Monday, August 8, 2011

Stop Your Slice With A Baseball Bat

The most common miss for the average golfer is a slice. There are many ways to slice a ball, but there is one particular problem that causes this problem in many golfers. In this post, I will describe what that swing fault looks like and provide tips for a quick way to fix it.

Almost every golfer has heard of the term "over the top" when used when describing a swing that comes steeply from the outside to the inside through impact. The "over the top" motion is only part of what makes a golf ball slice. The actual slicing of the golf ball comes from a club face that is either open or in the process of opening at the moment of impact. Swinging over the top with an open club face only emphasizes a slicing ball flight. It is also common for a player to have an over the top swing and hit a ball that goes straight but to the left (for a righty golfer). That just means that on that particular swing the player managed to square up the club face to the outside in swing path. The ball would have sliced if the club face was open to the outside in swing path.

To cure this common mistake, there are two keys to focus on:

1) Square the club face. The club face must be square to your swing path in order to hit the ball straight. The key to squaring the club face is to start the release of the club earlier in the downswing so that by the time the club reaches the ball, it has time to be square. Practice this using a baseball bat and imagine you want to hit an outside corner pitch over the shortstop's head. Meaning you are completely extending your arms while rotating your wrists so that the ball will be hit to the left.

2) Swing on the proper swing plane. Eliminating the "over the top" swing fault is also crucial to straightening out your ball flight. Swinging over the top is really a club path that is too vertical coming into the ball, and needs to be flattened or rounded out. Swinging a baseball bat is a very round golf swing, and it will definitely help improve your swing plane. Take continuous swings forward and back with the bat and get a good feel of the rounded arc of the bat. Then you can transfer that into your golf club. Hold the club at address and lift it a foot off the ground. Make several golf swings that start at that point and come back to impact at that point a foot off the ground. You will feel a rounder swing (more like Matt Kuchar or Ricky Fowler). After many repetitions, decrease the height to six inches and swing more times. Eventually work your way down to hitting a ball off a generous tee height and feeling the round and shallow swing.

When combining the rounded out swing with the great release you learned in key one, you should see a great change in your ball flight. Hopefully you will get rid of your slice and hit the ball straighter and farther.

Good Luck!
Coach Chad

Monday, August 1, 2011

Eldorado, here I come!


Well, it is official. I am now the Teaching Professional at Eldorado Country Club in McKinney, Tx. This is as close to a dream job as you can get at my age, so I had to make the move. I will be responsible for the teaching and golf education at Eldorado, as well as running the Eldorado Junior Academy.

I have a variety of programs ready to go for all the Eldorado members, and for you all too! The best program going right now is what I call the Eldorado Player's Academy. This academy meets once a week, for an hour and a half, and there is a low monthly charge for the students. Learning this way is the most effective way to learn, aside from taking individual lessons each week. The program is limited to 6 players for each session so that I have some good one on one time with each student. We will go through everything from video analysis to chipping and putting to trouble shots on the course.

I am most excited about taking over the junior golf academy. There is much room to grow the junior academy and I plan to take it from where it is now to hopefully double or triple it's size within a year. I will also be instructing all the summer junior camps and will be putting together a junior golf team that will play teams from other country clubs in the area.

Another noteworthy achievement is that I finally finished all my PGA work and am now a PGA Class A Professional!

I am very excited about this opportunity, and want to urge you all to come and get some golf training. Contact me if you want to get into some golf lessons, or if you know somebody that wants or needs to get into one of my programs.

Thanks!

Chad
cmoscovic@gmail.com
214-578-7921