Be One with Your Wdge

When you look back at the great rounds you’ve played,
what comes to mind?  Sure, you were putting good.  And
I’m sure your drives were at least playable.

And when I look back on my better scores, all those factors
are true, but the one thing that stands out is my short
game, around the green.

Let me clarify something.  Although the title of this lesson is
“Be One with your Wedge,” what I really mean is “Be One
with the Club You Use around the Greens”… but that title
didn’t sound catchy enough. :-)

The short game is totally about comfort and feel. You really
need to get a mental image of yourself hitting the perfect
shot.  Don’t mess around with trying all kinds of fancy-crazy
shots unless you totally have them in your bag.  Make the
same consistent shot over and over.  Just focus on the
power of that repeatable chip.

What helps me is imagining that my sand wedge (this is the
club I use around the greens – yours might be a pitching
wedge or 8 iron, etc.) is an extension of my left arm.  I view
it as almost another part of my body.

And when I successfully keep that focus through the round
my scores are generally 4 to 5 strokes better.

Another thing to keep in mind is that age-old advice of
trying to chip the ball so that it stops within a 3 foot circle
around the hole.

After playing a couple holes take a look back at any chips
you’ve had around the greens. Then adjust your power
(notice I said power – not the type of shot) accordingly.

Have you been running the ball by the hole?  Then lessen
your power a bit. Feel like your chipping club is part of you.

This advice may seem a little primitive, but it is so very
essential to lower your score.

Article source: tomsgolftips.com

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Golf-Bradley to hold fire after Twitter users left spitting mad

MARANA, Arizona, Feb 21 (Reuters) – A dumb-founded Keegan Bradley said even he was taken aback by his excessive spitting as he watched television replays of his play during the final round of last week’s Northern Trust Open in Los Angeles.

Bradley ended up losing a three-way playoff for the title at Riviera Country Club, where fellow American Bill Haas triumphed, and was initially surprised his on-course expectorating had sparked widespread criticism on Twitter.

However, once he saw for himself via the telecast how much he spat during his pre-shot routine, the PGA Championship winner issued a public apology on his Twitter account.

“To be honest with you, I really had no idea I was doing it,” Bradley told reporters at Dove Mountain on Tuesday while preparing for this week’s WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.

“And I feel bad.

“It’s something that I’m going to work on and I just ask everybody to just kind of bear with me as I go through this, because it’s something I’ve done without even knowing it. I’m going to truly work on it.

“It might take some time but I will do my best to stop. It’s something that I’m glad that’s come up, because I’m able to kind of nip it now. It’s just a thing where I’m watching myself.”

Bradley, who clinched his first major title by beating compatriot Jason Dufner in a playoff for last year’s PGA Championship in Atlanta, conceded his lengthy pre-shot routine was also a concern.

“It’s about visualisation,” the 25-year-old said. “It’s kind of my way of staying not stagnant. It’s something that you don’t even really realise you’re doing when you’re in the heat of it.

“I will take a look at it and see if there are any improvements that I can make. But it’s something that I’ve been doing and it’s been working. Coming down the stretch, it (the time) does come up a little bit.

“But it doesn’t seem to affect my ability, which is the most important,” added Bradley, who earlier was presented with his trophy for winning the 2011 PGA Tour Rookie of the Year award.

Bradley has been drawn to play against Australian Geoff Ogilvy, tournament champion in 2006 and 2009, in Wednesday’s opening round at Dove Mountain.

Article source: sports.yahoo.com

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Find your perfect swing with this household item

One of the most critical parts of the golf swing is what you do in the first few inches of the takeaway. Often, I see amateurs begin their takeaway by lifting the club upward, which then creates a very upright backswing that later becomes a reverse pivot. Yikes! This then leads to all sorts of trouble on the downswing and at impact.

The right way to start the backswing is to apply the “low and slow” approach. By staying low and slow, you’ll activate a bigger, wider arc and body turn, resulting in a golf swing that’s both more consistent and more powerful. A great way to practice a low and slow approach is to imagine swinging a wet mop on your backswing. Better yet, if you actually have a wet mop available, give this drill a try.

As you take the mop back, the weight and length of the mop will force you to stay low and slow. As you take the club farther back to the top of your backswing, make sure the wet end of the mop gets behind your body. If it hangs over your head at the top, you’ll get drenched!

The goal behind this drill is to not only help you avoid lifting the club too early in the takeaway, but also help you round out your backswing for a bigger, fuller body turn. And if you can’t find a mop nearby, then use a club, but imagine you’re actually swinging a big, heavy, wet mop. You’ll quickly begin to ingrain the proper takeaway motion and be on your way to hitting not only longer, but also straighter shots.

Article source: golftipsmag.com

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Ernie Els squeezes into Accenture Match Play

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) – Ernie Els can plan on a trip to Arizona for the Match Play Championship – just barely.

Sunday was the final week to qualify for the first World Golf Championship of the year, and the Match Play takes the top 64 players off the world ranking. Pebble Beach winner Phil Mickelson is not playing that week, so Els gets the final spot at No. 65.

He narrowly finished ahead of George Coetzee, a fellow South African, who is at No. 66. Coetzee still might get in if Paul Casey, recovering from a shoulder injury, decided not to play at Dove Mountain.

Luke Donald is the No. 1 seed.

Dubai winner Rafael Cabrera Bello and Kevin Na, who tied for fifth at Pebble Beach, played their way into Match Play.

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2012 new TaylorMade RocketBallZ RBZ irons

Recently, TaylorMade Golf sent out a brand new RBZ irons. This winning combination of distance and accuracy makes the new RBZ iron a game-changer and positions to be one of the greatest iron sets in company history.

“Without question, the  taylormade RocketBallz irons will be an improvement over any other iron in a golfer’s bag,” said Sean Toulon, executive vice president of TaylorMade Golf. “From a technology standpoint, we have done the unthinkable. We brought in metalwood engineers to help create irons with faces that behave like drivers, sending the ball easily high and far almost as if it was bounced off a trampoline. These technological advancements will be visible to the golfer upon first contact with a ball.”

RocketBallz clubheads are progressively shaped, with smaller, compact short-irons, deep undercut-cavity middle-irons and large, hollow long-irons. All feature TaylorMade’s Multi-functional Sole (see Multi-Functional Sole tech brief), while the sand wedge, attack wedge and lob wedge all incorporate our new ATV sole.

A new vibration and sound control system in the 3-iron to pitching wedge dampens unwanted vibration without slowing the face down. We’re using a new Japanese urethane layer for the first time that’s exceptionally soft and pliable; it works in conjunction with the badge system to absorb unwanted vibration and sound without slowing the face.

The new Taylormade irons 2012 are available in 3-iron through LW, right-handed and left-handed.

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TOUR Insider: This week is all about ‘The Coliseum’

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. — A trip to the desert in February is always nice.

Scottsdale offers blue skies, lots of sun and great golf. TPC Scottsdale provides a dramatic finish to the Waste Management Phoenix Open and the Thunderbirds have raised millions of dollars for charity.

That’s all very nice but let’s get real. This week is always about the 16th hole.

“The Coliseum.”

It’s an otherwise nondescript 162-yard par-3 — except for the fact it’s completely enclosed with grandstands seating 30,000 people who yell and cheer and boo depending on the quality of the shot.

It is absolutely intimidating. There is a fear factor for the players. The fear of embarrassment.

And don’t think all the clever comments are ad-libbed. The gallery is carefully orchestrated. Cheat sheets are handed out so fans can get very personal. You hear the names of player’s pets yelled out, their high school mascot is invoked.

Wikipedia hits must dramatically increase this week as the 16th-hole fans do their homework.

Players actually get their first taste of the 16th on the 10th hole. The green sits some 25 yards away and the overflow of gallery and noise can be disturbing.

At the 16th hole, players expect loud outbursts and know they are coming. Those same outbursts can catch some players off guard while playing the 10th.

Starting with the 11th hole, the course moves away from the 16th. The gallery and the noise diminish until you begin moving back toward the east beginning on the 14th hole. Every step brings you closer to the Coliseum. The noise increases as you walk. It’s easy for your mind to wander and begin anticipating the 16th and what lies ahead.

Once players exit the 15th green they cross a bridge and enter a tunnel underneath the grandstand that is both dark and claustrophobic. Just as your eyes get used to the low light you emerge on the other side and you have to squint into the daylight. The first thing you notice is how green everything looks, how crowded the corporate chalets are and how loud the gallery is.

I once walked next to Fred Couples under the grandstand and as he emerged on the other side the fans starting screaming, “Freddy, Freddy, Freddy!!!”

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Great Review–TaylorMade R9 Irons

Released to the golf world in late 2009, the TaylorMade R9 Irons are designed with a more traditional, clean look, and are intended primarily to be game improvement clubs.

This is what TaylorMade have to say about these irons: “Whereas our Burner irons deliver extraordinary distance in a modern design, the R9 irons are aimed at the technician, and so are rendered in a player’s shape with a clean and conventional look,” said Harry Arnett, TaylorMade’s senior category director of metalwoods, irons and balls. “However, a ridiculous degree of performance-enhancing technology is packaged within each oversized clubhead. The result is an iron that’s phenomenally easy to play despite its classic appearance, and extremely controllable and accurate as well.”

You’re never going to get the sort of feeling you expect from blades but the localized silicone shock absorber and the light foam that fills the Velocity Control Chamber in the 3 to 6 irons make these feel better than expected. A solid strike gives you a muted click while miss hits are only a little different with no harsh twisting no matter where on the face you hit the ball.

TaylorMade say that these are for golfers not just about pure performance but are also for the technician who wants to work the ball. Given the emphasis on forgiveness the R9 are surprisingly controllable for fades and draws but you have to put some effort in to making  the ball do anything more than a gentle movement.

The R9 are great irons for those looking for forgiveness without sacrificing performance. The amount of technology packed in ensures that any swing is flattered. With such a large sweetspot the distance generated on both pure strikes and on miss hits is fantastic and the low COG and high MOI ensure a great flight from low to mid swing speeds and that they come in left handed means that not only the righties get to play with them.

These irons are worth it if you are the right type of golfer to fit into this type of design. They are made with quality materials and are made by a company that continues to deliver some of the best and most playable golf clubs in the world.

If you would like to know more information about the technology of the Taylormade R9 irons, and what specifications are available. You can follow this link www.golfwholesalerau.com

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Steve Stricker Wins First PGA Tour Event of 2012

Steve Stricker has become the first PGA Tour winner of the New year after he beat Scotland’s Martin Laird by three-shots at the Hyundai Tournament of Champions in picturesque Maui, Hawaii.

Stricker went into the final round with a five-stroke advantage but started slowly making no birdies on the first seven holes and bogey at the par-four sixth. This allowed Laird, Jonathan Byrd and Webb Simpson to close the gap and put him under significant pressure but Stricker held his nerve, rediscovered his form and held on for the first PGA Tour win of 2012.

After winning the title Stricker spoke about the tournament in an interview with Sky Sports. Here he said, “It was tough but I never let up today. I’m very proud of what I have achieved here. I felt it kind of slipping away at the end of the round but I was patient. Frustrated but patient. The birdie at eight calmed me down quite a but and I played steady after that.”

This win marks a remarkable comeback for the 44-year old who looked like his PGA Tour career was in the balance. Just four months ago Stricker was forced to withdraw from the BMW Championship after a neck injury was restricting the movement in his left arm and it looked like going under the surgeon’s knife was his only option. However, he decided against the surgery and opted for cortisone injections and an intensive course of physiotherapy and it seems to have paid off judging by this result.

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Buy This Cheap Scotty Cameron Putter

A lot of people love golfing, particularly guys. This is actually the types of sport that seems to be for those elite people within the society. If basketball is a sport for the general public, golfing is made for those few money makers of our society.

If we talk about golf clubs, there are many brands which will instantly come to our minds; among those is definitely cheap Scotty Cameron Putter. Many individuals like this simply because it already has an established brand name and a social proof that individuals suggest it. The only issue is that it is expensive just like other brands. Though people like it, nevertheless they don�t have the luxury to acquire new Scotty Cameron putters.

The Studio Select line is the result of Scotty Cameron’s Putter research and their drive to create a putter collection with the finest technical performance and incredible overall feel. The precision milled 303 Stainless Steel Newport putters feature an improved high toe profile and heel and toe circular sole weights that allow for numerous length options in each model.

The circular heel-toe weights provide amplified stability by reducing head rotation on off-centre impacts for a larger sweet spot. The factory adjustable weights are set to provide the proper headweight-to-shaft length combination. The improved high toe profile of the Studio Select Putters feature a stepless shaft for a clean look and offer a soft but solid feel and are equipped a new Scotty Cameron red cord grip.

Whatever your preference of putter is in this season, you can be sure that you will find what you are looking for from golfwholesalerau.com’s huge range of wholesale golf clubs.

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Swing Extremes: Impact Position

All good players have one position in the golf swing that’s similar despite their very different-looking swings. This position is impact. Good players retain their wrist-cock through the hitting area so that their left wrist is bowed and the right wrist is flexed (for right-handed golfers), and both hands are slightly in front of the golf ball at the strike. This is often called a late hit or clubhead lag, and good players use both to create a tremendous amount of clubhead speed and power in their swings.

High-handicappers tend to do the opposite at impact. Instead of a late hit, they actually execute what’s called an early release. They scoop the ball at impact because they lose the lag too early in the downswing. Instead of having a bowed left wrist and their hands ahead of the ball at impact, they have a collapsed left wrist and their hands are behind the ball. As such, they suffer a tremendous loss of power and direction and end up with a very weak hit. Golfers with this problem tend to hit the ball better with their woods than their irons because the ball is teed up and they can get away with scooping or hitting up on the ball. In order to hit solid irons shots and better drives more consistently, however, it’s necessary to hit down with a flat left wrist that’s ahead of the ball at impact.

To create a late hit, you must sequence the swing so that your hands, wrists and clubhead arrive at impact in the correct order. This is called sequencing.

Sequencing

First, check your left-hand grip (your right if you’re left-handed) to make sure that the club handle is held primarily in the fingers as opposed to the palm. When you look down at your grip, you should see at least two knuckles on your left  hand at address. The V formed by the thumbs and forefingers on both hands should point to the right side of your face.

If you can’t see at least two knuckles, your grip is primarily in the palm, and this will make it difficult for you to create the necessary wrist hinge for a late hit at impact.

Second, as you swing back, allow your wrists to hinge naturally. To help create wrist hinge, imagine that there’s a hole in the butt end of the club and the shaft is full of water. As you swing back, pour the water out of the shaft onto your right leg. The wrists should be fully hinged by the time the left arm becomes parallel to the ground. This backswing wrist hinge must be duplicated in the downswing.

Third, as you start down, feel as if you’re leading with the butt end of the club. Try to maintain your wrist cocked as long as possible on the downswing before allowing the clubhead to whip through impact. Think of impact as a finish line to a race. Your left hand should come in first place, the right hand should come in second, and the clubhead should come in third. If you let the clubhead win the race, you’ll fail to achieve the correct impact position.

To ingrain the feel of this position, practice putting yourself in the correct impact arrangement. Start at your address position, with your weight evenly distributed. Your arms and club should form an uppercase Y. Now, shift your lower body weight and hands toward your target. Your hips should be slightly open, your left wrist should be flat and there should be some angle in the back of your right wrist. The capital Y formed by your arms and club at address should now resemble a lowercase y. Hold this position for a few seconds and repeat. Next, make a full swing, focusing on creating the lowercase y at contact. With a little practice, your shots will become straighter and more powerful.

Article source: golftipsmag.com

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