Saturday, September 4th, 2010

another Open Access Blog

How to Fine Tune Your Golf Swing: Must Know Information You Can’t Go Without

Golf is a game that can be a great joy or it can drive you stark raving mad. It can take years of your life or make you feel like you’re on cloud nine. Golf takes patience and armed with a good swing, it can take you a long way. While the objective of the game is easy, hit a ball really hard into a hole on the other side of the fairway, it’s easier said than done. Innumerable duffers have become overwhelmed by utter frustration because of golf. In reality, it really isn’t all that bad.

Keep it Simple… Practice, Practice, Practice

Golf is a game of consistency. Hitting the ball the same way, given a specific situation, is key to achieving good scores. Problems such as short drive distance, slicing, hooking and other golfing ailments are caused by a lack of consistency. Learning how to properly swing a golf club ought to be simple enough as long as you learn how to do it right from the start and practice.

Each golfer develops their own distinctive style when swinging a golf club, however all golfers use the same set of rudimentary rules that make up their swing. The golfer’s spine acts as a rotating axis while the golfer keeps a proper grip on the golf club accelerating through the impact of the ball to full follow through.

Conserving Energy

Eliminating unnecessary movements incorporated in your golf swing is by far one of the best things you can do. Consider it conserving energy. Your energy should be focused on striking the ball and any added awkward motions can cause hooking, slicing or other problems.

Concentrate on the fundamentals keeping only the motions needed to hit the ball dead on center. Focusing on the fundamentals of the swing will lead you to a lower handicap in short order. With added practice, achieving par golf will become a matter of routine. Keep in mind this will only happen if you consistently practice.

Getting Formal Instruction

Learning how to properly swing a golf club may be accomplished by signing up for golf lessons administered by a local golf pro. Typical classes offered by local golf courses also provide clubs and trained teachers that are equipped to help you develop a proper swing. You need to show up with your determination and discipline coupled with lots of practice.

Signing up for lessons typically requires a fee, however many golfing organizations want to encourage the development of new golfers into the sport and they may offer money saving promotions to entice people to try it. Also consider taking group golf lessons rather than private lessons if you’re budget conscious.

Golfing Books and the Internet

Golf aids such as books or articles found in magazines or the internet provide a wealth of information on the proper golf swing. There are people who can apply what they’ve read translating it into motion on a golf course successfully. People who are more visual learners have a difficult time making much headway with this this type of instruction.

Be wary of random free articles you find on the internet since you get what you pay for and much of it can be quite conflicting. Your primary job is to determine which golf aids are best for you, ones that help you establish and improve your golf swing.

Once you’ve properly tuned your golf swing and gotten beyond the frustration, golf can be a fun and rewarding hobby.

Paul Iconia is a lover of golf and he’s been a player of the game for his entire life. In Paul’s quest to better his golf swing he’s discovered a little known secret on how to swing golf clubs for significant yardage. Learn what Paul discovered at his site http://www.golfswingtrainingonline.com.

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How To Buy Junior Golf Club Equipment

If you are into golf, your children are probably going to want to try it once in a while. Children always want to emulate their parents, and that means they are going to find interest in all of the things that they see their parents doing. If the junior’s parents play golf, the children are going to show some interest in it. You can always take them to the mini golf range, but they are going to want to try the real thing. Start out by getting them a junior golf club set and then go from there.

When you first start your children out, you want to take them to a store, to get their junior golf club set. Make sure that they sell all types of junior golf equipment. The reason for this is that all children are different heights, obviously, and they all need different lengths. You can make sure they are getting clubs for their junior golf club set that fits their size so they can learn well. If they have the wrong sizes, they are not going to learn a good and natural swing, and that can mean they never adjust right as they grown. That can lead to frustration and a lack of interest in golf later on.

When my husband first got a junior golf clubs for my daughter, he did it one piece at a time. This is something that many moms and dads can do, especially if money is an issue. We got her a golf bag that was just her size, and then bought her just one club. The driver was the obvious choice as the first addition to the junior golf club set that she wanted so badly. That meant she had a bag like daddy, and could go learn to drive first. They went to the driving range together and were both very happy.

If this is something you would like to do for a junior golf club set, you can then do what my husband did next. He slowly bought her one club at a time, teaching her what it was and how to use it as they went along. She only has four at the present time, but she is getting good with each of them. She is young yet, but is very proud of her junior golf club set and cant wait to make more of it. However, the problem is now that she is getting a little taller and we may have to start all over again with a longer set of golf clubs.

You will find that this will be a problem for you when getting junior golf clubs also. If you have more than one child, you can simply pass them down the line. If you have just one, like we do, you may have to find a way to see what you can sell when you have to move up more sizes. If you dont care much about the price, you can always donate the junior golf club set that your child has outgrown to programs locally that get children involved in sports and physical education.

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Give Golf a Chance

Golf has long been looked at as an elitist sport – something not everyone can enjoy. However, it is fast becoming popular and more and more people are taking this up as a sport. The increasing number of golf clubs, golf accessories, and learning instructions for those who wish to learn this sport only make it easier for anyone who desires to learn.

Golf is also often seen as a mundane sport – compared to other ball sports, that is. There is very little tension, no thumping heart, no BP rising or other such phenomena that seem to occur with sports such as baseball, basketball or football. As such, not many non-players will avidly watch the game. Nevertheless, understanding the terminology of the game, its rules and regulations and maybe trying it out once in a while will help one get an idea of what kind of a game it is.

Golf essentially is a game of stroke. The player uses a golf club made of iron, wood or steel to play the ball into any one of the (usually) eighteen holes on a ‘golf course’. In this sense, golf is different from all other ball games since its area is not determined. The golf course is usually spread over many acres and the design of each one is quite different. Often a large effort, planning and money is put into designing and maintaining golf courses and most of them are also becoming tourist attractions and places of leisure and relaxation.

Golf courses can have nine or eighteen holes, spread over a large area, as per its design. The player has to play the ball into each of the holes one by one, depending on the layout of the golf course. In a nine-hole course, the player has to play all the holes twice. The player starts with the first hole of the course and then proceeds to the next only after he’s played the hole successfully. It is essential that the ball be played only by striking it with the club and cannot be moved from a position that it is lying in. If you miss a hole and the ball ends up, for example, behind a bush, you have to play it from there (although bushes are very rare on a golf course).

The important aspect of golf is the swing, or the stroke. It might seem like a ridiculous idea for a game to some – keep hitting a ball until it drops into a hole – however, this is where players like Tiger Woods have made it big and popularized the game to the extent it is today. Because oftentimes the player can’t even see the hole, and only knows what area it might be in – one has to be very careful with their aim and swinging technique. Also, the vastness of a golf course makes it very difficult to estimate how much force one will really have to use. Golf can be thought of as carom in many ways; however due to having no contact with the ball, it is often difficult to determine how much force, applied in which direction will yield what kind of results on the ball. Even aspects like posture and the hand being used to tee-off matter a lot in getting a swing right.

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Get More Power from a Shorter Backswing

(This golf article is followed by a drill, and a link to that drill on video.)

Have you ever noticed that while the golf courses the pros play are getting longer, their golf swings are getting shorter? Tiger’s done it. Sergio’s done it. Phil’s done it. Why? How can players who depend on dominating long golf courses give up distance by shortening their golf swings? Well, guess what? They’re not. Not giving up distance that is.

One of the most important facts to remember when playing or learning golf is that the number one variable in swinging a golf club – that directly relates to distance – is clubhead speed. In my teaching experience most players either do not realize this, or wrongly associate size of swing with clubhead speed.

It’s really this simple: given that clubhead speed equals distance – with all else being the same – if my swing is big and slow and yours is small yet fast, you will get more distance than me. The bonus is that your shorter swing is likely to be more consistent than my big one.

In my writings I talk a lot about – and try to explain away – many golf myths. One such myth is the supposed need to get the club shaft to horizontal at the top of the golf swing. Why should the golf club get to horizontal? Why is this the ideal position? What is the scientific reasoning for this? Because it is parallel with mother earth? What if it is a little shy of horizontal? What if it goes beyond horizontal (see John Daly)? Getting the club to horizontal is an arbitrary instruction that unfortunately cripples many a player in their efforts to get it there, and distracts them from the primary ingredient of the golf swing: the downswing. What if someone came along and told you it did not matter if you got the club to horizontal or not? What if someone told you you do not need to be a contortionist while executing the backswing? Wouldn’t that lift some big burdens in playing golf?

There is an irony in the fact that most of us try to make a big backswing, while telling our buddies to slow down. What if you were told you could speed up? Should speed up? While many will say that even on the PGA Tour there’s nearly as many different golf swings as there is players, there is one undeniable common denominator among them, and that is acceleration.

All good players accelerate the golf club to impact. Many a struggling player makes such a large backswing that they either get into a position from which acceleration is difficult, or they are so out of control that they unintentionally decelerate in order to try to regain control by the time they reach impact. Either way the result does not produce the distance desired, or the contact required. Deceleration is contrary to centripetal force while acceleration contributes to it. Suffice to say, two swings that are 90 mph at impact are not the same if one was accelerating from 80 to 90, while the other was decelerating from 100 to 90 at impact. Consider the racecar driver (or you depending on your driving) who slows before a curve in the road, in order to accelerate into it. Then consider a time when you were going too fast for a curve and had to slow down. Remember how hard it was to maintain control of the vehicle as you took the turn? The golf swing is no different. A decelerating club cannot remain on its intended path and will veer wider than intended. This creates a wider arc, the bottom of which is now behind the ball. Hello fat shot. Even if your club was going 200 mph before it hit the ground, hitting the ground will slow it down incredibly, not to mention all the other negatives associated with hitting the big ball before the small ball. Slowing down is not the answer.

Acceleration is. Interestingly, while a big backswing tends to promote deceleration, a short backswing does the opposite. A short backswing promotes acceleration. Your ideal win-win. It’s as if you do not believe the short backswing will do the trick, so you accelerate to make up for it. Hello good shot. Being it was so good, you then become willing to try it again. And it works again. The next thing you know, rather than trying to attain difficult physical positions (such as getting the club to horizontal at the top of the backswing) you’re practicing accelerating the club. Imagine practicing something good. Bingo.

And there’s a bonus to the bonus. Practicing leads to muscle memory. And muscle memory leads to speed. Think of anything you do that requires muscle memory and that which you do on an ongoing basis. Whether it is tying your shoelaces, or your tie, or calling home, you do it faster now than when you first tried. I doubt that since you mastered phoning home, you started trying to phone home harder. I highly doubt that since you mastered tying your tie, you began trying to tie much bigger ties. And I highly doubt that since mastering tying your shoe laces, you began trying to tie bigger laces. Okay, so I am pushing the point. But I think you see the point I am trying to make.

Believe it or not PGA Tour players do not enjoy one luxury we do. They do not have the luxury to mess around with their swings. We can mess around and only our game suffers. They mess around and their day-to-day existence suffers. Tour players have learned that by shortening their swings and working on acceleration they can attain the same (or more) distance they used to, and gain accuracy and consistency – two staples to life on the Tour. That is why we have seen, and will continue to see a growing trend of shorter backswings on the long golf courses of the PGA Tour.

Clive Scarff is author of Hit Down Dammit! More information can be found at www.hitdowndammit.com.

Drill: Right Hand Thrust Drill

The Right Hand Thrust Drill is one of several found on “Hit Down Drills!” which is one of four DVDs in the Hit Down Dammit! DVD series. The goal of this drill is to learn to accelerate from a shortened backswing position. It’s harder than it looks, but the results will be surprising.

Swing your club back to waist-high, pause a split second, and then use your right hand to “thrust” the clubhead down toward the golf ball. You will find you have now created sufficient speed with the clubhead that it follows through to the target, naturally, putting you in a finish position wherein the clubhead is pointing at the target, the toe is up, and the shaft is roughly horizontal (waist-high) and parallel to the target line. This position should roughly mirror your top-of-backswing position.

As you get better at this exercise, you will create more clubhead speed, the momentum from which will see a follow-through position that “naturally” swings through a little higher than the height of your backswing. It’s important that this follow-through is natural, not forced or abbreviated.

(To see this drill demonstrated on Video, visit: http://www.hitdowndammit.com/#Drills)

For more articles on golf, or further information, contact Clive Scarff at clive@hitdowndammit.com

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Where To Find Complete Golf Tips Online

There has been a fascination about mastering the often exasperating game of golf ever since the game was invented back in the 15th century in Scotland. The modern game of golf evolved into what we know it as today since 1750. But mastering the game of golf is still as difficult as ever, even though golf equipment technology and teaching techniques have improved greatly.

Luckily, today we have access to golf tips online with the Internet. Even though I have played golf for over 30 years, I struggled to master the game until a few years ago. With the various golf resources you can search for online, it is now easier to discover the tips that can make a big difference with your game of golf.

There are many excellent paid products, like golf instructional DVD’s, golf swing aids, and even some golf e-books that can help you master the game of golf. But, you can also find some valuable free golf tips online as well. Although you sometimes will find that there are many different techniques – especially regarding the grip and the transition from backswing to downswing.

To see what works for you, just try out the different techniques until you feel comfortable. The golf swing is a fairly complex movement and there are several styles; from the newer stack and tilt golf swing to the traditional swing. Some online golf tips instruct you to grip the club firmly, tightly, or even loosely. These terms are quite subjective as they don’t really tell you the amount of pressure to use – so just experiment until you find the right grip – I prefer a firm grip.

When looking for golf tips online, take into account that there is more to golf than just learning the golf swing. Look for resources that show you the most comprehensive golf tips online. One of the most important areas of golf, that is often ignored, is the mental game of golf. You want free golf tips? First, learn to dominate your inner game of golf.

Also, it is important to know what the right golf equipment (golf clubs and balls) is for your type of game. If you are starting out, look for clubs that are suited for the beginner golfer as they are more forgiving. Buy a driver and fairway woods with a graphite shaft, large titanium head, and perimeter weighting. For irons, choose iron shafts for accuracy, more sole weighting, and wider soles. For beginners or high handicap golfers, play a two-piece, mid spin, firm feel golf ball.

Like I said before, look for golf tips online that covers every area of the golf game. Some of the things you need to learn are the grip; setup and stance; backswing, transition, and downswing; driving, fairway shots, chipping, bunker shots, and putting; course management; how to fix problems like the slice, hook, and pull / push shots; and the different trouble shots you will encounter – playing into the wind, deep rough, hill lies, and more.

One option is to pay a professional golf coach to learn all these things, but you will end up paying a lot of money for so many lessons. My recommendation would be to start out to learn as much as possible with free online golf tips. You could then take a few personal golf lessons and then visit the driving range to practice what you have been taught. Finally, get out on the golf course and play a round of golf – at least twice a week. Remember, to master the game of golf, you need to practice, practice, practice.

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