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Welcome to all Golfers

Welcome to the all new Startmygolf  Blog why not  book mark this site and visit on a regular basis. here you will find lessons and tips gleaned from a lifetime of golf, now in my sixties am still able on the odd occasion to bash it round in par, whilst age has knocked me Credit union location Missouri Springfield Springfield Catholic Credit Union on distance, good technique has helped me keep my game competitive so please add comments about anything you see on the site

The Grip, Address and Target Line.

The Grip, Address and Target Line.

Reverse overlap grip

Put both hands close together with the thumbs on the top edge of the grip, the index finger of the left hand outside the middle three fingers of your right hand. The index finger of the right hand goes down the grip.

This is just one of many ways to hold a putter, whichever way you hold your putter you must make sure it becomes part of your arms, because a good putting stroke avoids independent wrist action. With a soft grip, your putting action will help you feel you are moving the putter head backwards and forwards with your arms and shoulders moving in unison.

Addressing the ball.

The ball should be inline with the Credit union location Illinois Evergreen Park Little Company Of Mary Employees Credit Union left toe; this will help impart top spin on the ball which players call “getting a good roll”. The head should be over the ball allowing the eyes to look down the target line without moving your body. The body needs to be well balanced as it needs to be held still through the putting stroke.

Target Line.

Ideally the body, shoulders and feet should be square to your target line, the line is through the centre of the club face and ball inline with where you want the ball to go.
While this is the ideal position for your body you may have noticed some of the pro’s putting with a slightly  closed or open stance this can be caused by many factors, such as build of a person etc the one thing in common though with all good putters is that they always putt in a straight line through the ball towards their designated target.

Putting Practise

Putting practise should always be done on a level part of the practise green, once you can putt the ball short distances you will then be able to cope with longer distances. The most important part of any putt is the first 9” to 12” if the putt starts correctly there is a good chance of it being a successful putt.

Having lined the ball up with the centre of the clubface practise making a smooth back and through swing striking the ball in the  same spot you lined up with at address. On short putts the line back and forwards will be straight, but  come back slightly on the inside. This is how it should be it’s a natural progression of the putting stroke as putts get longer.

Putting, The Most Important Part of Your Golf Game.

Putting, The Most Important Part of Your Golf Game.

Putting is an area of the game neglected by many club and higher handicap players. When and if they practice it’s usually not on technique, just bashing a ball at the hole, or it seems to be that way when watching people on the putting green. Very few people are prepared to spend time on the practice green honing a technique and practise for this is what is usually required.

Concentration and confidence play a big role in all golf shots, and at no time are they more important than when putting. You only have to watch how much time and care the professional players put into the preparation of their shots on the putting green to see how much concentration is required. Confidence will come from good sound technique and practice. Always remember that however close you are to the hole, your putting routine should remain the same as for any other putt. Take care to line up for the shot. Putting is never as  easy as it looks.

I The putter head is set square to the target with Credit union location Louisiana Baton Rouge Campus Federal Credit Union the ball in the centre of the clubface. A reverse overlap grip or similar grip is used. The arms are extended down. Ball positioned just left of centre in the stance, the body is evenly balanced. Head positioned over the ball.

2 At the takeaway the head and body are kept still as the club is taken back with a movement of the arms and shoulders together. Try and avoid using wrist action when putting.  Move the whole of the putter – the head, shaft and  the speed of the green. Speed and touch cannot be taught but through practice, feel and touch for distance can be learned.

Putting is the most pressurised shot on the golf course, so practise is even more important. Practice gives confidence in your putting action and helps to judge speed and distance. The old adage “You drive for show, but you put for dough” is never truer than when you get on the final green during competition.

Simple Golf Tips To Quickly Improve Your Distance

3 Simple Golf Tips To Quickly Improve Your Distance

 

Every golfer wants to know the secret golf tip to improve their distance. The secret, is there is NO secret. It’s common sense, and treating golf like a sport. The golf swing is not for the weak and feeble anymore.

Any golf tips you hear to improve distance should somehow be directly or indirectly related to the physical side of the golf swing. I mean?don’t you think the swing puts a tremendous amount of pressure on your body, especially your lower back?

To alleviate this pain and quickly improve your distance takes strength and stretching, specific to your body and your golf swing.

So the quick fixes (band aides) you hear in all the magazines and on the golf channel are short-term fixes. You won’t be able to consistently duplicate it until you improve your physical limitations.

So let’s get to these simple, yet valuable tips.

Tip #1:

Perform a dynamic warm-up prior to the first tee. Don’t ever skip it. It is more important than hitting balls before you play. How many times do you see a professional athlete go on the field and start playing? Never. That’s my point.

A Simple Warm-Up could be some arm circles, toe touches, squats with your club, and standing twists holding the club out in front of you chest high.

That’s it! Simple yet very effective to prepare your body for that LONG drive on the first tee.

Tip #2

Stretching on the course will keep your body nice and loose to make that FULL backswing, generating high clubhead speed and consistently LONG drives. There are just a few KEY stretches specific to your swing, that can keep your body relaxed for 18 holes.

One stretch I’ll tell you is the backswing/shoulder stretch. It’s a very simple stretch that will maintain a full and fluid backswing.

All you do is get in your golf posture, with your arms hanging naturally in front of you. For a right-handed golfer, you would take your right hand underneath  be done on almost every hole to get the most out of it.

Tip #3

Improve your core strength and rotational speed. This one is done “off the course”, and can even be done in your home with minimal equipment. Now this is just one tip (exercise) of many you can do Credit union location Illinois South Holland Thornton Township High Schools Credit Union to dramatically explode your drives “on the course”.

Since the golf swing is a turn back and a turn through, it is rotational in nature. Then why wouldn’t you do many exercises to improve your rotational strength and flexibility?

If you’re serious about your game, you will now!

One simple golf exercise is the Seated Twist with a dumbbell. It’s very easy and can be done with a 5 or 8 pound dumbbell.

While sitting on the ground, grab a single dumbbell with both hands and hold it out in front of you.

Now lean back putting tension on the abs. Your legs will be bent at a 90 degree angle in the knee, and together.

Start rotationg side to side, only with your upper body. Try keeping your lower body as stable as possible.

You will do 3 sets of 20 repetitions to get the full benefit of the exercise. Again, this is just ONE exercise of many that will strengthen your rotational muscles of your core.

I’ve just showed you 3 quick and easy golf tips to dramatically increase your distance. Now go out and make it happen!

Mike Pedersen is a respected golf fitness expert, and the author of the Ultimate Golf Fitness Guide, numerous golf fitness tips and founder of several online golf fitness sites. For more information on his new, cutting-edge golf fitness e-book, go to http://www.ultimategolffitnessguide.com.

Three Secrets of A Consistent Golf Stroke

Three Secrets of A Consistent Golf Stroke

What you are about to read… will change your golfing life forever! What are these three “secrets”? If you knew how would they effect your game?. These three “secrets” are what the worlds best players do. Every player MUST know these “secrets” if they are to have a powerful, repeating golf stroke.

The problem with the majority of golfers is that they don’t know what to do. Oh their friends, well wishers at best, tell them that they are “bending their left arm”, “raising up through the shot”, “coming over the top” and host of other swing faults. But these are the same people that shoot the same scores you do! What could they possibly tell you that would improve your game?

The information you are about to receive is not theory or conjecture but science. Ooooh, you say, this sounds complicated. Well it isn’t, it is simply the laws of force and motion that govern our entire lives and day to day living. Once you understand these simply laws your golf game will forever change…for the better!

Secret #1: A Flat Left Wrist

Because the golf stroke involves a golf club, a left arm, and a wrist in between, it is called a “lever system”. The left wrist acts as a “hinge pin” much like the old time “flail” used to beat wheat. This “hinge pin” can rotate, cock or uncock but NEVER Bends!

Golfers however routinely bend the left wrist causing the clubhead to reach the ball before the hands do. This causes a “quitting” motion, adds loft to the clubface, points the face to the left of target, makes the clubhead swing upward disrupting the downward motion that ALL good golf shots MUST have. Good players DELOFT the clubface at Impact. Poor players ADD loft to the club face  costing them distance, direction, and trajectory.

A 5 iron, for example, has approximately 8 degrees for “forward lean” when soled properly. At Impact with good players the “lean” is approximately 15 degrees. This turns the 5 iron into a 4 iron. Poor players reach Impact with a “backward” leaning clubshaft thereby ADDING loft and turning the 5 iron into a 6-7 iron!

Secret #2: A Staright Plane Line

You only have two choices when it comes to the swing plane, you are either on or you’re off. There is no middle ground!

What exactly is the swing plane? The plane is the angle of the clubshaft as it sets at address – period! It is NOT Hogans plane of glass as many would have you to believe. There are only three planes available;

1. Horizontal – a wall
2. Vertical – the floor
3. Inclined somewhere in between

As golfers you and I use the Inclined Plane to swing the club back up and end, down out and forward, up back and in making the Golf Stroke three dimensional.

The clubshaft, actually the sweetspot of the club, may travel to any other plane angle during the swing as long as it DOES NOT cross the base of the plane. Here is a simple way you can know if you are on plane or not. Whichever end of the club is nearest to the ground MUST also point at the base of the plane from horizon to horizon. Credit union location Michigan East Lansing Michigan State University Federal Credit Union If neither end is nearer then the clubshaft MUST be horizontal to the ground and parallel to the base of plane.

Secret #3: A Lagging Clubhead

Lag by definition means “trailing”. When the clubhead passes the hands coming into Impact there is no “lag”. Without “lag” the golf ball cannot be compressed, we cannot hit downward, and we have a tremendous power loss. Clubhead lag promotes a steady and even acceleration giving us a dependable way to control distance.

Look at any picture of your favorite player at Impact. The left arm and clubshaft are in ONE LINE! Never two lines. This means that the player is utilizing “lag”. When a ball is struck with “lag” it explodes off the clubface! Without this “lag” the sound turns into one of mush, a soft Impact instead of a driving Impact.

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If you follow this outline, learn these three “Secrets” you will be hitting the ball with more compression than you ever thought possible.

For example, a Driver striking a golf ball with a 2 degree “backward” leaning clubshaft at 100 mph with 9.5 degrees of loft produces a launch angle of 6.4 degrees and a carry distance of 230 yards.

By changing Impact to a 2 degree forward leaning clubshaft the player produces a launch angle of 10.4 degrees and a carry of 251 yards. A 21 YARD INCREASE WITHOUT buying a new Driver and simply having clubhead lag!

YOU can improve your game dramatically by following the steps outlined above. Become the best player YOU can be and start winning those 4 way presses! If YOU really want to elevate your game, hit it farther, straighter, and nearer the hole then practice what I’ve shared with you.

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Chuck Evans, G.S.E.D.
www.chuckevansgolf.com
chuck@chuckevansgolf.com

P.S. Visit our website for more information on how to become the best player YOU can be.
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Chuck Evans is one of only 31 Teachers in the world to hold the designation of “Doctorate in Golf Stroke

Chuck has appeared on numerous golf talk shows, written and published instructional articles in local, regional, and national golf publications. His DVD, “60 Days To Game Improvement” has sold in excess of 10,000 copies and his new eBook, “How To Build YOUR Golf Swing” is in the library of amateurs and Teaching Professional alike. He has also appeared as the featured instructor for education classes regarding the golf swing at various PGA Sections and Chapters around the country and has been nominated numerous times for Golf Digest’s Top 50 Teachers and Golf Magazine’s Top 100 Teachers.

In addition Chuck has held the positions of Director of Schools for the PGA Tour Golf Academy and the Director of Instruction for the United States Golf Institute.