Golf tips, instruction, and commentary for any golfer looking to improve.

Tag: Golf Tips

Which Golf Grip Should You Use?

From the very first moment you touched a club, your golf game has been dramatically affected by your grip.

Given this obvious fact, it’s amazing to me how many golfers discount how important this part of your game is. After all, why would you spend hundreds of dollars and hours of your time with lessons and practice when the basics are truly what is holding you back from improving?

Thankfully, all the confusion surrounding golf grips is easily fixed with just a little information. And that’s what we’re going to talk about today.

Importance of a Grip

Before we talk about the three main types of golf grips, we should really talk about why your grip is so important.

Simply put, your grip is what allows you to transfer your body’s movement into your club, and through your club, into the ball.

While it might be obvious, this really is worth emphasizing as your grip will determine your success or failure when it comes to the physical consistency with your swing.

Strong or weak grips might heighten or negate the effect of a shaky swing. Too much pressure from a grip can over or under rotate your wrists, leading to errant shots. And the list goes on and on.

So, with that said, let’s take a look at the three main golf grips a golfer can use.

The Baseball Grip (Ten Finger Grip)

baseball gripWhether you look back at playing t-ball as a kid or your first golf swing an overwhelming majority of golfers start their careers with the baseball grip, otherwise, known as the “ten-finger grip”.

For a right-handed golfer, simply grab the club with your right hand stacked on top of your left and then approach the ball.

While the baseball grip is simple, other benefits of this grip include greater leverage from the absence of interlocking fingers. This can create more clubhead speed at impact; something that improves distance.

Finally, the dominance of the right hand in the baseball grip helps prevent a fade. This makes the baseball grip especially useful for golfers that struggle with a slice or fade.

However, while the baseball grip is simple and powerful for new golfers, this comes at a price. Since you lack any connection between hands with the ten-finger grip, you run the risk of sacrificing your grips consistency for the positives listed above.

If you’d like to keep that consistency with your grip, however, we may have a solution for you down below…

The Overlap Grip (Vardon Grip)

vardon gripNext up after the baseball grip is the “overlap grip” or the “Vardon grip”. This grip was popularized by Henry Vardon in the late 19th century and is the most popular grip of professional golfers. A picture of the grip is shown on the right.

To do the overlap grip, first, grab the club as you would for the baseball grip. From there, slide the little finger of your right hand into the space between the index and middle finger of your left hand. After, just move your finger around until the grip feels comfortable and you should be all set.

While the Vardon Grip, like the baseball grip, is also simple to adapt, its overlapping nature adds to the structure and stability of the overall grip.

This might seem like an improvement over the baseball grip, however, this grip removes the leverage created by stacking your hands in the previous grip. Although this isn’t a big deal for most golfers, losing the extra distance, especially with the driver and long irons, is a significant tradeoff.

All and all, the improved stability and comfort of the overlap grip is usually worth the decreased distance. This, along with the ease of adaptation, has caused the overlap grip to be one of golf’s most popular grips.

The Interlock Grip

Our final grip today is the one I personally use when I golf, the interlock grip. interlock grip.jpg

While the overlap grip promoted the tradeoff of consistency for distance, the interlock grip takes this one step further.

As you can see to the right, the interlock grip features an interconnection of the left index finger and the right pinky finger. This interlocking set-up not only increases the strength of the grip itself but, more importantly, this grip forces both of your hands to work together during a swing.

This forced cohesion between hands is, in my opinion, the interlock grip’s greatest strength. By forcing a golfer to use both hands in unison, this grip dramatically improves the consistency of a golfer’s ball-striking at impact. It’s for this massive reason that I only teach the interlock grip during my lessons.

Unfortunately, all good things inevitably come with a tradeoff. For this grip, in particular, it is exceedingly difficult to adapt to. Where other grips might not cause any inconvenience when you switch to them, the interlocking grip will take months of consistent practice to start to feel normal.

For this reason, I would recommend learning this grip during the offseason if you are interested in trying it out. If that’s not possible, even just grabbing a club and taking a couple swings a day will help reduce the time it takes for this grip to feel natural.

It might seem like a little bit of work, but I promise the pay off from improved ball striking will be worth it.

The Wrap-Up

While there is no shortage of grips to try out in the golfing world, I’m confident that one of the three grips will help you find what you’re looking for in your golf game.

Whether you’re looking for improved distance, comfort, consistency, or some of each, the above grips will, hopefully, help you achieve your goals the next time you step on the course.

So, while it might be inconvenient to leave your trusty old grip from the past, it might be worth it to try out some of the grips we listed above.

After all, you never know when you might come across your new favorite grip.

Our New Ebook – A Golfer’s Practice Plan

With the new year upon us and 2019 already off to a busy start, I thought now would be a perfect time to unveil the newest project we have been working on.

While we spoke about an ebook in the works over a year ago, up until early December it really was something that had been pushed to the back burner. Thankfully, a few long flights and a handful of days off gave me the chance to finally finish up the manuscript.

After all the time spent on writing, cover art, and proofreading I am extremely excited to announce our first ebook from The Golf Academy:

A Golfer’s Practice Plan: Drills and Insight to Slash Your Scores

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Our Design

At the root of our design for this ebook was really finding a solution to the average golfers struggle to improve; their stagnation, we ultimately found, was due to a shortage of practice time coupled with the lack of focus many golfers have while they practice.

This guide speaks to both of these problems and provides advice to help you get the most out of your practice sessions and your golfing season.

By grabbing insight from practice theory, psychology, and almost a decade of teaching experience I think my team and I have hit the nail on the head when it comes to the content inside this guide.

With that being said, my team and I would be extremely happy to share our newest project with all of you.

And, to make things even sweeter, we’ll share it with you for free.

We want to share all this great information with you and we don’t want it to cost you a dime. In fact, we’ll even send it to your email if you’d like us to!

If you are interested in getting our new ebook delivered to your inbox, there’s a sign-up form below that’ll get you your new ebook automatically. Not only will this get you our new ebook, but it will also sign you up to get all of our new blog posts in your inbox as well (something we would love to have you on board for!).

Subscribe below for your FREE Ebook!

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Otherwise, if you don’t want to sign up for another mailing list, the download for a PDF is also down below. This way you’ll always have it with you and, better yet, it’ll be all set for you to send to a friend or playing partner (we’d appreciate that also!)

The Golfer’s Practice Plan

At the end of the day, we truly want to share our experience and advice with golfers that are looking to improve; hopefully, this guide helps do that for you.

If it does, please come reach out to us in the comments below or on Twitter and let us know! We’d love to hear what you think of our guide or anything golf related in general!

With that said, I really do want to thank you for coming along with us through the golfing world. We’re so grateful you’re at The Golf Academy with us and we hope you enjoy our newest guide.

Cheers,

Sully

Why Do Shots Curve?

We’ve all hit a draw or a slice before in our lives, right? But if I had to guess, you were probably more worried about the result of your shot than taking a second to think about why your ball did what it did during its flight. However, this question of why is exactly the little piece of golfing science that I want to cover today.

So why do my shots curve in the air? Well, the simple answer is, spin.

Unfortunately, that’s sort of where the simplicity of it stops…

What comes after this is a whole slew of physics that explain when, why, and how much the ball curves but, for the sake of this brief article, I’ll do my best to condense it. Basically, the curvature of your shot is due to a physical principle that’s also used in commercial airplanes and baseball called, the Magnus Effect.

Let’s start with an example, the slice. As we mentioned in our article How to Cure Your Slice, fading the ball is a result of a misalignment between your swing path and the club head. This misalignment actually causes the root of our problem by producing side spin on the ball.

This is where the physics comes in. Using exactly the same fundamental principle as a pitcher in baseball does with a curve ball, the spin your club imparts on your ball actually creates a small

Image result for curveball physics

Pitchers use the Magnus Effect every game in order to strike out batters with quick diving curveballs. 

discrepancy in the air pressure next to the ball. As you might be able to see by looking at the picture to the right, due to the spin on a curveball, the air pressure below the ball in lower than the pressure above the ball. This, in turn, causes the ball to dip and gives baseball pitchers their famous curve ball.

 

For our slice (assuming you’re right handed), as the ball spins clockwise off the club face a pocket of low pressure is established to the right of the ball which leads to a left to right ball trajectory.

Image result for slice physics golf

Our troubles don’t stop with slices. The Magnus Effect works on both sides of the ball so it turns out there’s no escaping your hook either. 

Not all slices are created equal, however. As you might have guessed, the amount of side spin that your swing imparts on the ball will also affect how far the ball will curve. The more side spin you put on your shot, the greater the change in pressure, the faster and (ultimately further) your ball will curve to the side. Simple as that!

 

So the next time you’re out on the links and you slash a ball off into the trees you can thank Gustav Magnus and his Magnus Effect for ultimately show us why nobody we know can keep our tee shots in the short grass. Thanks for joining us in class today and we’ll see you all next time!

What Wedge Should You Use and When

If you’ve been around the game of golf for a little while eventually you start to understand how your clubs work and how to go about choosing the right club for certain shots. After all, it can’t be that complicated, right? You simply follow number on the club with lower numbers going farther and visa versa. This is standard in golf, whether you’re using woods or irons except when it comes to wedges. Unfortunately, for a novice golfer or even an advanced one, it’s not always obvious what each different type of wedge is used for, and that can be frustrating. Luckily though, we’re here to shed some light on that today.  

How to Practice: At the Range

This might seem like a no-brainer. Go to the range, buy a bucket of balls, and whack away. And while this might be what you see other people on the range doing, putting some thought into the clubs you focus on and just how you practice at the range might help you improve your game.

So what should you be doing at the range? Well I think of it like this: ideally, you want to get a consistent shot that you can use while you’re on the course. So, if you’re looking to replicate your range shots out on the links, it only makes sense that you should practice like you’re on the course. Yes, this is going to slow you down, so if you’re trying to hit 200 balls in a couple hours you might not reach your goal, but practicing on the range (like almost everything in golf) is about quality over quantity.

How exactly do you do that?

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