The biggest mistake most golfers make is that they hold the golf club too loosely in their fingers and too firm in their arms. Thus, the golfer sometimes fails to hold good grip on the club and he consequently plays a poor shot.
The club needs to be held firmly in the fingers in order to try a good swing. Think a cup of coffee is on the table in front of you and you try to pick it up with loose grip of your fingers but your firm arms. What would be the result? May be you drop the cup down. The same principle of control applies on the golf club.
To know how to play a proper pull comes after you learn to hold your club properly. If you pull too swiftly or from your elbow or shoulder, there will be a lot of tension in your arm and upper part of your body. If you wish to play a good swing, hold the golf club firmly in your fingers. By doing so, you will have one fluid motion and you will direct the ball to get in the way. This also helps to bounce off the club correctly.
Once you master the technique of holding the club in firm fingers and set your club gently in the motion, you will be able to get proficiency in creative shot-making. Playing your best golf is at your finger grips.
There are different ways in which you can swing your golf club. The most famed is the modern swing which is also referred to as the lower body swing or total body swing. Most first time young golfers having a thin body have been seen playing this specific shot called “tail swings the dog”. In the course of swinging the club with his arms, a young boy arcs his body a little across his front portion of his body, which results in response to his arm’s and club’s movements. A young boy usually has a flexible and supple torso that easily moves about in space in reaction to the forces that come into play by the active movement of his arms and club.
On the other hand, most overweight men in their middle-age, due to their heavy, non-flexible central torso, play a swing called “dog swings the tail”. A man with bulky body is unable to bend his torso complying to the movement of his arms across the front portion of the body and hence plays this type of swing.
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