Greetings,
I want to share some thoughts so here goes.
The purpose of golf is to send a ball to a target using a club. It's the same purpose for the golf swing itself, to send a ball to a target using a club. The most important aspect of the golf swing is proper contact with the ball. Quite literally, it's the only way to fulfill its purpose which is to send a ball to a target using a club. Golf is a game of accuracy.
Retain control of the club.
What do you need for accuracy if not to retain control of the club as you swing it and as you strike the ball with it?
Hitting a nail with a hammer.
Have you ever hit your own thumb? It hurts. Imagine trying to swing that hammer all the way back with the hammer head almost touching your own back then bringing it back in front as fast as you can trying to make contact with the nail directly on the head. Wouldn't you be scared of squashing your own thumb? I certainly would.
Sending a ball to a target using a club.
Imagine the same kind of swing with the hammer above. Do you think you have a better chance of making contact with the ball? Imagine your thumb is right next to the ball, are you going to overswing anyway? Of course not, you'd be scared of hitting your thumb, wouldn't you.
Swinging the club within your ability. Retaining control of the club.
The contrary would be: Swinging outside of your ability. Losing control of the club.
The question really is, do you have the ability to swing the club as you do now and still retain control of the club?
This is only one reason to swing within your ability.
Here's another interesting question. Do you have a smooth swing but still send the ball zipping across the stalls at the range? Are you trying to dance or send a ball to a target using a club?
Focus on the ball.
Swinging within your ability is easy to determine. As you swing the club, does your head move sideways/up/down/front/back, to a great extent so much so that you lose focus of the ball? Do you lose focus of the ball at any point during your swing? Does your chin get caught up in your shoulder on the backswing? Do your eyes ever leave the ball during your swing?
A different way of looking at it. Are you doing anything that causes your head to move during your swing? If so, stop doing that. The head is where the eyes are, the eyes is what we use to aim. For the best accuracy when we aim, we must keep our head as immobile as we can.
Let's go back to the beginning of this post.
The most important aspect of the golf swing is proper contact with the ball. How do we produce proper contact with the ball if not by aiming with our eyes and maintaining the head as immobile as we can so that we maintain focus on the ball to produce the best accuracy we can? How do we send a ball to a target using a club if not by producing the best accuracy we can?
Is your ability so great that you can make proper contact with the ball every time all the time with your eyes closed and/or your head bobbing up and down, left and right?
Swinging within your ability. Maintaining focus on the ball.
The contrary would be: Swinging outside your ability. Losing focus of the ball.
That's another reason to swing within your ability.
Now combine both reasons, to maintain focus on the ball and to retain control of the club, so that you can produce a better swing, a better stroke and more importantly, a better result.
Below is an exercise I do regularly when I want to get back to what's important.
Address the ball, bring the arms not more than horizontal on the backswing, swing and bring the club back to the ball to strike it. Maintain the head as immobile as I can, maintain focus on the ball with the eyes throughout even as I strike the ball and longer after the ball leaves the clubface.
Aim for a target.
The more I practice, the more I learn. One thing I learned about hitting balls at the range and on the course is to always aim for a target, no matter what exercise I'm practicing. I've learned that aiming for a target is almost as essential as making proper contact with the ball. Otherwise, I'm only hitting balls to _somewhere_ and that's not sufficient for golf.
It's the difference between having a goal and going about the world aimlessly. Which would you prefer and which do you think is most effective?
Aim for a target. Retain control of the club. Focus on the ball.
Swing within your ability.
Some physics for the skeptics.
The purpose of the golf swing is to send a ball to a target using a club. Note that it's not: To send a club to a target using my hands or to send a ball to a target using my hands.
Whatever you're doing during the swing, you must eventually transfer the club's momentum to the ball by striking it. Momentum is speed or velocity.
If the purpose of the golf swing was to send a club to a target using my hands, I'd be swinging away like mad just trying to send that club as far as I could, wouldn't I? Wouldn't you?
Isn't that what you're doing right now? Swinging like mad?
Since the purpose of the golf swing is to send a ball to a target using a club and that activity is ruled by the transfer of momentum from the clubhead to the ball, swinging within your ability will only allow you to transfer as much momentum as your ability will allow.
Proper contact with the ball is the most important aspect of the golf swing. It's where power comes from, it's where accuracy comes from. You can lose more power from a bad contact with the ball than from any other aspect of the golf swing. If that previous statement is true, it follows that you can produce more power with proper contact with the ball than with any other aspect of the golf swing.
As far as accuracy is concerned, I dunno about you but what I truly hate to see is the ball going either side of my intended target. Short, I don't normally care. Too long, I care a bit more but still not so much. Off line, that pisses me off to no end.
What I truly want is the ball to go directly to my target. Every time, all the time.
Have fun
Martin Levac
I want to share some thoughts so here goes.
The purpose of golf is to send a ball to a target using a club. It's the same purpose for the golf swing itself, to send a ball to a target using a club. The most important aspect of the golf swing is proper contact with the ball. Quite literally, it's the only way to fulfill its purpose which is to send a ball to a target using a club. Golf is a game of accuracy.
Retain control of the club.
What do you need for accuracy if not to retain control of the club as you swing it and as you strike the ball with it?
Hitting a nail with a hammer.
Have you ever hit your own thumb? It hurts. Imagine trying to swing that hammer all the way back with the hammer head almost touching your own back then bringing it back in front as fast as you can trying to make contact with the nail directly on the head. Wouldn't you be scared of squashing your own thumb? I certainly would.
Sending a ball to a target using a club.
Imagine the same kind of swing with the hammer above. Do you think you have a better chance of making contact with the ball? Imagine your thumb is right next to the ball, are you going to overswing anyway? Of course not, you'd be scared of hitting your thumb, wouldn't you.
Swinging the club within your ability. Retaining control of the club.
The contrary would be: Swinging outside of your ability. Losing control of the club.
The question really is, do you have the ability to swing the club as you do now and still retain control of the club?
This is only one reason to swing within your ability.
Here's another interesting question. Do you have a smooth swing but still send the ball zipping across the stalls at the range? Are you trying to dance or send a ball to a target using a club?
Focus on the ball.
Swinging within your ability is easy to determine. As you swing the club, does your head move sideways/up/down/front/back, to a great extent so much so that you lose focus of the ball? Do you lose focus of the ball at any point during your swing? Does your chin get caught up in your shoulder on the backswing? Do your eyes ever leave the ball during your swing?
A different way of looking at it. Are you doing anything that causes your head to move during your swing? If so, stop doing that. The head is where the eyes are, the eyes is what we use to aim. For the best accuracy when we aim, we must keep our head as immobile as we can.
Let's go back to the beginning of this post.
The most important aspect of the golf swing is proper contact with the ball. How do we produce proper contact with the ball if not by aiming with our eyes and maintaining the head as immobile as we can so that we maintain focus on the ball to produce the best accuracy we can? How do we send a ball to a target using a club if not by producing the best accuracy we can?
Is your ability so great that you can make proper contact with the ball every time all the time with your eyes closed and/or your head bobbing up and down, left and right?
Swinging within your ability. Maintaining focus on the ball.
The contrary would be: Swinging outside your ability. Losing focus of the ball.
That's another reason to swing within your ability.
Now combine both reasons, to maintain focus on the ball and to retain control of the club, so that you can produce a better swing, a better stroke and more importantly, a better result.
Below is an exercise I do regularly when I want to get back to what's important.
Address the ball, bring the arms not more than horizontal on the backswing, swing and bring the club back to the ball to strike it. Maintain the head as immobile as I can, maintain focus on the ball with the eyes throughout even as I strike the ball and longer after the ball leaves the clubface.
Aim for a target.
The more I practice, the more I learn. One thing I learned about hitting balls at the range and on the course is to always aim for a target, no matter what exercise I'm practicing. I've learned that aiming for a target is almost as essential as making proper contact with the ball. Otherwise, I'm only hitting balls to _somewhere_ and that's not sufficient for golf.
It's the difference between having a goal and going about the world aimlessly. Which would you prefer and which do you think is most effective?
Aim for a target. Retain control of the club. Focus on the ball.
Swing within your ability.
Some physics for the skeptics.
The purpose of the golf swing is to send a ball to a target using a club. Note that it's not: To send a club to a target using my hands or to send a ball to a target using my hands.
Whatever you're doing during the swing, you must eventually transfer the club's momentum to the ball by striking it. Momentum is speed or velocity.
If the purpose of the golf swing was to send a club to a target using my hands, I'd be swinging away like mad just trying to send that club as far as I could, wouldn't I? Wouldn't you?
Isn't that what you're doing right now? Swinging like mad?
Since the purpose of the golf swing is to send a ball to a target using a club and that activity is ruled by the transfer of momentum from the clubhead to the ball, swinging within your ability will only allow you to transfer as much momentum as your ability will allow.
Proper contact with the ball is the most important aspect of the golf swing. It's where power comes from, it's where accuracy comes from. You can lose more power from a bad contact with the ball than from any other aspect of the golf swing. If that previous statement is true, it follows that you can produce more power with proper contact with the ball than with any other aspect of the golf swing.
As far as accuracy is concerned, I dunno about you but what I truly hate to see is the ball going either side of my intended target. Short, I don't normally care. Too long, I care a bit more but still not so much. Off line, that pisses me off to no end.
What I truly want is the ball to go directly to my target. Every time, all the time.
Have fun
Martin Levac
Comment