T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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590.1 | Don't worry; be happy | CURIE::TDAVIS | | Tue Apr 25 1989 15:55 | 50 |
| < I just got done taking 5 indoor group lessons and now I can't hit
< the ball anymore. Right now the only clubs I can hit half way decent
< are the SW, PW, and 9. From the 8 on up it's a nightmare.
<
< Right now I'm hitting way behind the ball, taking a large chunk
< of mother earth and ofcourse the ball goes nowhere. Trouble is
Sounds very familiar!
When I first took up the game, I was playing as a sub in the DEC
league. I played well enough to catch the bug and made enough golfing
friends to get invited to go down to Myrtle Beach with a bunch of guys
the following March. I decided I would learn the game over the winter,
so I enrolled in an indoor golf school. Went 3-4 times a week, hit
thousands of balls, was told by the pro that I had a great swing and
should get my handicap down to the single numbers by the end of the
summer. I went to Myrtle beach flushed with confidence.
I strolled out to the practice tee at Pine Lakes the first morning,
told one of the guys about how I had worked on my game all winter, so
look out, and proceeded to hit one fat shot after another. And kept up
that pace right through the round, swinging harder and madder each
time.
Ended up tearing all the muscles on my right side, going to the
hospital, meeting a nurse (but that's another story), and playing the
remaining 8 days in a fog of pain, muscle relaxers, and codene (sp?).
The moral?
Relax. Go to a practice tee with GRASS and hit a lot of balls as
smoothly and sweetly as you can. It will come to you.
I'm not sure why that happens, but my guess is that it's one or both
of the following:
a) Mats are very forgiving of a fat shot; the club bounces through it
unnoticed. You can groove a fat shot on them.
b) If you were using the kind of mts that are rubber where you stand
and fake grass in the hitting area, then your feet are artificially
elevated, and so is your whole swing arc. Go to the lush grass of a
real course and that arc drops a little, causing that dreaded fat
shot.
regardless of the cause, the fat shots will go away. (The pro was
right, I did get my handicap down to 8 by September.)
Good luck.
|
590.2 | Same problem here! | JAWS::DIAZ | CMG/CDG/SAMG | Tue Apr 25 1989 16:07 | 15 |
| I have the same problem, and in my case is due to a couple of things:
1) I turn my left hip in bending down my left knee (I am lefty, so it
will be your right knee) on my down swing. If I make a concious
effort not to bend down my knee, but move my hips towards the target
then I usually can hit it clean.
2) Too tense. When I am tense, I don't extend my arms freely while
addressing the ball, but I do when trying to hit the ball, so I hit
the ball very fat. The cure? What else but relaxing the muscles.
My guess is there are many more reasons, but again practice will
help.
Tavo
|
590.3 | check ball position | TOOK::RASPUZZI | Michael Raspuzzi | Tue Apr 25 1989 16:24 | 23 |
| You also might want to check your ball position. You might be hitting shots
fat because the ball is too far forward in your stance and this is putting
you in a goofy stance.
If in doubt of your stance, take a few of your clubs and lay them down on the
ground so you can see where your feet are supposed to be and where you would
like the ball positioned.
Another cause is an incorrect weight shift. On your follow through, do you
feel like you are falling backwards or are you finishing with all your weight
on your right side? If so, this is sign that you are not making the weight
transition on your downswing.
Then there is the head dip... If you can't keep your head still (like having
it dip down on your backswing) this will cause you to hit it fat. If this
is the case, have a friend grab your hair and hold it when you address the
ball. Have this person hold onto your hair tightly while you swing. If your
head moves, your hair will get pulled and it will not be pleasant.
These are just a couple of check points I use when I start hitting fat shots
or chilly dipped shots. Hope this helps you out.
Mike
|
590.4 | Thanks | FROST::WILLIAMS | Looking for a Pitcher | Tue Apr 25 1989 17:04 | 8 |
|
Thanks for the insight and tips. I already feel a little better
knowing others have suffered through a "Lesson Slump".
Thanks again,
Shane
|
590.5 | 3/4 swing | HOCUS::HATTON | | Wed Apr 26 1989 11:03 | 10 |
| One last peace of info on the over-cocking of the wrists. Let
this happen naturally (supinate & pronate), it should not be a consious
effort. Also, a lot of golfers go past parallel on the backswing,
when this happens it becomes very difficult to get back to square
on contact. Try taking a 3/4 backswing, you may come to realize
that the 3/4 is in fact a full backswing!
By the by, mats will not make a difference, practice and relaxed
swings will. Good luck.
Cam
|
590.6 | One Simple Solution | BOSHOG::VARLEY | | Wed Apr 26 1989 11:05 | 21 |
| I taught golf for a few years, mostly in the Met section (N.Y.)
of the P.G.A., and I'll go out on a limb and say you have ONE problem:
The head dip mentioned previously. If your head stays at the same
level which it is at address YOU CANNOT HIT IT FAT! It's that simple.
Other things contribute to hitting it fat, but I think you ought
to work on one simple thought, and that's it. You can have a friend
hold the butt of a club under your chin to assist you, if you wish.
I like to envision the head as being in a 3 cornered box - with
the front, top and bottom CLOSED, and the back open. Watch the pro's,
and notice how square their left cheek stays at impact; it almost
looks as if their head is moving backward.
Basically, if you lift your head (NOT "look up" with your eyes),
you'll hit it thin; if you dip your head, you'll hit it (ugh!) fat,
and if you move your head left (assuming you're a right hander),
you'll hit it to the right. I'm sure you're picking the club up
instead of turning your shoulders, and lunging down - but if you
KEEP YOUR HEAD LEVEL, you CANNOT hit it fat! Hope this helps.
Jack (the Skoal Bandit) Varley
|