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Golf Instruction

Golf instruction articles from Tees2Greens.com

July 2007 - Posts

  • A Splashing Time!

    By Padraig Harrington

    Bunker play is a bit like chipping, at least when it comes to your address position. As you did for the chip shot, you want to create 'impact' at address.

    So set up this time with your sternum directly above a point about an inch behind the ball. In other words, above the area of sand you want the sole of the club to enter the sand as you skim it through.


    Again, you want most of your weight – about 90% – on your left side. Again, you want to leave it there throughout the swing. That has the benefit of angling your shoulders downward from right to left, which allows you to make a slightly steeper than normal backswing and forward swing and encourages you to 'skim' the club through the sand. When you get that right, the ball flies out high and soft. Perfect.

    How open?

    Good bunker technique revolves around a good set-up position. For me, that involves letting the length of the shot I am playing dictate how far left I aim my body at address and how much I open the clubface. It's a trade-off.

    The simple rule of thumb that I follow is that for every degree I open the clubface, I open up my body by the same amount. So, for a standard greenside shot, a line along my feet will be aimed roughly 30 degrees left of the flag, the clubface opened until the leading edge is aligned 30 degrees right of the flag – as we have illustrated here (left). If I want the ball to go further than normal, I square up both my stance and the clubface.

    If I don't want the ball to go as far – say, when I want a very soft pop-up type shot – I would significantly open both my stance and the clubface until I was satisfied that I had the perfect set-up for the shot (right).

    One last thing. Even the briefest of glances at all the best sand players reveals that every one of them has a significant bend in their knees at address. They 'sit down' to hit bunker shots. You should, too.




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  • How to Recapture Your Control

    By Steve Wakulsky
    Director of Training and Certification Worldwide

    In this technology-driven age, golfers are benefiting from exotic driver design, red-hot golf balls and launch monitor club-fitting that has placed distance firmly at the top of the agenda for many. It's funny, even the older guys like Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player are commenting on the fact that when they return to courses they played regularly in their prime, they are now hitting shorter irons in to greens than ever before.

    So great, we have all added some distance to our tee shots. But what about iron play – the 'scoring zone', which I'm going to suggest is from the 7-iron down through the wedges. How is your accuracy and shot dispersion pattern with those clubs? Because for a lot of the scratch to, say, 12-handicap bracket players I see here at the DLGA in Orlando, this is the area that is costing them dearly out on the course. They are killing it off the tee but then putting the same effort into their iron shots, often under-clubbing and, as a result, suffering from inconsistent ball-striking.

    Good players never force their approach shots. They are looking for a laser-like ball-flight with spin that stops the ball quickly on the green. And to achieve that they make some subtle changes to their technique. With a driver, you set up with your weight favouring the right side, ball up forward in the stance, opposite the left instep, and as a result the swing itself is characterised by a full body pivot and coil behind the ball. All designed to maximise speed and distance. But compare this with the 7-iron sequence below: my weight is more 'centred', perhaps even favouring the left side, the ball is played back towards the centre and the hands are slightly in front of the ball at address. The result? A shorter, more compact golf swing. Compare the two backswing positions. Obviously the length of the shaft makes a difference, but look at the body pivot. With the driver I am behind the ball, the upper body fully coiled. With the iron, the pivot is more restricted and the arm-swing is much shorter, too. But the main thing to note is that my weight is 'centred' and on top of the ball at the top of the backswing.

    The finish sees a fairly similar body position, but with the iron the arm-swing is restricted, as there is simply not the momentum here to pull the arms all the way through. While the driver swing results in a wrap-around finish, the iron is much more controlled with more width in the arms. All of these specific points can be traced to the address position, one designed to produce the downand- through strike that you are looking to achieve to create spin and control. To find out more about the DLGA visit: www.davidleadbetter.com




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  • Create a Positive and Ready Mindset

    When you really want to play your best golf, you must understand this simple philosophy: action always follows thought. I have found this verbal directive to be true in working with every golfer who wants to improve his or her talent potential and to post lower scores. The key point of this mental lesson is that in order to make your most efficient swing and play your best golf, you must first get your thoughts and emotions in an organised and positive working order before you step into the address position and strike your ball. In a very real sense, you must be psychologically and emotionally ready long before you are physically set to hit a correct golf shot or make a sound golf swing. This 'ready mindset' must be addressed before you step on to the first tee and before you play any shot on the course.

    The Way Your Brain Works

    The reasoning that you must get your thoughts in a positive and focused order before you act is really quite simple. It is based on your brain's never-ending struggle of entertaining positive thoughts versus negative ones. In today's fast-paced commercial world, where we are constantly exposed to advertising campaigns and information overload, it seems almost second-nature to become sceptical and cynical and to buy into negative messages.

    The content of many of these messages distort our sense of 'reality' and we start to programme negative thoughts as being 'realistic'. This is known in neurological literature as the negative bias of the human brain. Your brain is skewed to view information in a way that will hold you back or protect you and make you cautious.

    Simply stated, your brain responds to negative information much more readily than it does to positive signals. (If you don't believe me, just look at the front page of any newspaper.) The result is a negative focus or mental perspective. And the trouble with negative thinking is that if you buy into it, it always works!

    The concept is known psychologically as 'negative emotional contagion'. The result is: think bad stuff, bad stuff happens. This is why it is so important to get your thoughts flowing in a positive direction. Let's apply this to your golf. If you think you're going to miss a shot or find trouble, you usually become worried and feel a bit vulnerable. In an effort to gain control over your negative thoughts and feelings, you become tight and try to overcontrol the shot. You steer the club in an attempt to gain control over negative imagined events in your mind (that you are trying to avoid) and as a result, you end up with the negative result – i.e. exactly what you were trying not to do.

    If you choose to focus on the negative approach or you just act without planning your shot or thinking about the situation correctly, your golfing day is over. The problem then becomes that your lack of focus coupled with a negative attitude carries over into the rest of your game. What started out as a promising round ends up as a bad day on the links.

    The good news about this is that there is another way to think and to programme your mind and body for optimal performance. The accompanying sequences of Luke Donald in action tell their own story, while the following passages will describe how to create a purposeful and positive mindset for playing great golf.

    Creating a Positive and Directed Focus

    An organised and positive mindset gives you the opportunity to hit consistent shots and to repeat that sequence for an entire round. By getting your mind focused on what you want to achieve versus what you want to avoid helps to create a mental scheme or road map for success. Here are three simple suggestions for getting your mind into a positive, directed focus for golfing success.

    1. When you stand behind your ball before the shot, give yourself specific directions on what you want to achieve and where you want the ball to go. Think about what the situation gives you and make an appropriate decision based on your assessment of the situation and your available golf skills.

    2. Understand that your brain and body do not understand the word imagery of don't. Your body only understands the energy that is given to brain. It becomes imperative that you always give yourself a do this directive. Directing your mind to a specific intention of do will allow your body to respond more effectively by sending positive motor movement signals from the brain. The do this mindset helps to create a smoother and more efficient motor action with your swing.

    Make a clear decision about what you want to do and stick with it, even during your swing. Remember, the clearer your picture from behind the ball in your planning, the more likely it will result in a more efficient swing when you are ready to strike the ball.

    3. As you go out to play, adopt the single goal that you will have a clear and focused mind on each shot you hit and that you will not hit any shot until you are 100% positively focused and ready. If you are over a shot and you become negative, simply back away from the ball and become refocused. Get yourself recommitted to the specific task of what you want to happen and then swing away to your target with trust.




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