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How to Hit a Straight Drive
Topic Started: Apr 16 2013, 01:15 AM (142 Views)
estelle

Some golfers who are new to the game and have not been playing it long have a tendency to want to thrash the ball with the driver. The desire is to hit the ball as hard as possible in the belief that the harder you hit it the further it will travel. If that is your expectation, think again.

Sometimes I find my swing is faster than it should be. When I notice this happening, I slow it down and concentrate on swinging the Mizuno MP-59 Irons as smoothly as possible. The power and accuracy of the golf drive comes from the correct timing in the correct swing path. How can you practice these two important elements of the golf game?

Here is what I do.

1. Take to the practice ground and lay out two rows of seven tee pegs, spaced about an inch apart. Make sure the two rows of tee pegs are parallel to each other and have them about eight inches apart.

2. Place one tee peg in the middle of the two rows.

3. Practice swinging the mizuno mp 59 iron set through the corridor of tee pegs. If the pattern of pegs is spoiled, noticing where it has spoiled will help you take corrective action.

4. Once you can swing consistently through the tee pegs without knocking any down, put a golf ball on the tee peg in the middle of the formation. Recreate the smooth swing you have been practicing with callaway diablo octane driver. Do not try and smash the ball, just concentrate on swinging the club as smoothly as possible.

You will then be swinging in the correct plane and the result will be a straight drive, with the power for the shot coming from the loft of the callaway diablo octane and the proper tempo of your swing.

By making this a regular practice drill you will learn to swing the club on the right path through the ball and you should notice a difference in straighter golf drives.


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