Online Golf Tips

 

Holding your club well

When we grip the golf club we not want to lose traction. We want a firm grip.

We do not want to say so tight that the muscles of the arms and shoulders are intimately linked.. Not at all. But we want these hands tight on the club. What, you ask, about the wrists? If they are tight, won't the swing  be too be stiff and wooden? And how will I get my wrist break?

The body should be slightly bent from the waist but the shoulders shall be rounded or hunched. The head should be down and not to an excessive degree, but rather than downward. The right shoulder, of course, will be lower than the left because the right hand is lower on the tree to the left hand.

We have rarely seen someone too rigid or too tight, swinging a golf club (except perhaps to frighten beginners), but we saw thousands too loose.

The trend of all students is too weak to take a grip. The loose grip faults leads to opening their hands on high, the collapse of the left wrist, over swing, and so forth.

The tight grip, even though it may feel uncomfortable for a while, acts as a brace against these mistakes and makes the whole action swinging easier to perform correctly.

Controlled evolution we also mean with almost all the fingers that are in the club. These would be the last three, primarily, in the left hand and the first three from the right. Many players tend to put the forefinger of the right hand, the one that hooks around the tree just below the right thumb, very slightly on the club. Don 't do it.

Hook this finger firmly around the tree, so that the edge of this is a precise contact with the tip of the thumb. If you hold, the club will be liable to fall, from the top of his swing, in the big V between the thumb and index. That means a loss of control at the top.

So much for the tight grip elbow two overlap, to reduce it to the shape of capsules.
Now, how can we defend the ball? No great mystery is not involved in either, although some points must be respected.

First, we must take a position that allows us to swing the club back freely, and to bring to the ball on an arc inside-out easily. To this end, the weight should be about equally divided between the feet. The knees should be slightly bent, better than too little.