You know, I see a LOT of golfers who address the ball with the driver at such an angle that the toe is significantly higher than the heel. It may be my imagination, but I seem to see this most often with those who are using the drivers with very large heads (but then, almost everyone is using them, so never mind). Granted, these are all recreational golfers who have, for the most part, swings just as ugly as mine, and most of them hit the ball better than I do, so I'm not criticizing. I'm just curious. Setting up in this way has the shaft of the club at a lower angle to the ground, obviously, so I'm wondering if this is part of the one-plane setup, in order to take the club back at a less upright angle.
The thing that makes me curious is that it seems to me that this tilt would affect the ball flight because the loft of the club would no longer be oriented vertically, but would be tilted toward the golfer. Maybe this helps to cause a draw or correct a slice?
Even more curious...I see plenty who putt this way. The putter isn't soled, or even close. The toe sticks up.
Maybe the simple answer is that these guys are all hacks like myself (and who knows what I'm doing that THEY wonder about), and that's fine. I'm just wondering if there's any more to it than that.
The thing that makes me curious is that it seems to me that this tilt would affect the ball flight because the loft of the club would no longer be oriented vertically, but would be tilted toward the golfer. Maybe this helps to cause a draw or correct a slice?
Even more curious...I see plenty who putt this way. The putter isn't soled, or even close. The toe sticks up.
Maybe the simple answer is that these guys are all hacks like myself (and who knows what I'm doing that THEY wonder about), and that's fine. I'm just wondering if there's any more to it than that.
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