Golf Swing tip – Yours Is Good Enough

If you watch the Golf Channel or read any of the magazines and books on golf, it will be very hard for you to miss the basic theme that  “There is a perfect swing and you will do the most for your game by trying to get it”. Even when you watch a tournament on TV, you see the commentators participate in this conspiracy by showing us frame-by-frame analysis of the pro and critiquing his/her every move. Now, maybe we can give the TV guys a break because they are just trying for some entertainment value and let’s face it, most of us are interested in the details of the swing because we’ve been brainwashed by years of this theme.

For many years, I too was a “swing zombie” in my quest to improve my golf game. I even participated with a group of golfers that   all had our swings videotaped and then we critiqued each other in a classroom setting. The feedback I received from all of us watching my swing ran from “very smooth” to “way off-kilter”. Everybody had a differing opinion of many of the swings that we watched and at least for me, it only confused me more.

In my younger years, I had a typical amateur slice swing that obviously came out of my years of playing baseball and softball. In those days, I would just aim for the left edge of any fairway and I could count on the ball moving left to right, at worst ending up in the right rough but usually hitting the fairway.  I enjoyed playing golf those days but I always felt that something was missing. So when I could finally afford it,I decided to take a set of lessons from a pro. Of course I told him that I wanted to get rid of my slice swing and he asked me back “are you sure?”. This answer kind of shocked me but he was a very good instructor and by the end of the lessons, I was able to hit the ball out of bounds both ways, left and right. I figured that it would just be a matter of time until I “dialed” in to hitting it straight. To make the story short, 5 years later and I was still “dialing” and getting wrong numbers (ob, jail, water,no score improvement, etc.).

Looking back, I honestly believe now that if I had stuck with my old left to right swing and just used the rest of what I learned from the pro, that I would have improved significantly. Why? Because I was a typical golfer and not a 12 handicapper trying to become a single-digiter (a good golfer trying to become a great one). Studies have shown that the overwhelming majority of amateur golfers shoot in the 90′s or above for men and it’s over 100 for women. If you are in that group, then you really should be working on parts of your game that will give you far more efficient score improvement for the time and effort spent. This would primarily be in the area of the short game and the mental game.

This is absolutely true for the average golfer but it may be true for all golfers as well. There is loads of evidence on the pro tours that the ones making the money are those best at chipping and putting. The golf research guru himself, Dave Pelz, actually followed tour players around for years taking detailed statistics and he proved it (see his book, My Short Game Bible). In addition to that, there are too many pros to list that admit that their swing is not “technically correct” or maybe not even very good…BUT THEY WIN TOURNAMENTS!  Look at Jim Furyk, 2003 U.S. Open winner. He actually has a big loop in his backswing. Lee Trevino always told people that they should not copy his swing. Even Jack Nicklaus says in his books that he wasn’t a very good ball striker. Bruce Lietzke has won tournaments on the PGA and Senior tours playing his left-to-right shot his whole career – And he says he rarely practices! On top of that, the tours are littered with past champions that totally lost their game AFTER they tried to change it for the better.  And now they are begging their sports psychologist to help them “find” their old swing.

I have talked to PGA golf instructors that say it’s their clients that want the swing advice (just like I did) even when they recommend working some other part of their game first. So maybe it’s our own fault in creating the current situation where average scores of amateurs have not dropped one stroke in the last 50 years despite the advances in equipment technology. Now don’t get me wrong, if you are a total beginner, maybe you should start out with learning the basics of the golf swing with a lesson. But if you’re hitting it solid most of the time,  you are good to go for a real scoring quest as more swing advice is not the quickest way for you to drop your score. There is just so much more that you can do, on and off the course, that will pay you back in saved strokes for far less time spent than “fixing” your swing. Most of us have precious little free time that we can work to improve our games so why not work on that which will give us the greatest bang for our (time) buck?

And so, let me be the first to make a pledge to the golf spirit inside me (I always thought that golf is like religion):
“I for one, do solemnly swear that I will not pay attention to any swing advice of any sort until I can score in the 70′s consistently with the swing I have (and maybe not even then)”.

Greens and fairways!

Craig

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Do you still really think that the only way to get better at this game is to take lessons and then practice until your hands bleed? Does that work? Sometimes for some people. At the beginner level, yes, you need to get the basics down and develop a decent swing. But what of all those millions of golfers around the world that have a decent swing…that have taken lessons…that have had plenty of great shots before.

Why can’t you put together 18 holes of good golf if you can put together 3 or 4?….You can!

Now, go with me here a minute…you’ve produced a great shot before with a given club right? So you know that the problem is not with your body unless the body has significantly changed since you had that shot right?

So if that’s not the problem, what is? I don’t think I have to tell you. I think your clubs know the answer since they don’t change from shot to shot. As I write this and you read this, I am reminded of a friend who recounted to me about a story that Jack Nicklaus dad used to tell about young Jack. It seems that Jack never did think he had the best or prettiest swing on the tour. And, he didn’t think he had the most talent. He just KNEW he was going to make a putt…or a perfect swing…or win the tournament.

Would you like to get some of that? Break 80 Without Practice

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Comments

  1. Barbro Nilsson says:

    I already have your cd set in my library. I have not been attending for a while unfortunately. Is there anything I should do to get updated again?
    Regards
    Barbro Nilsson

    [Reply]

  2. giavarini says:

    Is-it a translation in french of this method ?

    [Reply]

  3. Craig says:

    Hi Giavarini,

    I do not have French translation but I’m sure you could find a website that would translate roughly if you copy and paste the words.
    Greens and fairways,
    Craig

    [Reply]

  4. Ric says:

    Hi Giavarini,

    Try a site called Babelfish, it can translate text or web pages.

    Good Luck,

    Ric

    [Reply]

  5. Tom says:

    You may have to change your sign-off “green and fairways” to something else. Without a predictable, repeatable, controllable swing, one will never hit any greens nor will one ever be hitting their second shot from a fairway. I do agree that we don’t all need the same style of swing, but I don’t take lessons for style, I take lessons to learn control. Very few of the amateurs I play with (some who have played for years) are able to control their swing. They are left, they are right, they are short and they have no clue how to make it any different. So I could never pledge to ignore swing advice until I started scoring in the 70s, because I’ll never get to the 70s with my current swing. I’ll never get to the 70s with my current short game, either, so I can’t ignore that in my practice schedule, either. It’s a multifaceted game and I need a multifaceted practice.

    [Reply]

    Craig Reply:

    Hi Tom,
    Thanks for writing. Keep reading my articles and you will find that I am ALL about a predictable, repeatable swing. Unfortunately, too many golfers get that mixed up with a “perfect” swing. Our unconscious mind has the ability to repeat whatever workable swing golfers have right now. Golfers can continue to take lessons and hit thousands of balls and that CAN work. My methods enhance that process but also work for golfers who don’t have the time or energy for either and just want to play and improve their game. Too many pros to count have made it all the way to the top WITHOUT any swing coach or lessons to prove my point. Bubba Watson is just the latest.
    He hits a lot of greens and fairways,

    Craig

    [Reply]

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