Friday, November 28, 2008
Swing Path
In a perfect swing, the club approaches the ball from inside the target
line, is square to the target at impact, and comes back inside in the
follow-through. A common fault is the inside-out swing,
approaching the ball from inside, then pushing the club to the
outside (toward right field). Most shots off this swing start to the
right; where they finish is determined by the clubface.
If the face is square to the inside-out path, the ball sails dead right,
called a "push." If the face is closed (aiming left), the result is a
roundhouse hook, starting right then curving left. With an open face
(pointing right), the ball bends right to right.
In order to counter an inside-out swing bring the club straight back
as long as possible in the takeaway phase.
An outside-in path brings the club into the ball from the far side and
moves it toward left field. Shots from this swing begin left. If the
clubface is square, the ball flies dead left, called a "pull." An open
face makes the ball curve sharply left to right. A closed face makes
the ball curve even further left.
Correct an outside-in swing by bringing the club inside the line in
the takeaway.
A proper inside-square-inside swing starts the ball straight. Any
subsequent movement is the result of clubface alignment: Off an
open face, the ball bends right; a closed face curves it left.
**For More Killer Golf Tips & Tricks, Check Out The Full Audio/Video Course At:**
http://www.quickgolfsecrets.com
In a perfect swing, the club approaches the ball from inside the target
line, is square to the target at impact, and comes back inside in the
follow-through. A common fault is the inside-out swing,
approaching the ball from inside, then pushing the club to the
outside (toward right field). Most shots off this swing start to the
right; where they finish is determined by the clubface.
If the face is square to the inside-out path, the ball sails dead right,
called a "push." If the face is closed (aiming left), the result is a
roundhouse hook, starting right then curving left. With an open face
(pointing right), the ball bends right to right.
In order to counter an inside-out swing bring the club straight back
as long as possible in the takeaway phase.
An outside-in path brings the club into the ball from the far side and
moves it toward left field. Shots from this swing begin left. If the
clubface is square, the ball flies dead left, called a "pull." An open
face makes the ball curve sharply left to right. A closed face makes
the ball curve even further left.
Correct an outside-in swing by bringing the club inside the line in
the takeaway.
A proper inside-square-inside swing starts the ball straight. Any
subsequent movement is the result of clubface alignment: Off an
open face, the ball bends right; a closed face curves it left.
**For More Killer Golf Tips & Tricks, Check Out The Full Audio/Video Course At:**
http://www.quickgolfsecrets.com
Labels: golf, golf swing, golf tips
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