09/27/2013
Here's another article to help improve your game.
The Most Important Thing You Can Learn
What is the one thing a golfer can learn to do that will make the biggest impact on their scores? Learn to make the ball curve. If you go to the practice range and figure out how to hit shots that curve right to left and left to right, you'll be doing more for the future of your golf game than hitting 100 buckets of balls with no intention to your practice. The benefits of learning how to curve or “work” the ball go well beyond just being able to hit a shot around a tree and will positively affect almost every aspect of your game. When you create an understanding of the actions and feelings that cause different ball flights, and take control of those movements to make the ball do what you’ve envisioned, you’ll be able to truly PLAY golf.
Often when I ask my students if they tend to hit a draw or a fade they will answer me with, “I try to hit it straight” and while that is admirable, it’s highly unlikely and not the best strategy. Ben Hogan, one of the greatest golfers of all time said, “The ball is going to move right or left every time you hit it, so you had better make it go one way or the other.” The point he is making is rooted in the intrinsic difficulty of golf, but more so, it’s about feel and visualization. It’s of the utmost importance that before you hit any shot, you must be able to see that shot, so have a picture in your mind that you are trying to duplicate.
If you don’t know what makes the ball curve, understand these facts. The ball will come off the clubface at basically a 90-degree angle. For a right-handed golfer, the ball will curve right to left if the clubface is closed to the path of the clubhead through impact and the ball will curve left to right if the clubface is open to the path of the clubhead through impact. Being able to control the path that the club is swinging on and simultaneously knowing what your clubface is doing is your goal.
The next time you go to the practice range try the following drill; with a 7-iron, choose a target that is approximately 2/3 the distance you would hit a full 7-iron, set-up with everything square to that target (feet, body, clubface) and hit shots that curve both right to left and left to right, to that target. These shots should be punch shots, less than full swings that have an abbreviated follow-through, and fly lower than a standard 7-iron. Sounds simple enough, but it’s possible that you may struggle with successful ex*****on. That’s the point! You learn best when you are attempting things just outside your skill set, and that learning is accelerated when you are figuring out how to accomplish the task. Don’t feel as though you have to hit these shots all the way to your target, just like any new movements, you’ll want to hit these shots as short as necessary and with a motion that’s as slow as necessary to be successful. You are learning; you can always do things bigger and faster once you have the feel.
Playing golf is an artistic endeavor that is as much mental as it is physical, but not in the sports psychologist, controlling your emotions and thoughts way, but in the way that challenges your imagination and creativity. Just as an artist creates a beautiful painting, your works of art are your shots. Visualizing the ball flight, experiencing the feelings to come, then bringing it to fruition, that’s your masterpiece, but you’ll need the tools, knowledge and experience first, so learn how to curve the ball.