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Most golfers, men and women alike, tend to hit a slice. The most common cause of a slice is a lack of clubface rotation through the ball at impact. This opening or holding back of the clubface puts a clockwise rotation on the ball and causes the sometimes-dramatic curve to the right. To correct your slice you first must learn to hit the anti-slice (a.k.a. a hook). Feel the toe of the club pass the heel through impact and the ball will move from right to left. An excellent drill to feel this release of the clubhead and your arms is to set up as if the ball were teed up three feet off the ground. Make a few swooshing swings and begin to sense how your right arm crosses over the left naturally.
Gradually lower the bottom of the swing until you are making swings at ground height. If you can get this rotational swing to happen through the ball, Kiss Your Slice Goodbye!
Steve Mitchell
Director of Instruction
Kiawah Island Resort Learning Center
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Anybody have a tee? Golf expert and trick-shot
artist Peter Johncke was on hand at the annual PGA Play Golf
America Day at Patriots Point Links offering free advice to
hundreds of spectators. His tips include how to play golf with a
chain link shaft, or striking golf balls while balanced on an
exercise ball, but one of the high lights was thee 9-foot
tee and his ability to strike the ball and estimated 275 yards.
Besides the trick-shots, spectators attending Play Golf America
Day received free lessons, a goody bag of gifts and opportunities
to test the newest in golf products. The month of May is free
10-minute lesson month and PGA professionals throughout the
country are bringing new golfers to the sport. - Pete Wofford
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