Golfweek's 101 Winning Golf Tips
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About this ebook
John Andrisani
John Andrisani is the author of The Hogan Way and The Bobby Jones Way. He has also written books with top teachers and tour players and he contributes instruction to various golf and other popular magazines. Andrisani, a low-handicap golfer, is a former course record holder and winner of the World Golf Writers' Championship. He lives in Sarasota, Florida.
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Golfweek's 101 Winning Golf Tips - John Andrisani
Introduction
The game of golf is played on courses around the country that, though finely manicured, are anything but perfect, especially when compared to the other settings where other sports, such as basketball, bowling, and billiards are played. Typically, on public and private courses, tees are not perfectly flat, fairways are rolling in spots, and greens often feature two tiers or subtle undulations. Then, of course, there are water hazards, bunkers, trees, and rough.
Granted, on par-4 and par-5 holes, you get to tee the ball up when driving. Still, holes usually curve left or right, so you need to work the ball around the corner of a dogleg. And, if you do hit the ideal shaped tee shot, for example a draw, you still have to hit an exacting approach shot the right distance and in the right direction to land the ball on the green and avoid trouble.
Short par-3 holes demand even more precision, because greens are usually smaller. Therefore, if you choose the wrong club, steer the swing instead of employing a tension free action, or hit the wrong shot, you are going to face a challenging pitch, chip, or sand shot to put the ball in position to save par.
I think Ben Hogan was right to relate one’s handicap to the number of errors the player makes during a round. Nowadays, the majority of club-level recreational golfers shoot in the 90s on a par-72 course, so obviously they make a high number of shot-making errors. The irony is that the average golfer is not totally at fault. I say that because I believe there is misinformation being passed on to recreational golfers by teachers across the country. More importantly, golf instructors do exactly what the great teacher and 1948 Masters champion Claude Harmon, Sr. said a teacher should never do: Teach swing instead of teaching golf.
Claude Harmon knew what his son Butch Harmon (former teacher of Tiger Woods) and other great instructors, as well as great players, know: To become good at golf and shoot good scores, you must be able to hit a wide variety of tee-to-green shots that require setting up and swinging differently than you normally are accustomed to doing.
It’s my hope that the 101 shots showcased in this book will help you reach your goal of becoming a shot-making virtuoso; a player who is able to handle any course situation you are confronted with for your golfing lifetime.
John Andrisani
December 2006
Gulfport, Florida
1
Driving the Ball
The key objective on par-4 and par-5 holes is hitting the fairway, yet course-design features and weather conditions require you to play creative shots to land the ball in scoring position
The first shot played on either a par-4 or par-5 hole, off a tee and between two markers placed several yards apart on an area of manicured grass called the tee-box, is the drive. The purpose of the drive is to hit the ball within a strip of short grass called the fairway, running all the way from the tee to green, ideally in an area that allows you to hit an attacking shot into the green.
The legendary golfer Ben Hogan once said, If you can’t drive the ball, you can’t play golf,
as if talking to the majority of players who struggle with this department of the game, often slicing drives into trees, water, or rough bordering the fairway.
Fred Funk, one of the world’s best golfers at hitting controlled drives.
Ironically, I believe one reason average golfers fail to hit a high number of drives on to the short grass
during a round of golf has less to do with a lack of talent and more to do with a lack of knowledge regarding how to properly set up to the ball. Let me explain.
When driving, many amateur golfers fail to sweep the ball cleanly off a tee and powerfully into the air because they address the ball in the same way they do when setting up to play a short iron club. Rather than playing out of a wide stance that will provide a strong foundation for swinging the driver (the longest club in the bag with an average length of forty-six inches), middle and high handicap players, in contrast to Ben Hogan in days gone by and Tiger Woods today, spread their feet narrowly apart when addressing the ball. Furthermore, many club-level players set up with their arms hanging straight down instead of extending them outward to feel a strong sense of relaxed tension as they reach for the ball. Consequently, due to incorrect pre-swing preparation, the player is set up to swing the club on a steep plane ideal for a wedge rather than a flat plane ideal for a driver, particularly if the objective is to hit a controlled draw shot.
The driver setup determines, to a large degree, the type of swing you will employ and the type of shot you will hit. So never take the address for granted.
Professional golfers and low handicap players know that in order to hit solid, accurate drives a set of basic fundamentals must be heeded. Of course, as you will learn, setup positions change according to the type of driver shot you intend to hit. Having said that, to hit the ball even halfway decently off the tee with the driver, you need, when taking your address, to fall within certain parameters, or what my friend and top-ranked teacher calls corridors of success.
To do that, I recommend that you:
Play the ball approximately opposite your left heel in a stance that is a few inches wider than shoulder width.
Position your feet, knees, hips, and shoulders parallel to the target line.
Set the clubface perpendicular to an area of fairway that you have designated as your target.
Point the toe-end of your left foot about 25 degrees away from the target line, and position your right foot almost perpendicular to the target line.
Bend comfortably at the knees and waist.
Balance your weight evenly between your feet or place about fifty-five percent of it on your right foot.
Set up with your left arm and the club-shaft forming a straight line.
Position your hands in line with the ball or slightly ahead of the clubhead.
The other reason so many weekend golfers hit a high percentage of weak, off-line drives is they swing the club too fast and off track during the takeaway or initial stage of the swing.
The takeaway is the engine room of the swing. If the initial move you make away from the ball is incorrect, it is highly unlikely that you will be able to swing the club back along the proper path and plane and achieve your ultimate goal—the one all golfers strive for—square club-face-to-ball contact at impact. Frankly, the only way to bail out a bad start to the swing is to reroute the club back on track