50 Years of Golfing Wisdom. John Jacobs

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50 Years of Golfing Wisdom - John  Jacobs

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      This does not mean to say that the very excellent action photographs published in golf magazines and books are of no value in learning the game. But undoubtedly the biggest danger in static golf, in learning from still pictures, is that body action becomes overemphasized. Photographs cannot show motion, but they show very well how the body changes position during the golf swing. It is these positional impressions that the beginner and the poor golfer is apt to copy and frequently overdo.

      Body action is important in golf, but is complementary to the swinging of the clubhead, not the dominating factor of the swing. The body movement must be in sympathy with the clubhead as controlled by the hands, not try to take over from the clubhead as the function of striking the ball. For the club to swing down and forward at over 100 mph, the arms must swing. Arm and hand action also promote feel, and this too can only be learned by swinging.

       The grip takes care of the blade

      The first thing to understand is that there is no such thing as one single grip, correct for everybody. Men and women with many different grips have all played winning golf. What I try to do is to put a man or woman on to the easiest grip to use with his or her natural swing tendencies.

      Any grip that provides for the player to connect with the ball with the blade square to the target at impact while simultaneously allowing for full use of the hands and arms, is correct.

      If the shots are curving in their flight, even when the stance and swing are right, then the trouble is usually in the grip. Generalizing (and taking no account of special cases), if the ball is curving in its flight through the air towards the left, then the hands are likely to be turned too far over to the right and the correction needed is to move the Vs between thumbs and forefingers inwards past his right shoulder; even, in some cases, until they both point towards his chin, but usually not as far as that.

      The converse goes for a man whose shots are curving to the right.

      Anywhere between chin and right shoulder can be correct for the Vs, if it works for the player. Experiment helps to find out precisely what is best in every individual case.

       Setting up your stance

      Most golfers ruin many of their shots before they even begin to swing, simply because they set themselves to the task in the wrong way. It really is absurd for an intelligent person to make no effort to get things right from the start. Yet most golfers don’t. And here is one simple way in which they could get a much better grip on their game.

      The set-up of a shot can be learnt consciously and without any great mental or physical effort. With a little care and application, any one of us can set up a good swing. Make the effort – and a good swing becomes a probability rather than an impossibility.

       a) Stance essentials

      1 The first thing to aim is the club-blade, square to the target.

      2 Then lines straight through the shoulders and feet should aim approximately parallel, across country, to the line through the clubface to the target.

      3 The shoulders must be tilted: that is, the left shoulder must be higher than the right (or vice versa for left-handed golfers).

      4 You should never be tense. Your stance should, though, be firm; there should be a feeling of power, almost of the feet trying to grip the ground.

      5 The stance is wider for the longer shots than the short shots; approximately shoulder-width for woods, and progressively narrower down to approximately 12 inches for a 9-iron.

      6 The way many people take up their stance they might just as well be sitting in a chair, for all the help they get from their feet and legs. The right stance gives one more of a feeling of resting on a tall shooting stick, with the back still fairly straight, and the leg muscles ready for action.

       b) Aim and the Shoulders

      To me, standing ‘open’ (body set to make it easier to hit to the left of the target) or ‘shut’ (to the right of the target) means much more whether the shoulders are open or shut, than whether the feet are.

      If the ball is in the wrong position, the shoulders are likely to be wrongly aligned, whether the feet are correct or not. If the ball is actually too far back, drawing the shoulders to the right, you will then aim to the right with the club as well. Contrarily, a ball too far forward makes you aim to the left. There, quite simply, you have one cause of hundreds of thousands of hooks and slices every weekend!

      Basic involuntary hooker’s position: ball back, shoulders closed, blade aiming right.

      Basic involuntary slicer’s position: ball forward, shoulders open, blade aiming left.

      Note the cause here of much baffled infuriation: the man who aligns himself to the left of target will then tend to swing across the ball – and slice it to the right! He may then try to correct this by consciously aiming further left; this will probably make him swing even more wildly across it and the ball will slice even more! The converse can just as easily happen to the man who aligns himself to the right of the target.

       c) Summing up

      At the address, the blade should face the line to the target exactly. The shoulders should be parallel to this line, with the left shoulder higher than the right.

      Too simple? Well, may I suggest you take a close look at the address position of the next three weekend golfers you play with. If more than one of them has just these three points of aim correct, then you are obviously playing in very good company!

      I’m not saying that the right stance will guarantee a good shot. It won’t, of course. But it will make it a great deal easier, just as a wrong stance will make it a great deal more difficult. After all, it is the stance that aims the swing.

       Getting it all on track

      Picturing a golfer standing on one track of a railway to hit a ball sitting on the other track is one of the most popular teaching analogies. It is used so often because it so perfectly conveys the ideal of aligning one’s body parallel to the target line. Such a set-up encourages swinging the clubhead through the ball along, rather than across, the target line. Also note the posture: the golfer bends from the waist with his back straight. His arms hang free and easy. His knees are slightly flexed. Overall, his posture conveys a sense of readiness and resilience.

       The alignment of the feet, hips and shoulders should be parallel to the aim of the clubface.

       Remember!

      The basic idea of the golf grip is that you should hold the club at address in the same way as you intend to apply it to the ball at impact.

       Let the aim of the clubface position the ball relative to the feet

      The important and often neglected matter of ball positioning in relation to the feet is greatly simplified by correct clubface aiming. Step up from behind the ball looking down your target line and set the clubface behind the ball. Looking squarely at your target you will notice that, by positioning the face of the club in this way, you also establish a particular alignment of its shaft, and thus also of its

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