Learning Good Golf Swing Mechanics
We all want to have more power in our golf swing. Want to see that ball go sailing off the tee straight down the fairway a couple of hundred yards. Now of course we’ve all also seen someone consistently do that at a course on Sunday afternoon, so effortlessly, just like the club was slicing through butter. What do these people with the perfect Golf Swing and a perfect drive every time have that we don’t have. Is it speed, strength, or a better driver? Chances are none of the above, what they have mastered is their golf swing mechanics.
Of course a better driver made of the latest and greatest material will help add a few yards to your drive, also having strength in the right muscles will help out. How ever all of these things aren’t worth a dime if you’re not using them correctly. And to use them correctly you need to have the right swing mechanics down. Until you understand exactly what happens when you swing a golf club, how the weight is transferred and how mechanics come into play rather then brute force and strength you’ll continue to either duff the ball or be plagued by that evil hook or slice.
So is this to say that you should just purchase an inexpensive club, and any out of shape bum can learn to drive a winning ball? No not at all, your equipment and physical fitness level are very important, how ever you need to learn to use it right. A bad swing will only produce one thing, bad results. Whether it’s a good club or a bad club, or your strong or weak.
If you’re over the top with your golf swing, or to far on the inside it will come out in the direction of the ball. Being able to correct this error through your swing mechanics is when you’ve really learned to master the controllable par of this crazy game.
Working consistently to tweak your swing through mechanics is how you’ll slowly but surely shave those strokes off of your handicap. The key is know the right way to do it in the first place so you have a base to work from. It is a lot more difficult for us to unlearn bad habits in our swing sequence then it is to take the time to learn the correct movements and technique the first time around. Remember bad habits are difficult to break, and this is no different in golf then it is in any other area of life.
Take advantage of Golf Instruction
One big let down with amateur golfers is that they get discouraged when they don’t see improvement after practicing and practicing at the driving range. All they’re learning to do is slice that ball further and further rather then discovering how to correct it and drive it straighter and straighter. This can all be corrected by introducing the correct instruction to your practicing regime. Whether it’s a quality instructional video or book, or you register for lessons from the local pro you need a solid foundation to understand why a golf ball will tend to slice or hook. Or where the correction can be made in your swing to stop topping the ball. Without proper instruction you can’t fully understand correct golf swing mechanics, and will continue to be frustrated.
D Fraser
http://www.articlesbase.com/golf-articles/learning-good-golf-swing-mechanics-99420.html
Filed under: Golf Swing
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Is it really important to have your left arm straight and high to have a good golf swing?
I’ve gotten lessons and tips from friends and random golfers at the driving range and they all say the same thing, try to keep your left arm straight and bring it back as far as you can. Well, I can bring it back pretty far, far enough to have the club almost parallel to the ground, but I have to slightly bend my left elbow. I can also keep my left arm totally straight, but I would only get up to a half backswing, with full torso/hip rotation. I’m new to the game of golf and I want to learn the textbook body mechanics of the swing and still be comfortable/balanced. I feel that when I swing comfortably, it’s not textbook. When I swing textbook, it’s not comfortable. Any advice/tips would help a lot. Thanks.
You sound like a friend of mine that was keeping his left arm straight, but was unaware that you DO bend your wrists. at the top of your backswing the club shaft and your wrists should be at about a 90 degree angle, and you release (straighten) your wrists at impact. Ask a local golf instructor about proper positions and how to "release" the club
http://www.pga2be.com
the place for golfers
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You sound like a friend of mine that was keeping his left arm straight, but was unaware that you do bend your wrists. at the top of your backswing the club shaft and your wrists should be at about a 90 degree angle, and you release (straighten) your wrists at impact. Ask a local golf instructor about proper positions and how to "release" the club. It also depends on what type of swing you are doing. and how flexible you are
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Get some tips from this book, "How To Master The Golf Swing " might help you.
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http://cclhealth.grabithere.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=GOLF
No, your left arm does not have to stay straight. It is extended however but not locked and straight. It is important to create some width in your backswing by having your hands as far from your body as possible. But if you try to keep your left arm locked straight, it will limit the length and effectiveness of your backswing.
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The "straight left arm" maintains the consistant swing arc that is required to make a good golf swing. It also ensures the arc is extended to its full potential; bigger arc = higher swing speed.
You don’t have to hyperextend your elbow, to keep the left arm straight. If you are forcing it.. then you are doing too much. But.. also.. if the left arm breaks down somewhere in the backswing.. then that is the point that you are not rotating correctly. If you rotate with the upper body; chest, shoulders.. then the left arm will not break down.
Also.. you do not have to get the backswing to "parallel to the target line". It is totally acceptable to be "laid off" and not quite back to the parallel position. Tommy Armour III has a backswing that barely makes it past the 9:00 position and he’s been playing pretty well on the PGA this season. He has alot of power in that compact swing.
So.. don’t believe all the hype and technicalities of the golf swing. As long as you perform the basic fundamentals, make your swing, your own swing.
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More important to keep the left arm straight than to be able to take it all the way back. Keeping it straight allows you to bring the club back to where it started and hit the ball squarely each time. If you really want to learn the best techniques spend $12 on Hogan’s book "Five lessons, the modern fundamentals of golf". It will give you sound fundamentals in all aspects of the swing and you will be off to a great start. The golf swing is not a ‘comfortable’ movement for anyone until you have done it thousands of times.
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