining 10. That is your average distance for each club.
5. Mirror work: You can build a world class golf swing by using mirrors, tape, and flashlights. These are used indoors so that you can see what you are doing.
6. Find someone to help you in your quest for improvement. Very soon you will be able to find a Medicus Golf Institute Certified Instructor in your area.
7. Remember that golf is a game. Unless you are playing golf for a living, golf is still a game. Get outside and enjoy the surroundings, your playing partners, and the time to get away from the rigors of everyday life.
As I close this article I would like to invite each and every one of you to join the Medicus Golf Institute Members Section. Inside this section you will find more than 15 hours of video instruction that covers every swing malady that you may have. There is also an assessment tool that will generate training videos for you based upon your answers. Right now it is free to join, but you will have to hurry.
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