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Fore Newsletter

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Hit It High

When needing to get the ball up quickly, say to hit it over a tree, or when needing the ball to land extra soft on an extra firm green, you can make just two adjustments to your one plane swing and get the desired results. The first thing is the ball position. It should be moved up slightly forward in your stance, generally no more than an inch. Any more than this and you will be required to make compensations in your swing to hit the ball, such as sliding your hips to get to the ball. You also risk not making solid contact. The second thing is you must release the club with a rehinge of the left wrist. This adds loft to the club through impact which will make the ball launch much higher and continue to climb. At impact, the shaft of the club shaft must not lean too far forward (toward the target) or too far back (away from the target). Every degree that the shaft leans toward the target reduces the loft by the same amount. In other words, if the loft on the club is 42 degrees and the shaft is leaning 10 degrees toward the target at impact, the effective loft at impact is 32 degrees.

Here are some checkpoints to help achieve a better impact position and increase the heights on your shots:

• 1. Make sure that the ball is positioned correctly in your stance. Play your short irons (wedges, 9 iron and 8 iron) in the center of your stance. Your middle irons (7 iron, 6 iron and 5 iron) should be positioned one ball width forward of center and your long irons and fairway woods two balls forward of center. Play your drives off the inside front heel. Moving the ball back of center in your stance encourages a low hook or push.

• 2. Tilt your spine slightly away from the target so that your head is behind the ball. All tour players tilt slightly behind the ball from approximately 2 degrees with short irons to a full 10 degrees or more for driving. This "up-hill lie" position should help you launch the ball higher. It is imperative that your head stay behind the ball for a powerful impact. Jack Nicklaus always said, "I hit (make contact with the ball) past my chin." If your chin is behind the ball at impact, your shots will be higher and more powerful.

• 3. Continue your swing to a full, high finish. A long, high finish helps you release the wrist angles through impact. When your wrists hinge and re-hinge through and after impact, the shaft is less likely to lean towards the target. The rule of thumb for trajectory control is finish high and full for high ball flight and finish low and short for low ball flight.

• 4. If your shots hook and are low, choose a weaker grip. Just as with shaft lean, a closed clubface reduces the effective loft of the club. A weaker grip (thumb and forefinger "V’s" more towards the middle of your body) will encourage a square or slightly open clubface.



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