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Message
What are some simple ways to fix a golf game
Posted on 7/22/25 at 6:24 am
Posted on 7/22/25 at 6:24 am
Recently started getting into golf, and have a few outings ahead of me this year that I’m signed up for, and simply want to play consistent enough where it’s not embarrassing and I’m competitive.
I’m decent at times but not at all consistent. 250 yd fairway drive on one and hard right slice into the woods on the next. Nice looping wedge shot onto the green from 50 yards out on one, and then the next I whack it and it and it’s a line drive somewhere.
Trying not to spend a fortune on lessons, etc. my current strategy is to have a bunch of practice balls and just working at the house for now watching YouTube videos, and putting in 10-15 minutes a night, mixing it up with a range visit once a week.
Are there any recommended gadgets or apps or video series I should be watching? Basic techniques that everyone should be implementing? My main issue is maintaining a smooth form all the way thru, at a consistent speed. This is probably creating my inconsistency, but that is my basic analysis.
I’m decent at times but not at all consistent. 250 yd fairway drive on one and hard right slice into the woods on the next. Nice looping wedge shot onto the green from 50 yards out on one, and then the next I whack it and it and it’s a line drive somewhere.
Trying not to spend a fortune on lessons, etc. my current strategy is to have a bunch of practice balls and just working at the house for now watching YouTube videos, and putting in 10-15 minutes a night, mixing it up with a range visit once a week.
Are there any recommended gadgets or apps or video series I should be watching? Basic techniques that everyone should be implementing? My main issue is maintaining a smooth form all the way thru, at a consistent speed. This is probably creating my inconsistency, but that is my basic analysis.
Posted on 7/22/25 at 6:38 am to burger bearcat
quote:
Trying not to spend a fortune on lessons
Most of us can’t really do more than one lesson every 2/3 weeks.
A good pro willlook at your swing and simplify it for you.
$50 and 30 minutes could really pay off.
Doing multiple lessons without interval of time between is not ideal.
IF you are wildly inconsistent, you may be swaying off the golf ball.
Staying balanced is paramount.
As far as gadgets, an orange whip is nice for training good motion.
All in all, hiring a pro for a half hour evaluation/lesson is probably the best way to sort out what to do.
Posted on 7/22/25 at 6:39 am to burger bearcat
quote:
Basic techniques that everyone should be implementing?
Look up Hank Haney’s slice fix. It’s a good place to start.
Drill the heck out of that and ramp up speed. You can play a lot of good golf hitting it 250 in the fairway.
Posted on 7/22/25 at 6:50 am to burger bearcat
I would avoid the YouTube rabbit hole personally. A pro can get you a consistent grip and setup and some drills to work on to make your swing playable.
You don’t have to spend a fortune on lessons, just one or two to get a direction.
You don’t have to spend a fortune on lessons, just one or two to get a direction.
Posted on 7/22/25 at 7:49 am to burger bearcat
I would start with your grip and basic setup. Once you are consistent with that, you can move on to more technical things. If that is wrong from jump, none of the other issues will matter because the beginning is broken.
Also, work more of your short game than hitting bombs. Thats where you will make the majority of your strokes so being good at that will help tremendously.
Also, work more of your short game than hitting bombs. Thats where you will make the majority of your strokes so being good at that will help tremendously.
Posted on 7/22/25 at 7:57 am to burger bearcat
As someone that has had every fault under the sun.. grip and takeaway.
Hammer these two home and everything else falls into place much, much easier
Hammer these two home and everything else falls into place much, much easier
Posted on 7/22/25 at 9:14 am to burger bearcat
Nail grip and set up. Next prioritize contact Look up adam young golf has a bunch of free info and affordable courses improving contact with ball and ground
Posted on 7/22/25 at 11:02 am to burger bearcat
As others have said, grip is the first thing you need to work on, then set up. Buy one of these and put it on one of your clubs, let's say a 7 iron.
Scottie Scheffler uses one and works on his grip constantly, If the #1 player in the world is worried about the most basic of fundamental things, his grip, then we all should be too, especially someone who is pretty new to the game.
I'd go get 1 lesson to help with these fundamentals, grip and set up, work on that for a while before you go and get a full swing lesson.
I'm a 9 handicap, a decent player and I have a problem being consistent, most all amateurs do. We simply don't have the time or the God given talent to be as consistent as the tour pros or high-level amateurs. They hit thousands of golf balls a week, I play a couple times a week and don't even go to the range when I'm there. #1, right now it's too hot, #2, I'm too lazy, I just like to play and am happy shooting low 80's with an occasional 78 or 79 sprinkled in there. I also shoot in the 90's sometimes, it happens. Remember this, golf is fun but it is also INCREDIBLY HARD. So much to time up and sync up with your arms, body and club face. I will say that I am consistent, consistently inconsistent
Scottie Scheffler uses one and works on his grip constantly, If the #1 player in the world is worried about the most basic of fundamental things, his grip, then we all should be too, especially someone who is pretty new to the game.
I'd go get 1 lesson to help with these fundamentals, grip and set up, work on that for a while before you go and get a full swing lesson.
I'm a 9 handicap, a decent player and I have a problem being consistent, most all amateurs do. We simply don't have the time or the God given talent to be as consistent as the tour pros or high-level amateurs. They hit thousands of golf balls a week, I play a couple times a week and don't even go to the range when I'm there. #1, right now it's too hot, #2, I'm too lazy, I just like to play and am happy shooting low 80's with an occasional 78 or 79 sprinkled in there. I also shoot in the 90's sometimes, it happens. Remember this, golf is fun but it is also INCREDIBLY HARD. So much to time up and sync up with your arms, body and club face. I will say that I am consistent, consistently inconsistent
This post was edited on 7/22/25 at 11:12 am
Posted on 7/22/25 at 11:38 am to burger bearcat
Working on a good solid wedge swing with ball first contact will set you 99% on the way to having a good all-around game. There is something about the heavy swing weight of a wedge and the length that forces you to really accelerate through impact in order to smack the ball first. I find I HAVE TO feel like I’m releasing the club properly through the ball in order to hit my wedge clean. That feel translates well up the iron chain.
When you practice always start with a wedge. Any wedge. I like to use my 52 because it’s the longest one I carry.
I start with 10 balls but I swing the wedge until I can hit 5 consecutive shots, ball first, where I’m aiming. Then work my way through the irons; P, 8, 6, 4, 18* then driver. I try to get 5 each consecutive playable shots.
If I have any balls left then go back to irons but this time the odds, 9, 7, 5, then one or two 3 wood shots off the deck. If I still have any remaining balls I go back to a wedge.
If I’m warming up before a round I do wedge, 8, 7, 4, 3 wood, Driver.
Also, if I’m having a particularly wonky driver day I find that switching to the 3 wood and hitting them clean off the grass “resets” my driver swing and gets my balance where it needs to be.
Oh and one more thing:
If possible, FIND SOME GRASS!
The mat will lie to you and get you hitting stuff super fat. If you can hit off grass that would be ideal.
Another edit:
I also caution against going down the YouTube rabbit hole but Eric Cogorno has some good videos on how to properly release a club. If you get this feel down it will absolutely simplify your swing. Pay close attention to how the lead wrist ROTATES and allows the trail wrist to overtake. You’re not bending your wrist you’re turning it.
Eric Cogorno Release
When you practice always start with a wedge. Any wedge. I like to use my 52 because it’s the longest one I carry.
I start with 10 balls but I swing the wedge until I can hit 5 consecutive shots, ball first, where I’m aiming. Then work my way through the irons; P, 8, 6, 4, 18* then driver. I try to get 5 each consecutive playable shots.
If I have any balls left then go back to irons but this time the odds, 9, 7, 5, then one or two 3 wood shots off the deck. If I still have any remaining balls I go back to a wedge.
If I’m warming up before a round I do wedge, 8, 7, 4, 3 wood, Driver.
Also, if I’m having a particularly wonky driver day I find that switching to the 3 wood and hitting them clean off the grass “resets” my driver swing and gets my balance where it needs to be.
Oh and one more thing:
If possible, FIND SOME GRASS!
The mat will lie to you and get you hitting stuff super fat. If you can hit off grass that would be ideal.
Another edit:
I also caution against going down the YouTube rabbit hole but Eric Cogorno has some good videos on how to properly release a club. If you get this feel down it will absolutely simplify your swing. Pay close attention to how the lead wrist ROTATES and allows the trail wrist to overtake. You’re not bending your wrist you’re turning it.
Eric Cogorno Release
This post was edited on 7/22/25 at 11:50 am
Posted on 7/22/25 at 1:29 pm to RockinDood
quote:
I also caution against going down the YouTube rabbit hole but Eric Cogorno has some good videos on how to properly release a club. If you get this feel down it will absolutely simplify your swing. Pay close attention to how the lead wrist ROTATES and allows the trail wrist to overtake. You’re not bending your wrist you’re turning it.
100% agree with this. I would also suggest his tips on giving blood. Meaning, a great swing thought on how to keep your right elbow close to your body and promote swinging from the inside. That thought has improved my game by leaps
Posted on 7/22/25 at 2:02 pm to burger bearcat
I would be careful with YouTube and taking in too much instruction, could lead to way too many swing thoughts. The main thoughts anyone needs to have to hit powerful golf shots is to keep your head/spine still through impact and keep your hands in front of the club head (lag) through impact. You hear “keep your head down” all the time but that’s a bit misleading- obviously you want to keep your eye on the ball but the real purpose is to create a central axis to swing around, which is why I say to keep it still rather than down, let it look at the ball flying as you swing through rather than twisting your neck. Creating lag mean you keep your right hand bent back as long as you can, not ever releasing consciously.
Neither of these things feel particularly natural or intuitive, so you basically have to trick your brain into doing this until you trust the motion.
The thing for me that I think made the most difference was using a wedge around my house with foam balls. I would just drill this into my head
You mentioned dedicated putting practice which would be the other thing I recommend- I consider this basically a separate part of the game
Neither of these things feel particularly natural or intuitive, so you basically have to trick your brain into doing this until you trust the motion.
The thing for me that I think made the most difference was using a wedge around my house with foam balls. I would just drill this into my head
You mentioned dedicated putting practice which would be the other thing I recommend- I consider this basically a separate part of the game
Posted on 8/10/25 at 8:53 pm to burger bearcat
YouTube doesn’t know what you do. Take a lesson from a PGA golf professional. Corey. Webber gives lessons at Carter Plantation and is really good. If you do it on your own you will ingrain bad habits which are super difficult to fix. Golf really isn’t something you can figure
Out on your own.
Out on your own.
Posted on 8/14/25 at 10:45 am to burger bearcat
As far as simplifying your game and not worrying as much about mechanics, look up Tropicana golf or golf sidekick on youtube. More course managment focused with a few subtle tips to simplify the swing. Alot of it is take more club, shorten the swing and swing easy... Now if I could take my ego out and put those things into practice.
Posted on 8/14/25 at 11:07 am to burger bearcat
low point control is one of the biggest differentiators between high handicap players and really good players. that means your club bottoms out in the same place over and over again.
when you practice with your irons, put a towel flat on the ground a couple inches behind the ball.
also, drill the fundamentals. make sure your grip and setup is the same on every swing. it doesn't take any talent to do that.
when you practice with your irons, put a towel flat on the ground a couple inches behind the ball.
also, drill the fundamentals. make sure your grip and setup is the same on every swing. it doesn't take any talent to do that.
This post was edited on 8/14/25 at 11:09 am
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