Many times during golf telecast your will hear announcer say " so and so had to hang on for dear life" Can someone please explain what that means. Obviously the golfer has made some kind of swing error and is trying to quickly react so save his shot but I cannot decipher what that error could be. Is the golfer releasing his club to soon and trying to prevent a hook or pull? I have always wondered about that one. Thank you
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
"Hang on for dear life"
Collapse
X
-
GTO Moderator
- Jul 2004
- 5311
-
True Length Technology Fitter - www.truelengthtechnology.com
It's live! - www.ShipShapeClubs.com
PCS Class 'A' Clubfitter
A new highlight: Golfing the home course on Christmas Day.
I say it too often: If it's golf club shaped, you can play with it.
For the record, I'm a club doctor, not a swing doctor.
Re: "Hang on for dear life"
You've pretty much nailed it - the golfer is 'hanging on' to the release to keep it from hooking off the course (or even into the rough).
-
Re: "Hang on for dear life"
Hi tj,
You are right, it is usually that the golfer has gone over the top or turned his bottom hand over and the ball is going left. The golfer knows this from the moment he strikes the ball, as you yourself had the feeling when you know what you've done wrong, the moment or even before you hit the ball. In order to try to save the shot, the usual remedy is to hold onto the club to fight the over release. Matter of fact, that is one way to execute an intentional fade, to hold off the club.
Ted
Comment
-
Re: "Hang on for dear life"
Originally posted by rotator View PostHi tj,
You are right, it is usually that the golfer has gone over the top or turned his bottom hand over and the ball is going left. The golfer knows this from the moment he strikes the ball, as you yourself had the feeling when you know what you've done wrong, the moment or even before you hit the ball. In order to try to save the shot, the usual remedy is to hold onto the club to fight the over release. Matter of fact, that is one way to execute an intentional fade, to hold off the club.
Ted- the balls gone surely.
Comment
-
GTO Moderator
- Jul 2004
- 5311
-
True Length Technology Fitter - www.truelengthtechnology.com
It's live! - www.ShipShapeClubs.com
PCS Class 'A' Clubfitter
A new highlight: Golfing the home course on Christmas Day.
I say it too often: If it's golf club shaped, you can play with it.
For the record, I'm a club doctor, not a swing doctor.
Re: "Hang on for dear life"
It's a pre-strike move, but as Ted points out it's usually too late and the ball IS going pull-side. They fight to hold off to keep it on the hole they're on. I've felt it myself on occasion - A feeling of trying to slide the blade under the ball to not end up with a big pull or hook. I don't conciously notice it during my swing, but moreso afterwards.
Comment
Comment