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By Chuck Evans
Special Contributor |
You're standing on the tee with water right and think, boy I don't want to
hit it right. What usually happens next? The ball doesn't go into the water
because it wants to. It go in the water because it has to!
You did everything absolutely perfect to produce this slice and send your
golf ball to a watery grave. So how do you fix this abomination of a shot?
First, you will need to know what a slice is and what some of its causes
are.
A slice can start anywhere but then curves back to the right - for a
right-handed player. The amount of this curvature can be small or great
depending on the clubface angle when the ball leaves the clubface.
1. Ball location - having the ball too far back in the stance will not allow
the clubface to close properly. A player's hand speed also affects ball
location. Fast hands need to play the ball back and slow hands more forward.
2. Hinge action (the control of the clubface transmitted through the left
hand) - Faulty hinge action can lead to slices, hooks, pushes, and fades. But
properly educated hands can even compensate for off plane motions.
3. Right arm action - Not straightening the right arm through impact allows
the clubface to remain open. These three are the basic reasons for slices, but
there could be more depending on the player.
Some misnomers about slices
1. Clubhead path controls initial ball direction.
This is one of the worst pieces of advice ever given. Why? The ball will
always leave the clubface, at a right angle to the clubface, regardless of the
path the club is swung on unless there is enough time and force to alter what's
known as the Venturi Effect.
2. A strong grip eliminates a slice.
Yeah right. We've all heard this and I bet you've even tried it. You probably
took a lesson - or two - from the local pro and have spent a few dollars (or
even a few hundred) to get rid of that nasty slice.
Heck, you might have even tried to fix that nasty thing yourself! But you
quickly realized after hundreds of golf balls...it did not work. You heard me.
It didn't work, never has, and never will.
If you want to eliminate a slice, or a hook, you MUST learn how to control
the clubface through the proper use of the left wrist. That's all there is to
it.
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