How to Stop Slicing the Golf Ball: The Clubface Fix Most Golfers Miss
Most golfers try to fix a slice by changing their swing path. The real cause is an open clubface from a cupped wrist. Here is how to fix it at...
Most golfers try to fix a slice by changing their swing path. The real cause is an open clubface from a cupped wrist. Here is how to fix it at...
Swinging harder usually costs you distance. Real speed comes from an efficient power chain — body rotation transferred through connected arms to the clubhead.
Most golf training aids collect dust in the garage. Here is how to tell which ones actually work — and a system that addresses the four fundamentals that matter.
You face 8-12 putts per round from inside 10 feet. Making two more of them drops your score by two strokes. Here are the two variables that determine the outcome.
Pure iron contact means the club reaches its lowest point after the ball, not behind it. Here is why fat and thin shots happen and how to fix them permanently.
Most golfers waste practice time on the wrong things. This 30-minute routine is built on strokes gained data to target the areas where your scores actually drop.
A hook and a slice are opposite misses with the same root cause: clubface control. Learn why your face is closing too fast and how to train it out for...
From Hogan to the modern tour, four golf swing fundamentals have remained constant. Learn what they are, why they endure, and how to train each one correctly.
Breaking 90 does not require a swing overhaul. It requires fixing 3 specific mechanical issues and practicing the shots that actually make up most of your score.
Lag is the most misunderstood concept in golf. It is not something you hold or force. Learn what lag actually is and why it happens naturally with proper mechanics.
Most golfers scoop their chips because they are trying to lift the ball. The fix is simple: let the club do the work. Here is how to train proper chip...
Despite wildly different swings, every great golfer looks the same at impact. Learn the 5 universal elements of a correct impact position and how to train them.
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