If you want to start flushing your golf irons, you need to understand some concepts that will help you with consistency first.
Understanding proper ball position, foot pressure, and how to release your golf irons will go a long way towards hitting your irons pure and flushing them down the fairway!
The transition is the most important part of the golf swing and without getting the sequence right then your never going to find consistency in your game.
All golfers need to understand regardless of their type of swing or desired outcome rotation needs to exist and this video will teach you the benefits but all how to rotate the upper and lower body in the golf swing.
Hip rotation is a part of the golf swing which can make a huge difference to every golfer and understanding how to turn and use your hips will help you become a better and more powerful golfer.
Trail hand grip secrets in the golf swing. Alistair Davies shares with you the best secret in controlling the clubface and the transition through your trail hand grip.
To hold your head still during the golf swing is probably one of the most difficult thing in the world! Literally!
But with a help of this training tool and a little guidance, voila Your wish is my command!
The first and only easy solution to stabilize your swing and follow the oldest and purest piece of golf knowledge.
“Keep your head still”
This amazing new training aid is one of a kind. With a sleek design it is easy to use and a highly effective method of improving your swing and learning to hit every shot more solid and on target.
This video is about Golf Swing Impact Position Drill For Deadly ACCURACY!
If we are to improve our golf shots then we have to change our impact. Understanding what should happen is key to improving this area. We’ll take a closer look at the impact zone and talk through what you can do to improve your ball striking.
3 Golf Swing Tips That Will Make All the Difference in Your Golf Swing
Have you hit a plateau in your golf game? You’re hitting the driving range and golf course every weekend, maybe even practicing at home, but your scores never change.
Even if you don’t care much about besting your buddies, we all want to best ourselves. We want to see clear improvement and know that our hard work is paying off. If you’re stuck in a rut, it’s not because you’ve reached your full potential. More likely, there’s some small error in your golf swing that’s holding you back.
I’m going to share three swing tips that are proven to help you play better golf. I’ve used these tips with my students for over twenty years, and the results have been transformative.
These concepts cover three different stages of your swing:
Takeaway
Transition
Finish
You may not need all three, but odds are at least one of these tips will illuminate an error you didn’t realize you were making.
The Takeaway
One neglected aspect of the takeaway is the relationship between the hands and the clubhead.
In fact, it’s far more common to worry about the direction the club swings on the takeaway. You may even have received advice on this or heard theories on whether it’s best to swing the club more outside or more inside.
However, if you watch the best players in the world, you’ll notice that there isn’t much consistency when it comes to club direction. Some golfers swing way inside, some swing way outside, and many fall somewhere in between. Meanwhile, they’re all making incredible shots and taking home trophies.
So, here’s a theory: maybe the direction of the club isn’t the real issue.
If you watch these same players, you’ll notice there is one thing that remains consistent no matter which direction they guide they club:
They always keep the clubhead outside of the hands.
To clarify, when we talk about keeping the clubhead outside of the hands, we mean the clubhead is just slightly farther out from the body than the hands are. If the clubhead passes through the plane of your hands and closer towards the body, the clubhead is now inside.
Let’s talk about the perfect follow through and finish position. I want to talk about where you should be in the follow through and at the finish position with both the golf club and your body.
When you swing a golf club, it’s more or less designed to work in a circle around your body. The clubhead works up and in on the entire backswing, down and out during the downswing and then back up and in during the follow through.
If I take my normal setup and I draw a line up the shaft, I want it – more or less – parallel to that plane line during my backswing, parallel to it during my downswing and to get back parallel to it on to my follow through.
Now most of that happens just because of how my body turns. When I make a backswing, I turn my body away from the target so my hands should go in and up. In the follow through, I turn towards the target, so my hands should in and up. That’s the main concept that we’re going for here.
Past impact – when the club is at first parallel – I’m looking for the club to be about on my heel line. By the time I get to arms parallel in the follow through, I want my upper body, chest and shoulders and hips fully turned towards the target.
if you’re someone who normally gets a little too over the top and exits too far to the left, I would set up a practice station with an object to the left of the target line. That’s a block that’s in my way that I need to learn to swing the club to the right of.
If you’re the other golfer who swings too far inside out, you can use the same station. You just adjust the setup. If you’re normally too far right, you want to put an object up to the right of the target line that’s in your way.
To start the practice, use a short iron and make a half swing at half speed. Get a feel, give yourself feedback with video, confirm what you’re doing and continue to give yourself feedback until you get where you want to go.