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Everyone
Has Three Golf Swings
Everyone Has
Three Golf Swings – the practice swing, the practice tee swing and the first
tee swing. How many times have you seen
someone take a nice looking practice swing and then address the ball and it
looks totally different? Suddenly they
look like they have impaired motor skills.
This is caused by a change of focus and emotion. With the practice swing the focus is on
feeling the swing. When they address the
ball their focus changes to hitting the ball and they allow negative thoughts
to creep in.
The worst
case of this I have ever dealt with was one of my students early in my
career. At some point he had loop or
over the top motion that created an outside to in swing plane. He was a sing digit handicap at that
point. He decided he wanted to improve
so he took lessons from a teaching professional that got him to reverse the
loop. This created a very pronounced
drop to the inside on his downswing which caused him to frequently hit behind
the ball. By this time he was struggling
to break ninety. I could get him to take
fifteen great practice swings in a row.
The moment he addressed the ball he immediately reverted back to the
reverse loop because his focus changed to hitting the ball. It blocked out his ability to feel what his
body was doing with the club.
The
objective of the practice swing is to focus on making the swing feel good. This should not change when you address the
ball. Focus on making the real swing
feel exactly like the practice swing.
Distance is taken care of with club selection and direction is taken
care of with alignment – they should never be swing thoughts. The only thought you should have is
reproducing the good feeling practice swing.
The practice
tee swing is usually worse than the practice swing but better than the first
tee swing. On the practice tee if you
hit a bad shot you just address another ball and hit it – no fear of failure. Very little pressure or negative emotion
(fear of a bad shot).
The first
tee is where fear of failure kicks in.
If you hit a bad shot there you have to find it and play it. This causes people to try to control what
happens to the ball. Rarely does
anything good come from this. In golf
effort is self-defeating – the harder you try the worse it gets. One reason I am a big fan of whiffle balls is
it gives you a chance to work on controlling your focus almost any time in your
own yard.
The next
time you go to the range to hit balls take practice swings until the swing
feels good to you and remember that feeling.
When you get ready to hit a ball just remember that feeling and focus
totally on reproducing it and nothing else.
It will then become much easier to do this on the first tee.
Just
remember that if golf was played with dandelions and pine cones we would all
score much better than we do.
Feel the
swing and pick a very defined target and focus on that rather than where you
don’t want the ball to go.
Please leave
comments and don’t hesitate to contact me at sam@essentiallygolf.com with any comments or questions.
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