T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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709.1 | | ENGINE::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Thu Aug 03 1989 18:00 | 13 |
| > One of the problems that keeps coming up is my left hand. It never
> quite feels comfortable and it seems to be overcompensating for my
> right hand.
You should focus on keeping the hands out of the swing. If you
concentrate on swinging with the arms & sholders the hands have to
do the right thing automatically (otherwise you would break your wrists).
Often your hands get active because your body is trying to compensate
for other parts of the body that aren't doing their job. I fight a
right hand that kicks in when I am trying to "hit" the ball, rather
than "swing" the club.
Larry
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709.2 | | TOOK::RASPUZZI | Michael Raspuzzi - VMS/LAT Engineering | Thu Aug 03 1989 20:35 | 15 |
| I am a lefty playing righthanded golf. It has helped my game because
my left arm keeps my swing in control. But I have been playing that
way for 20 years (started when I was 6) so that may have something to
do with it.
Speaking of tennis, try comparing your golf swing to a tennis backhand
- a two handed backhand. The lefthand guides and the right hand hits
for power.
At the current time, my right hand is starting to get too strong
because I occasionally don't roll my hands over (my right hand is
preventing it). The more I practice, the better I start feeling.
Practice, practice, practice along with patience, patience, patience.
Mike
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709.3 | My wife's a cackhanded Kate also | YUPPY::MOSSMAN | A lone mongoose in a world of snakes | Fri Aug 04 1989 08:59 | 24 |
| Scott,
If it is any help, my wife is just like you -left handed in everything
but golf. She started off playing left handed but the pr persuaded
her to change and now she is feeling much more comfortable.
For the record, her main problems were :-
a). Putting - but she persevered or else she couldn't do those little
"putting-stroke" type chips from just off the edge
of the edge of the green.
b). Backswing - as this used to be her follow-through it is now
much too strong in relation to a relatively eak
follow-through which used to be her nice slow
backswing.
I don't know if this helps but at least you now know you're not
alone out there. Let me know how you get on. Any help you can give
my wife will save ME endless grief !
Cheers. M.
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709.4 | More Input | CLSTR1::VARLEY | | Fri Aug 04 1989 10:30 | 24 |
| Here's 2 cents worth from a former teaching assistant pro right
now, I wish I had stayed in the business...):
1. For a right hander, your left hand is the "talent" hand in a
golf swing, and the right hand is the "power" hand. That's why we
teach you to grip half as hard with the right hand as the left.
Unfortunately, for most natural right handers, our feel AND strength
is all in the right hand, so learning can be a slow process. You
have a natural advantage in that your talent (control) hand is more
developed, but a slight disadvantage because your power hand isn't.
I suggest you work on just hitting it straight - don't worry about
distance, it'll come as you learn to release the club and your right
hand becomes more facile.
2. The 2 best sports analogies I can think of that relate to the
golf swing are:
A. A baseball swing - same swing but on an oblique plane, and you
don't move your front foot.
B. A topspin tennis forehand - from waist to waist height, the
shoulders and racquet move EXACTLY like a golf club does in a golf
swing.
Hope this helps,
--Jack.
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709.5 | more left side? | CSEVEN::DANIELE | | Fri Aug 04 1989 14:13 | 23 |
| I'll happily add to the confusion.
1. How could your left hand ever be too strong in a righty swing?
While everyone seems to have a different aspect of the swing they focus
on (and use in teaching), there is some concensus that pulling the lead
(left) hand down and thru the ball is THE thing to think about.
2. If you play baseball and tennis righty already, maybe your right
arm/hand are already strong (perhaps even dominant). Then your problem
reduces to every beginning golfer's; not having enough left side at
all.
I say this because I'm a righty who plays lefty (switched in 86 due to
injury). And I discovered that my "strong" right side was really quite
weak in the external rotation and extension required in a lefty golf
swing. What I thought was "no left hand" was really not enough right
side.
What is wrong with your swing? Or at least, what do most of your shots
look like. I was slicing badly initially when I switched. (Now I hook
badly ... ;-)
Mike
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709.6 | Course layouts favor righty? | SHARE::HURLEY | | Mon Aug 07 1989 10:49 | 10 |
|
I'm a lefty who plays righty. I was told early on that most
courses are set up for right handed players so I learned to play
righty. I'm not sure I've noticed an advantage, nor do I fully
understand the theory, but I have heard this from more than one
person.
Can anyone lend some insight into this?
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709.7 | Still trying! | LEDS::WALKINSHAW | | Mon Aug 07 1989 13:42 | 34 |
|
Hi!
It's me again... thanks for all the advice! At least I know I'm not
the only one out there!
>709.5 "What's wrong with your swing? / What's does the ball do?"
It may be easier to tell you what isn't wrong with it! :-)
Follow-through seems to be a big problem... but I don't know if
I could explain it. My shoulders tend to pull up (instead of
down and around) and my left foot twists.
I can tell you that I consistently slice the ball. It seems that
I am forever hugging the right side of the course.
** BTW: I initially said that my left hand never feels comfortable...
paying close attention to my hands during my last game, it
is actually the right hand that I am constantly trying to get
comfortable.
On a positive note, I played a little par 3 course in Wenham this
weekend (Bill Flynn's??) and my swing was better... HOWEVER, I just
can't seem to get rid of that slice/fade right!
Practice, practice, practice, practice...
-Scott
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709.8 | Definitely not Stow Acres North | EUCLID::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Mon Aug 07 1989 14:13 | 14 |
| Re: -.2
> I'm a lefty who plays righty. I was told early on that most
> courses are set up for right handed players so I learned to play
> righty.
I've generally found the tougher courses are set up to penalize the slicing
right handed golfer. (More dogleg lefts than dog leg rights.)
The people who told you that most courses are set up for right hand players
probably base it on the fact that a fade generally stops faster than a draw so
players.
Larry
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709.9 | might help... might not | CSEVEN::DANIELE | | Wed Aug 09 1989 09:56 | 27 |
| re .7
Well, I can tell you two drills that helped me.
1. Address the ball with your feet close together, and swing with just
your arms. This lets you concentrate on just your upper body,
releasing your hands, etc. For a while, I could hit it farther
this way than with a normal swing!
2. Hold the club with your left hand only, and hit some balls.
This will really tell you if you have any left side power.
When I first started swinging lefty and tried this (with my right
hand), I couldn't muster much of a swing. And I'm right handed.
I can hit a seven iron about 100 yards now with 1 hand, and that
feeling of driving my right hand thru the ball is my swing key.
It may not be the key to yours, but I bet this drill helps.
Also just in general, are you sure you're not swinging outside-in?
I really thought I had a nice inside-out plane, but I didn't. My arms
and hands just forced that club outside on the backswing (perhaps
remembering the old swing), and that never helps the slice. I had to
have someone at the range w/ me positioning the club at the top to get
over this.
Hope this helps. If not, just rear back and smack it!
Mike
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709.10 | Update from Golf Central | LEDS::WALKINSHAW | | Thu Aug 10 1989 11:40 | 16 |
| re .9
Thanks Mike. My pro has actually started me on those 2 drills and they
really seem to help. It's strange, but I sometimes hit the ball much
better this way then with 2 hands or with normal stance!
Update -- Had a lesson last night and changed my right hand grip. My
right hand seems to be much more in line now and I am hitting the ball
"solid" more consistently (Bye-bye slice, hello hook!).
Little did I know that this sport takes sooooooo much effort --- and
now I'm more addicted to it than ever!!!!
"Determined to improve"
--Scott
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