March 26, 2002
Welcome to The No B.S. Golf Newsletter
This week Sensei Mark Anthony is giving us some tips on improving
our short game. You can purchase Mark\'s Tao OF Golf video from
www.thinkandreachpar.com
This is what Ken Black, President of the website http://golfrevelation.com
had to say about Tao Of Golf:
***********************************************
The TAO of Golf by Sensei Mark Anthony is an outstanding
instructional video on how to swing a golf club correctly and
practice to improve. Anyone who has mastered a Martial Art, knows
all about patience, perfecting physical movements to the best of
one\'s ability, and success. He has taken these elements and
incorporated them into his golf game and into his teaching methods.
Some of the things I liked best were the \"2 Club Kata\", the \"No
Peeks Kata\" and the \"Handcuff Kata\". These lessons, and many
others, can easily help any level of golfer shoot lower scores and
start enjoying the game more. I give this video my highest
recommendation. It is a great investment in the future of your golf
game.
Ken Black
President
http://golfrevelations.com
How to KNOCK IT STIFF and Make the Ball
Stop On-a-Dime
By Mark Anthony Montaquila.
Hi everyone!
Did you ever wonder how the Pro\'s can hit their wedges on the green
and the ball just STOPS and sits there like it had eyes?
Read on and see how the PGA Pro\'s hit it close and make the ball
stop on a dime...
Pitching.
This is one very subtle technique that I found by accident. With
pitching, you usually want the ball to end up as close to the hole
as possible, if not in it of course. As a hobby, I like to video
record golf tournaments on TV to study the swings of the pros. What
I usually do is playback the swings in slow motion and
frame-by-frame mode to catch the finer points of their body
movement. A couple of years ago, I picked up on something while
watching my favorite golfer, Tiger Woods. When he made approach
shots with shorter irons with the intent of making the ball stop, he
didn\'t let the club head turn over through impact. He kept his
right hand under the club through the divot. Be advised here, you
still have to swing your upper body through the center. The trick
is, to not release the club by rolling your wrists over as if
swinging a driver or longer club.
Driver swing...
With the longer clubs, Tiger would whip the club head through the
point-of-impact and finish his swing with a toe drag. With this
technique, the ball rolls after landing and goes the farthest and
straightest. This is generally the technique used with a driver,
three-wood, etc. If you freeze-frame right after impact with this
technique, you\'ll see that he\'s in a handshake position pointing
his right hand directly at the target with his thumb high and his
shoulders turned through the point-of-impact while facing the center
of his chest directly at the target.
Wedge swing...
Getting back to the short pitch or wedge shot, I like to do this
type of shot when I need as little roll as possible after the ball
lands. I\'ll especially do this out of the sand or next to the green
when I can\'t chip it and I need the ball to check up quick without
rolling. You should set up with the ball slightly back of center of
your stance. When you swing, all you have to do is have your right
hand underhand toss the ball at the hole. Note here the thumb
position. It\'ll be out as if you\'re hitchhiking, and your palm
will be facing up.
50 yards and under...
To hit it even shorter, swing the same way with your hands, and cut
your toe drag down by swinging a bit on the flat-footed side. Again,
by studying the Tour Pro\'s swings, I noticed that with short iron
and pitch shots, I wouldn\'t see a toe drag as with a driver or long
iron. The right foot may come off the ground a little but it will
not come all the way up on the toe. This is a very subtle aspect of
the short game that took me years to come across.
You have to remember; I\'ve only had two or three formal golf
lessons in my life. I\'ve not gone to expensive golf schools or had
a personal PGA coach. Everything that I know about the golf swing
was learned from experience, careful observation and years of
independent, diligent study. This book is the culmination of that
time and energy. But I digress. Lets get back to the short game...
The motion of this type of shot is simply an underhanded toss. Your
right hand will not roll over to let the club head turn through the
point-of-impact. This can be done with the shorter clubs to an
extent. However, unless you\'re looking for a slice, don\'t do it
with a long club. The reason is simple. If you sweep the clubface of
a longer club through the point-of-impact without letting it roll
over, it\'ll remain open at impact and you\'ll be guaranteed a nice
banana-ball. This is where some people get confused. Here\'s why...
Crossed rules...
With a shorter club, this type of underhanded swing will not produce
as much sidespin as backspin. With more backspin than sidespin, any
type of curve during flight will be minimized. This is why you see a
lot of intermediate level golfers able to effectively control
shorter irons, but slice the ball terribly with longer clubs. Its
simply because they\'re crossing up these very subtle swing rules.
This is also one of the reasons why I used to slice.
My problem was...
I would squeeze the club at impact in anticipation of feeling a
\"solid\" hit. Here\'s what would happen. When I squeezed the club,
it would actually slow down and sort of freeze through the
point-of-impact. With the club moving without turning over, it would
scrape the ball and put a mean left-to-right sidespin on it. This of
course resulted in a banana-ball that would only go about 100 yards
and then take a hard right turn, driving me absolutely batty with
anger and frustration. Once I learned how to release the club and
let it turn over naturally, (with Double-Clubbers) my slice
immediately disappeared.
Let impact surprise you...
Lets back up for a second and talk about squeezing the club... this
was because I was anticipating impact. A lot of people do this.
Maybe you do too. The next time you\'re at the range, swing through
and let impact surprise you. If you anticipate impact, you\'ll slow
the clubhead down and will most likely slice the ball or miss it
outright.
In closing, remember this:
1. To hit the ball short, swing underhanded with a minimal or no toe
drag.
2. To hit it long and straight, roll your hands over and whip the
club head through the point-of-impact. Let impact surprise you by
throwing the clubhead through the center and at the target while
finishing with a toe drag.
Pretty interesting stuff, huh? Try it and see for yourself.
Go to www.ThinkAndReachPar.com to find out how you can TAKE 40
STROKES OFF YOUR GAME and ADD 100 YARDS to your DRIVES THIS YEAR
with the principles and training techniques in Tao of Golf just like
I did.
See you next time.
Mark.
Thanks Mark. If any of you have any questions for Mark, send them to
Richard@thinkandreachpar.com
Also when you visit www.thinkandreachpar.com you will notice on the
right side is an icon to vote for the 100 top golf sites. I would
appreciate your vote. Just click on the green icon, click enter,
then find Think And Reach Par in the list and click on it. Thank
you.
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Until next time, good golfing.
Richard
www.thinkandreachpar.com
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