That is great advice. The only problem is when I aim left to compensate for my slice, I make great contact and it goes left. The next hole I aim straight and it goes right.
@@sasquatch8923 also can use the tee box to your advantage. In this video, a slicer really should start at the right side of the tee box, aiming back across the fairway to the left edge. This gives you the widest possible dispersion that is in the fairway, a straight shot won't run through since the angle makes it further, and a cut and even slice will find the center of fairway to right edge.
Any ideas on my situation regarding aim? I set up with my feet aimed slightly right with slightly closed or inline shoulders for a slight draw. If I hit it good which is probably 65% of the time with either a slight draw as desired, lighting the ball slightly to the right, drawing back to my intended target or I'll hit the ball relatively straight relative to my setup alignment, resulting in landing slightly right to the target. However, my most common miss which happens maybe 25% of the time, which is a push to the right because I left the club face slightly open relative to my swing path which is already aiming slightly right. About 5% of the time I'll hit a low hook and the other 5% of the time I hit my worst shot with a massively open face with still an in to out path, resulting in a high flyer starting right and then fading even further right due to the terrible swipy in to out path with an open face. However, my problem with this is that I prefer to setup for a baby draw, aimed slightly right, with slightly closed or neutral shoulders but with my right and left toes pointing slightly outward to allow for some freedom the ability to really get a nice long connected backswing with some width at the top and then drop the club with the downswing compression pushing into the ground, clearing my body and hips due to my flexibility. However, since my most common miss is that push to the right, if I try and counter act that and aim left, things seem to get inconsistent because aiming left I don't feel comfortable with the baby draw setup whilst aiming left, so often times I'll hit my straight shot or baby draw and end up a good bit left. Sometimes though aiming left will subconsciously make me hit a fade and I end up actually hitting a nice shot but it's a total diff shot than my go to, so less consistent. So aiming left I could end up trying to compensate too much and end up hitting more down on the ball from out to in hitting a low cut that can sometimes end up leaking quite a bit more right at the end of the ball flight where the beginning part looked ok. In my case should I continue setting up aiming slightly right for my baby draw and just try and manage face to path to limit those right pushes? This seems the most comfortable and consistent to me despite the fact that my common miss is that push right while aiming right. Would love to hear your thoughts.
Hi, is there any way to adapt lumberjack skills in a good golf swing, by which, I mean, is using biceps for power and faster ball speed and further distance?
Consistency is my problem. I don't have a consistent miss. Beyond that, the K stance for driver confuses my baseball brain. I can hit my irons really well, but my driver is relatively short compared to my iron distances.
Personally I feel you need to have the lofty goal of ‘best’ not ‘average, especially when taking in consideration distance control with out irons etc. The goal is to reach our potential so if we are thinking average we will get average.
I get what you are saying, but the more average shots you hit, success will follow. The error rate will reduce over time and your average shot will actually become good shots. No sense going for broke on every shot and end up in trouble 9 out of 10 times. I never improved until I learned what my limits were.
Don't mistake this from trying to be better. We are still working hard to be our very best but it's so rare we hit our target with any shot so it's very smart (not negative) to aim to allow for a miss. This way, over the course of a whole round we are way more consistent. The best players in the world do this so well and most amateurs are trying to hit the perfect shot when they are less likely to hit it. Strive to be your best but manage your game with reality. Hope that makes sense?
Hope this video can help you lower your scores guys! If you would like more coaching from myself and Piers click here🏌🏻♂⛳👉meandmygolf.com/build-your-journey-youtube/?RU-vid&Golfers_Plan&SM
As for putting routine, it shouldn't need to be said (but it does): Read the green as you're walking up to your ball. Read the green while others are putting. Be quick about it. One of my playing partners probably takes an 30 seconds more on the green than the rest of us. He single-handedly adds 9 minutes to our rounds. Annoying for us, and for the groups behind us.
The pure mental anxiety I feel on the course is what's holding me back. I got a hole in one last round but the fact I could not hit a ball off the tee ruined me. I don't know how to fix it.
@@meandmygolf. I have watched your videos and they have been helpful I just can't make it work on the tee. I can't understand why everyone else makes it look easy. I slow down, I aim left, I do everything every video tells me to do yet my execution I top it all the time.
RAP putting...😂, if you want to read a green, do the full clock face. Get there quickly and walk the full 360 degrees around the flag, pick an apex point and hit it over that.
1. You know, if you play more right and aim more left you will play more to the right. 2. ✔ 3. ✔Speed is the King, aiming the Queen. I think that you first check the distance, then the slope and then the break. 4. ✔I think that the good players atack the flag. If you don't, you will always remain a mediocre player. It's also about trusting your own golf swing. If something doesn't work out, you have to accept it and you get better at bunker play etc. 5. ✔ 6. ✔ 7. ✔why does a golf pro wear sweatpants?😅