Never fix a problem by trying to do the opposite. Instead, concentrate on doing it correct. If your club face is off at impact, you are either setting up wrong (easy correction - just make sure it is square to the target at set up), or your grip is wrong and causing you to close it or leave it open at impact. A strong grip can lead to hooks, a weak grip can lead to slices.
I have def had more succes hooking the ball left consistently than I do slicing to the right. One of the best rounds I had, I focused on aiming right and having a nice easy hook swing to the left. I was consistently on the left side of the fairway (IN PLAY) about 230 yards, instead of 265 sliced to the right out of play.
You can't be serious! Attempting to actively control the clubface is what causes the ball to go offline. Look at anyone who's good and tell me they're actively controlling the clubface - no way! Worst advice ever! If you try this, bring a bucket of range balls because it's going to be a miserable round.
There needs to be some awareness of where the clubface is at impact. For golfers who are wide open thinking they're square massive issues. Need to learn a new pattern to improve direction of shots. Everyone entitled to their opinion though.
One of the best instruction channels on TH-cam
Thank you
Need to learn the butter cut fade ….it’s better than draw, better than hook, better than slice.
How far are you aiming right? Right of green, right rough, right boundary or further? 5, 10, 20, 30 degs?
Depends how much you think you can close the clubface, experiment in practice first then take it to the course.
Without a doubt this will help many many golfers out there especially me!!! Thanks for another great video you rock.
Thanks 👍
Never fix a problem by trying to do the opposite. Instead, concentrate on doing it correct. If your club face is off at impact, you are either setting up wrong (easy correction - just make sure it is square to the target at set up), or your grip is wrong and causing you to close it or leave it open at impact. A strong grip can lead to hooks, a weak grip can lead to slices.
What if your grip is perfect and set up is square?
@@AliTaylorGolf - then it's probably swing path, which you chose to ignore for the video, so I did too.
Every slicer is a face issue first
I have def had more succes hooking the ball left consistently than I do slicing to the right. One of the best rounds I had, I focused on aiming right and having a nice easy hook swing to the left. I was consistently on the left side of the fairway (IN PLAY) about 230 yards, instead of 265 sliced to the right out of play.
That second shot set off left and went right.
First shot was a push slice or a more of a square path with open face. Second was face open to a leftward path.
I can nail my 3w with a nice draw, but really struggle with driver, it is very inconsistent
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You can't be serious! Attempting to actively control the clubface is what causes the ball to go offline. Look at anyone who's good and tell me they're actively controlling the clubface - no way! Worst advice ever! If you try this, bring a bucket of range balls because it's going to be a miserable round.
What -- no content? No videos? Hmmmmmm ...
There needs to be some awareness of where the clubface is at impact. For golfers who are wide open thinking they're square massive issues. Need to learn a new pattern to improve direction of shots. Everyone entitled to their opinion though.