Posts Tagged ‘Banana’
"Fixing a Golf Slice" – 3 Tips to Break Your Slice Swing Habit
One of the golf swing basic you must master is to control you slice. Fully more than 70% of golfers hate to slice the golf ball because it is almost impossible to control the direction of the ball. This article will help you to fix your golf slice.
In fact, if you are a right hand golfer your golf ball will most probably curve to the right. To help you cure your “banana ball”. You must first understand your slice. Following are the 3 types of slice you might encounter.
Type 1: The straight slice
Your club is open when applying a bit of spin to the ball. Normally, you ball path will look straight initially and then curve to right. This is known as the straight slice.
Type 2: The Pull Slice
This kind of slide result from which your club facing outside in (clubhead facing slightly to the left). The result of this slice is first the ball will travel to your left and then curve to your right.
Type 3: The Push Slice
The opposite of pull slice which is club facing inside out (club head facing slightly to your right). The ball will first travel to your right and then curve to the right giving you a nice (as intended?) banana curve.
Now, you can judge your slice by looking at your ball path. You should have a better idea why your ball go in those directions. To fix your slice, follow these few tips.
Tip 1: Fix Your Swing
Chance are you have a bad habit of slicing the ball outside in creating a left spin on the ball. When enough left spin applied your ball will curve to the right naturally. To fix this, you have to hit your ball inside out.
Try to drop your right foot to about 10 inch (for right hander) to the back, this will allow you to swing outside in easier. Adopt this swing to your normal stance, you’ll be amazed.
Tip 2: Throw A Bag?
This is a simple yet effective practice. Get something with decent weight, perhaps an impact bag. Swing and drop the bag to the direction you want your ball to land on. Remember to choose something light enough not to hurt your back but heavy enough to control your swing motion.
This practice helps grooves an anti-cut motion. Keep your left arm connected to your chest as you swing back, and maintain that connection until you release the bag to the right of the target line.
Tip 3: Fix your direction
If your swing is straight, ie, not swinging outside in, chances are your clubface it facing the wrong direction. To fix your direction, get a small magnet with the size of a calculator battery and a tee. Glue the magnet to the tee and place the tee onto your clubface.
Place your DIY magneted tee to your clubface with the tee pointing out. Make a few slow-mo swings, and study your clubface to see whether the tee pointing to the direction you intended?
As clubs get longer and as players swing faster, it is quite impossible for beginners not to slice their shots without clear instructions. However, with proper practice and analysis, any golfer can slash his handicaps by 3 to 7 within a short amount of time.
By: Eason Chan
About the Author:
[http://www.AcquireGolfSkills.com] provides complete golf guide and tips to help you improve your golf skills including the full swing, putting, pitching, etc. You can also get a free ebook by signing up their newsletter.
Fixing a Golf Slice With Your Driver
How many times during a round of golf do you wish you could take your slice-driver included and turn it around?
If you have ever struggled with a slice the driver seems to be the biggest culprit. There is a big reason and I will share it with you.
There is no doubt in my mind that the tee shot is one of the top three most important shots in golf. I would rate driving the ball right along with putting and pitching as the three most important parts to the game. That is why you have to get rid of the slice forever.
If your golf ball consistently curves to the right it can make for a long day. Every once in a while when you see trouble right it makes you aim further left, and of course that is about the time that the golf ball doesn’t slice.
The single biggest change that I have seen in the game over the past 20 years is the emphasis that has been placed on driving the golf ball further. What everyone fails to tell you is the further you drive it the less accurate you will be. Tom Watson went to Byron Nelson 20 years ago and mentioned that he wasn’t hitting the driver as accurate as he was when he was younger and Byron Nelson said “remember that if you hit it 25 yards further you are not going to hit it as straight”.
Let me give you a couple of tips that will help you straighten out your slice. #1. As painful as it is going to sound, you have to start aiming to the right. Slicers aim left and the only way to get the ball back in play is to slice it, or push it back to the right. #2. If you can train yourself to aim to the right then you have to release the clubhead sooner in the downswing, which will create a draw.
The next time you are on the golf course and you want to take your slice-driver included and turn it into a draw…aim right.
By: Bobby W Eldridge
About the Author:
Golfingly yours,
Bobby Eldridge
IGolfFixes.com
Bobby Eldridge
IGolfFixes.com
Do you want to fixing golf slice with your driver, or hit that ugly banana ball forever? If you do, then head on over to the new golf swing fixes site at IGolfFixes.com today!
Fix Your Golf Slice – Add Yards to Your Drives
Fix golf slice is a thought on many amateur golfers’ minds. Studies reveal over 80% of all amateur golfers slice the ball. There have been more training aids, drills and tips to fix the golf slice that I can’t even begin to count.
If you hit a golf slice, have you taken lessons; bought any training aids, and done several drills only to still hit a slice? What a frustrating situation! Do you realize what’s causing your golf slice?
A golf slice is caused by the clubface coming across the ball from outside the target line, creating side-spin on the ball. Upon first thought, this may seem like a mechanical issue. And it is…but if you dig a little deeper, you’ll find it’s a ‘physical’ issue.
You see…your body dictates your ability to swing the club efficiently. If your body has ‘physical limitations’, your swing will not be mechanically sound and swing faults will appear.
In the golf swing there are many compensations for lack of proper mechanics. If you can’t make a 90 degree shoulder turn on the backswing, you’ll do whatever it takes to feel like you are making a full turn.
A good example of this would be to rotate your hips beyond the desired 45 degrees to enable your body to make a full backswing. What this does is rob you of power. You have no torque built up in your core to unleash into the ball at impact.
The same thing with a golf slice.
A golf slice is caused by the upper body getting ahead of the lower body, creating an “over-the-top” move, which in turn results in your clubface slashing across the ball and creating side-spin. Here comes the banana ball!
Your first inclination will be to take a lesson to fix this. If that doesn’t work, you might buy a training aid. If that doesn’t work you’ll buy an “offset” driver to help eliminate your golf slice.
Does this sound familiar?
Now the real answer! Take a break on your lessons. Don’t buy anymore training aids. And keep your normal driver in your bag.
You need to work on you core rotational flexibility to be able to initiate the downswing with your lower body first, to avoid the upper body getting ahead of it. It’s that simple. The minute your able to separate the upper and lower body upon initial move down…you’ll see that golf slice improve dramatically.
Doesn’t that make sense?
Along with fixing your golf slice, you’ll add up to 30 yards to your drives. You will get more roll when the ball lands from a draw ball flight. A golf slice is a weak shot that does not penetrate the air for maximum distance.
When you work on your “machine”, your golf swing takes care of itself! You will finally eliminate the thought, ” fix golf slice“.
By: Mike Pedersen
About the Author:
Do you want to discover the secret to creating more power and consistency in your golf swing… AND eliminating ALL your swing faults?
Download this: performbettergolf.com/free-golf-ebook.html
Mike Pedersen helps golfers’ improve their golf swing power, consistency and golf swing faults by addressing the physical limitations in their golf swing.


