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
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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