Alignment
Alignment
Sometimes a golf shot may call for a slightly open or closed face. There may be a tree in your way and the only shot is to go over it. Adding loft by opening the clubface is a good way to attempt to hit the ball higher in the air, but you must be sure that the clubface is still square to the... more
Many times after you feel like you've hit a good shot, the ball does not end up near your target. Instead, you miss somewhere out to the right. Yet, the real problem is that you don't understand why. This was the case for a Surgite who submitted a question simply by the name of Joe.
Today's question is pretty unique. It's so interesting that I wanted to share it with you all. Gary Kinne has a physical feature that forces him to alter his alignment slightly and it got me wondering if anyone else has ran into the same situation.
Cheryl Cassidy has been using the Peak Performance Golf Swing for nearly two years and has expressed her excitement in the progress she's been making. But, she wrote in a question that I think a lot of you may relate with.
A reverse weight shift--where you end up with your weight on your back leg as you finish your swing--is one of the biggest robbers of both distance and accuracy. That's the problem that Jerry Shulman wrote me about a while back.
I recently had the pleasure of giving a lesson to a first-time student named Rick Baldwin, a lefty who has been been playing golf for 20 years but has only been with the Surge Swing for about six months.
Earlier this summer, Russ Bamber, wrote to me asking for help with a problem that I don't hear of all that often.
"Don, all of a sudden every one of my iron shots pulls left? My drives go straight, but I cannot hit a straight iron shot?? What am I doing wrong???? Help!!"