Entries Tagged as 'Driver'

Golf Swing Setup - How To Address Golf Ball

Bobby Eldridge Bio PictureWritten By
Bobby Eldridge
Founder of Golf Swing Instruction

The best kept secret in golf is to make sure you aim your golf club first then your body.  This game is tough enough without making it more difficult by aiming your body first.  Let me explain what happens when you aim your body first.

When you walk up to the golf ball and plant your feet in the ground and aim them AT the target, along with your knees, hips and shoulders, from the get-go, you are in big trouble.  Everything would be OK, except, you have to place the club behind the ball.  When you sole the clubhead it is going to be aimed MILES to the right of the target.

Now let me tell you what is has to happen from here.  You will have to compensate in order to get the golf ball to fly towards your target.  You will have to hook or pull it back on target.  That my friend is one tough way to play golf.  Don’t get me wrong, it can be done that way but it is very difficult.

Now I am going to tell you an easier way to play golf.  When you walk up to the golf ball you should sole the club first, aiming it at your target. 

Once you have done that you can begin to grip the club.

As you grip the club you can walk into the shot with your right foot behind you and then swing your left foot around so it is parallel to where you want the ball to start.

Once you have placed your feet parallel to the intended target line then your knees, hips and shoulders will follow.

From this position you look down the target line and “See” the target instead of turning your head back to the left to see it.  From this position you NEVER have to compensate during the golf swing.  You can make a full turn in the backswing and smash it from there. 

SO, repeat after me…golf club first then your body when you address the golf ball and not…body first, then golf club.

Add 15 more yards to your tee shot in 90 Days

Bobby Eldridge Bio PictureWritten By
Bobby Eldridge
Founder of Golf Swing Fixes

If you want to add 15 more yards to your tee shot-in three months, do what I did.  I have a confession to make.  Less than 24 months ago, my great friend Harvey Mackay asked me if I wanted to play 18 holes the following week.  I had cut way back on my golf both playing and practicing for the past couple of years and I was not looking forward to this round of golf.

By the time I reached the 12 hole he (74 year old) Harvey had outdriven me four times.  Harvey was playing to a 9 at the time and he is a great driver of the golf ball.  I should say straight driver of the golf ball with an average of 225 yards.  If I hit it well I was maybe 15 yards past him.  However if I missed the tee shot a tiny bit, I was hitting first onto the green.

When I walked up to the 13th tee, I remember it as thou it was yesterday, I decided that I was going to do something about my golf game.  The first thing I needed to do was start practicing and the second thing was to CATCH UP with the game.  It was passing me by.  The game was changing (getting longer) and I was stuck in neutral.

The next moring I ordered a Momentus Heavy Hittable Driver off of the internet with overnight delievery.  I could hardly pick it up.  I took it to the range, swung it five times and almost feel over.  That is when I decided that I needed to come up with a routine so I could take advantage of my new club.

I decided that I was going to swing the club 25 times, three days a week whether I was at the golf course or not.  In the backyard I went every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.  Once I started using it at the practice facility I then came up with another way to use it.  During practice sessions I swung it three times for every six balls I hit.  I like to hit three draws, three fades, three straight shots and then three swings with the heavy driver.

On days that I play, I have another routine that I have used for years.  I hit three shots with every club in my bag.  Now my routine includes swinging the heavy driver one time every time I change clubs.

OK, I know you are dying to hear the results.  The only reason I am not going to tell you how much further I am hitting the ball is that everybody is different.  The one thing I will tell you is that I am back.  I have caught up with the sport and…well ok, I am at least 20 yards further off of the tee and 1.5 clubs longer with my irons.  BUT, I have been VERY committed to this process.  I have not missed a day in two years.

VERY IMPORTANT REMINDERS:

#1.  Warm up before you pick up a heavy driver and start swinging it

#2.  Even thou it says it is a HITTABLE club, make 200 practice swings with it before you start hitting balls.  You have to get use to it first.

#3.  This is NOT an overnight fix for short tee shots.  Stay committed to see results.

#4.  I added 15 yards in the first three months, I kept going so I can keep what I have!!!

#5.  Harvey Mackay (USE YOUR HEAD TO GET YOUR FOOT IN THE DOOR) is a genius at dishing out great business advice.  I took advantage of his lesson to me.

Start using a HITTABLE HEAVY DRIVER today and you will add 15 more yards to your tee shot-in three months, like me.

How To Start Your Golf Downswing

Bobby Eldridge Bio PictureWritten By
Bobby Eldridge
Founder of Online Golf Instruction

One of these days I am going to send out a survey to all golfers and it’s going to ask one question, “What starts the downswing?”

You can not believe some of the answers I have heard over the past 30 years.  Today I will tell you my answer and then I will tell you why I believe it to be.  The first thing you have to remember is that before you finish your back swing the golf club is already beginning to swing back towards the ball.  That is a fact.  I have a camera that takes 1000 fps and I have seen it on new golfers and Tour Professionals.  It is really cool.

Let’s put that fact aside and talk about the question as it relates to our swing thoughts.  No matter who you ask they will give you an answer.  The answer might start with the feet, ankles, hips and work it’s way up to the shoulders or chest.

You either believe that it is the upper body and arms or the lower body, the hips, knees, legs, ankles or feet.  Somewhere in the back of your mind you believe one or the other.  Upper body or lower body.

My take on it is a little different.  It has everything to do with your own golf swing.  If you are someone that hits a large number of pulls and hooks, you are going to have to move the bottom half of your body first.  If you hook or pull the golf ball the golf club is arriving at the bottom of the golf ball sooner than your body.  Instead of slowing down your arm swing you should speed up OR start your bottom half of your body first.

On the other hand.  If you are someone that hits pushes or slices, you are someone that is getting the body to active to soon in the downswing and the golf club is falling behind you.  Instead of changing your body action, try speeding up your arms and hands OR start them first.

Lastly, if you are someone that hits most of your shots in front of you.  STOP READING THIS ARTICLE.  It is not for you.  Seriously, if you are hitting the ball solid and you don’t struggle with shots to the right or left, then your timing is great.

If you stop and think about it, if the club arrives before you, your shots will start left, most of the time.  If the club arrives after you, your shots will start to the right, most of the time.  The next time someone asks you what starts the downswing, you can tell them-it all depends.

How To Stop Pushing Your Golf Ball To The Right

In this golf video tip, I want to show you how to stop pushing your golf ball to the right with simple golf instruction and tips. This is a very frustrating miss in golf, which causes a great loss of yardage on every shot. We’ll fix that real soon.

If you want fix your golf swing quickly, check out my Golf Swing Instruction site!

Golf swing advice: Use your wrists for more power

Bobby Eldridge Bio PictureWritten By
Bobby Eldridge
Founder of Golf Download Video Fixes

I am going to give you some great golf swing advice.  If you want to hit the golf ball further, you are going to have to use your wrists.  Before you run out to the practice facility, I have to tell you exactly “how” to use your wrist to benefit your golf swing.

Let’s start at the address position.  When you grip the golf club your wrist are unhinged.  As you start the club back the toe begins to roll open and so do your wrists.  When you reach the 9:00 o’clock position the back of the left hand should be parallel to your target line.

This is where you have to pay close attention to your wrists.  From this position to the top of the backswing the wrists have to start (folding, breaking or unhinging) call it what you want, they have to have some play in them.  By the time you reach the top of the backswing the shaft has to be parallel to the ground.

Golf Wrist Cock Backswing

I know some of you struggle with arthritis, stiffness or the inability to turn like you use to.  When you reach the top of the backswing and your shaft is pointing to the sky, you are going to loose a lot of yardage.  The key here is to make sure you soften up the wrists and let them fold.  Do not keep them in the same position as they were in at address.  You are going to need as much sling in the downswing as you can muster up.

No Golf Wrist Cock

The best tip I can give you so you know for sure that you are folding your wrists at the top of the backswing is called the thumb pad drill.  When you address the golf ball your left thumb is on the top of the golf club.  When you reach the 9:00 o’clock position your left thumb is still on top of the golf club.  As you continue to turn your right shoulder out of the way and swing the club to the top of the backswing, your thumb pad is now UNDER the golf club.  In other words your left thumb pad is supporting the club at the top of the backswing.  That is how you can tell if you used your wrist.

I know this golf swing advice will help you hit longer shots the next time you tee it up.

How To Learn From Your Golf Scorecard

There is one thing about the game of golf: score cards don’t lie.  Ok I will agree with you on one point.  I have played a number of rounds in my life where I hit the ball very well, putted great and got nothing out of the round. 

On the other hand there have been many rounds where I couldn’t find the golf course.  I was lucky no one got hurt.  However at the end of the day when I added up the score card I was very pleased with the number. 

You have to keep in mind that golf is NOT one round.  It is a lifetime experience.  The only way you are going to improve is to continue to punch holes in your score card and find out what part of your game needs work.  That does not happen in one round of golf.

I know you are wondering where you should start.  There are a couple of stats that jump out at me.  Start with the driver.  You have to track every tee shot.  Keep a blank score card in your pocket and after every tee shot record whether you hit the fairway or missed to the left or right. 

The next statistic that will help you lower your score is did you short side your approach shot?  It doesn’t matter if it is the first, second, third or even fourth shot of the hole.  Did you short side yourself?  The definition of short siding is when you leave your approach shot in a position where you don’t have any green to work with. 

Everytime you prepare to approach a green you have to ask yourself the 10 million dollar question.  What side is the short side?  The safe side might leave you with a 30 yard pitch shot with nothing but a tiny fringe and then the putting green in front of you.  The short side might leave you with a 7 yard LOB shot over a bunker with a 12 foot lip and a slope running straight down hill to the hole.  You do the math.  It doesn’t take many of those a day to ruin a good round of golf.

Lastly, grade your attitude before you tee off, when you make the turn and when you walk off of the golf course.  It is a great stat to keep track of.  If you can maintain an upbeat and fun attitude your scores will reflect it.  I have gone on record for years as saying that I haven’t found a more enjoyable place to spend four hours than a golf course-when I am playing well and having fun.  On the other hand it is the most miserable place to be for four hours when you are struggling and not having fun.

Remember, if you use them correctly, score cards don’t lie.

For longer and straighter shots-LIGHTEN YOUR GRIP

There is a lot to be said about the amount of pressure you use to hold onto a golf club.  As a matter of fact there is grip pressure can also apply to most sports.  Keep in mind whether you are swinging a baseball bat, shooting a basketball, hitting a tennis ball or swinging a golf club; the tighter the muscles the more loss of speed and touch. 

Since there is no measuring device to gauge how tight you are gripping the club, you are going to have to go OLD SCHOOL with me on this one. 

If you slice the golf ball or hit shots to the right, you might be gripping the club too tight. If you grip the club too tight then your arms and shoulders will not be relaxed.  When you swing the golf club with a grip that is too tight you will not RELEASE the clubhead on time or with much speed.

One thing you have to keep in mind is that you might grip the club with the correct amount of pressure during your weekly round of golf with your friends.  Unfortunatley when it is tournament time, that might change.  Standing on the 17th tee with a one stroke lead in your club championship might cause the old “white knuckle grip” to raise it’s ugly head.

I want to leave you with a great way you can practice gripping it lighter.  Take out an 8 iron and after you address the golf ball and grip the club, I want you to grip it as tight as you possibly can.  Now I want you to hit three shots.  Make sure you keep the tight grip during the address, backswing, downswing, impact and follow through.  (That is how you grip it on the 17th tee.)

On the fourth shot I want you to go through the same routine, grip the club as tight as possible and then relax your grip as thou the club was going to come out of your hands.  I want you to hold it as thou you were holding a babies hand.  Now hit three more shots and compare the results. 

Remember:  Grip it as thou you were holding a babies hand, not holding on for your dear life!

Golf Driver Tee Height - You Gotta Get It Right!

Re: The correct golf driver tee height to hit longer drives.

I know with the size of the new drivers in the past 10 years it has made it very difficult for the average player to know how high to tee the ball up.  Just because you go out and buy one of those monsters that doesn’t mean you have to tee it up on a top of a telephone pole.

The rule of thumb is simple.  If your normal ball flight is a slice, then tee it UP high, where nearly half the ball is above your driver face when on the tee.  The higher you tee it the easier it is to the get the clubhead under the ball and role it over.

If your normal ball flight is a hook, then tee it DOWN, where the top of the ball is barely above the top of your driver face. The lower you tee it the more difficult it is to get the clubface under the ball in a closed position at impact.  If the ball is teed low the only way to make contact is for the face to return slightly open.

Finally, if your natural ball flight is a slight draw, slight fade, or straight-you are at the correct tee height.

Golfingly yours,
Bobby

P.S. If you’re struggling with a slice, you might want to take a look at my Cure Golf Slice golf fix over at my new site I Golf Fixes. This is an instantly downloadable video and ebook fix for slicing your golf driver.

Stop Hooking Your Driver

GET A GRIP ON YOUR TEE SHOTS…

When you are hooking your driver the one thing you have to keep in mind is the clubface is CLOSED at impact.  That is what a hook is, a golf ball with right to left spin on it.  During this lesson you can not loose focus of what we are trying to accomplish.  There are at least 10 reasons why you hook a tee shot.  Today we are going to focus on two of them and yes they are related.  GRIP and GRIP PRESSURE.

You have heard me say this before “the grip is the steering wheel of the golf swing”.  It is the only part of your body that touches the club and it plays a hugh roll in what the clubface does throughout the entire swing.  Not degress but let’s spend some time talking about how to grip the club correctly.

#1.  The grip should feel like you have the club more in the fingers/palm of the left hand.  The club rests against the bottom of the thumb.  As you grip the club with the right hand it will naturally feel as thou you grip it more with the fingers and less with the palm.  The bottom of the right thumb should cover the left thumb. 

#2.  Now let’s move on to what the grip should look like when you look down at it.  When Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson and Tiger Woods look down they see the top of one knuckle of the left hand.  The reason for this grip is to make sure the clubface is square at impact.  The speed of their swing has the club head arriving at the golf ball quicker than you and I.  However, if you are hooking your tee shots your grip should look more like theirs.  There is one huge problem.  When I teach slicers most of the time I have them move their grip further to the right.  They fall in love with me in three swings.  When you take a slicer and move their grip, it is usually the first time in their life that the clubface returns square.  On the other hand: when I teach golfers who hook the golf ball I have to move their grip to the LEFT and they DO NOT fallen in love with me immediately.  For that matter it might take a few months.  The reason is simple, comfort.  When you move your grip from the right to the left it feels as thou you can’t even swing the golf club back away from the golf ball.

 #2.  With that being said then next step is vitally important.  The palms MUST face each other.  You can not have the left hand over to the left and the right hand over to the right.  When you look down you have to see no more than one knuckle of the left hand and then you have to place the right hand on the golf club matching the palm of the left.  This is VERY uncomfortable for some time.  It will work, I guarantee it.

#3.  I have a theory, if it works I don’t care how uncomfortable I am, as long as it works.  Let’s get right into the second reason.  Grip pressure.  For those of you that hook the golf ball keep this in mind.  You are probably gripping the club in your left hand to LIGHLTY.  I want you to grip the left hand twice as tight as you normally do.  When you grip the club tighter in the left hand you will slow the toe down in the downswing and the golf ball will fly straighter. 

There you have it.  Weaken your grip and hold on tighter with the left.  As soon as you stop the hook you start drawing the golf ball. 

Join me tomorrow with a lesson on fat iron shots.

Golfingly yours,

Bobby

Releasing the Golf Club in the Downswing

THIS IS HOW TO LET IT GO!!!

The lesson today is titled “Releasing the Golf Club in the Downswing”.  I was tempted to call it “You CAN NOT Release the Golf Club in the Downswing unless you are in the Correct Position at the top of the Backswing”.   I thought it was a bit long.

I know many of you have struggled over the years with releasing the golf club.  Furthermore I know how frustrated you are reading all of the articles that have been written on the subject.  The problem is simple.  You can not release the golf club if you are not on the correct plane at the top of the backswing. 

If you are not on plane and you do release it you will swing the club either into the ground or on the top of the golf ball.  The lesson I am going to share with you today is going to explain how you can release the golf club into the BACK of the golf ball.

The golf swing is a chain of reaction motion.  If you can get all of those little links lined up then you are in good shape.  If one of the links is missing=DISASTER.  The one link I am going to talk about is the shoulder turn in the backswing.  The one thing that has to happen in the backswing is you have to turn your shoulders level and out of the way in order for the arms to swing up on the correct plane.  If you do this you will be able to find the correct path into the back of the golf ball.
If you don’t turn the shoulders in the backswing the arms will swing UP too much, too vertical.  If you try and release the golf club from this position you will swing the golf club too vertical in the downswing and drive the club straight into the ground. 

Most of you don’t have to worry about turning too much in the backswing.  However if you do turn too much in the backswing when you release the club in the downswing you will swing over the top of the ball.

Let me tell you exactly how you can teach yourself the correct way to turn in the backswing.  If you are lucky enough to have a small slope on your practice facility you are in business.  I will give you a visual of what the slope should look like and how to use it.  When you address the golf ball on the slope it should be above your feet.  The ideal lie would be where the golf ball was between your ankles and your knees.  DO NOT USE A SLOPE THAT IS BELOW YOUR FEET. 

Once you have addressed the golf ball make sure you sit back on your heels slightly.  From this lie you will develop the feel of turning in the backswing.  As soon as you start the golf club back the right shoulder will turn out of the way and your arms will swing up.  This is what we refer to as staying on plane in the backswing. 

The first 25 shots will feel odd; you might top a few or hit the ground behind some of them.  Give it time and you will begin to see the results. 

If you don’t have a slope to hit from I have another idea.  Address the golf ball and then lift the club head off of the ground three or four inches.  From this position you can simple turn and swing the arms up. 

Isn’t it funny that I haven’t mentioned the release very much?  The reason is simple.  If you get yourself in the correct position at the top of the backswing most of the time the release happens naturally.   

Don’t forget if you have any questions feel free to contact me by opening the Contact Bobby tab.  Come back tomorrow and I will have the continuation lesson on backspin.

Golfingly yours,

Bobby