I know, when you're a kid you want to be a doctor or a pilot. Well, I wound up a hooker.
This is after a year and a half of being a slicer. I just took up the game last year, and have always had a driver slice and an iron fade (with the occassional shank). Well, as I have come to firmly believe, a small change can make a huge difference.
I have made two changes recently (within the past 3 months) that have completely revolutionized my game. One, I went to a stronger left had grip. Now I see 2 1/2 to 3 knuckles on my iron shots, but have a weeker LH grip for my driver. Secondly, I have employed Harvey Penick's "Magic Move" - returning my right elbow to my right hip during my downswing.
The initial result of these two changes was as immediate as it was drastic. Long, straight drives, crisp ball-striking with my irons. No problem so far.
Now, about 3 weeks ago, I started gripping down an inch on my driver for more control. I started getting the occassional snap-hook. This has now progressed to me being a full-time hooker, both irons and woods. Mind you, I was a SLICER prior to this.
I'm not frustrated, not angry, etc., the things I used to become when I wasn't shooting well. I've learned that all problems in golf can be conquered.
I play mid- and short irons slightly back of center. This allows my hands to come through before the clubface. I try to hit with "dead hands" - no manipulation of the clubface with my hands through impact. I hit ball-first nearly every time, ground second - in other words, real solid contact. Ball striking is very good. Long irons I'll play just forward of center.
Yesterday I started thining that I might be trying to manipulate an already square clubface with my hands through impact, causing it to be closed.
Here's the bottom line: they start off straight, and then at a certain, sudden point, are seemingly shot out of the air, like skeet shooting. A driver will go 180 yards straight, start turning left, and then just nosedive-hook, straight down. A good iron shot will have a 10-yard draw, a bad one will start of straight, begin to hook, and wind up left of Hawaii.
Any suggestions? I have a sound set-up and an excellent grip.
This is after a year and a half of being a slicer. I just took up the game last year, and have always had a driver slice and an iron fade (with the occassional shank). Well, as I have come to firmly believe, a small change can make a huge difference.
I have made two changes recently (within the past 3 months) that have completely revolutionized my game. One, I went to a stronger left had grip. Now I see 2 1/2 to 3 knuckles on my iron shots, but have a weeker LH grip for my driver. Secondly, I have employed Harvey Penick's "Magic Move" - returning my right elbow to my right hip during my downswing.
The initial result of these two changes was as immediate as it was drastic. Long, straight drives, crisp ball-striking with my irons. No problem so far.
Now, about 3 weeks ago, I started gripping down an inch on my driver for more control. I started getting the occassional snap-hook. This has now progressed to me being a full-time hooker, both irons and woods. Mind you, I was a SLICER prior to this.
I'm not frustrated, not angry, etc., the things I used to become when I wasn't shooting well. I've learned that all problems in golf can be conquered.
I play mid- and short irons slightly back of center. This allows my hands to come through before the clubface. I try to hit with "dead hands" - no manipulation of the clubface with my hands through impact. I hit ball-first nearly every time, ground second - in other words, real solid contact. Ball striking is very good. Long irons I'll play just forward of center.
Yesterday I started thining that I might be trying to manipulate an already square clubface with my hands through impact, causing it to be closed.
Here's the bottom line: they start off straight, and then at a certain, sudden point, are seemingly shot out of the air, like skeet shooting. A driver will go 180 yards straight, start turning left, and then just nosedive-hook, straight down. A good iron shot will have a 10-yard draw, a bad one will start of straight, begin to hook, and wind up left of Hawaii.
Any suggestions? I have a sound set-up and an excellent grip.
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