"Good Contact"
Nothing in the golf swing is more important than the result - crisp, solid contact
resulting in a good shot. If you don't strike the ball cleanly, none of the other stuff
matters. A great backswing and a bad downswing gets you nowhere. But a bad backswing and a
great downswing can still get the job done. Look at Jim Furyk. Great downswing. Let's take
a look at some tips to help you strike the ball better.
ACHIEVE SUCCESS ON SHORTER, PARTIAL SHOTS AND WORK YOUR WAY OUT TO THE LONGER, FULLER
SHOTS
Most golfers don't have trouble with contact on chip shots, lob shots, or 3/4 wedges. Practice
what you hit well. When you can consisently strike the ball on the shorter shots, you are
ready to "go up a club." Your goal is consistent, square contact. You keep
advancing through your bag until you DON'T hit it square. Then you back up a club and get
your solid contact rhythm back. Your goal is to get square contact on every club in your
bag. It takes time and work, but becoming a good golfer means hitting it square.
PRACTICE DOWNSWINGS ONLY TO WORK
ON SOLID CONTACT
One of the best drills you can work on to achieve good ball striking is to start as close
to the top of your backswing as possible, then concentrate solely on the downswing and the
striking of the ball. Find your comfort zone as to where near the top of your backswing is
a good place to "start." Then trigger your downswing and concentrate on smoothly
striking the ball. It's a great drill for grooving the downswing.
REALIZE THAT EXCELLENCE IN BALL STRIKING MEANS SWINGING THROUGH THE GOLF BALL
AND THE HITTING AREA
This is a concept that really needs to be understood. When you watch a pro or a really
good golfer in person or in a sequence of pictures, you will see that the moment of
contact is NOT the end of the sequence. There's still the follow through part of the
swing. Every good golfer swings through the ball into some form of a follow through. The
striking of the ball is really only the halfway point of a good downswing. Look at
pictures of the swing sequence and think of the club head during the swing like the
numbers on a clock. The address possition is 6 o'clock. The backswing takes you backwards
5, 4, 3... past 12, and back to about 10 o'clock. Then the downswing takes you back
through the clock numbers (12, 1, 2, 3...) to the ball at 6 o'clock and continues through
the numbers on the clock until you go past 12 to 1, 2, or 3 o'clock on the follow through.
That's 8 to 9 "hours" of distance the clubhead passes past the point of contact.
If you were simply swinging AT the ball, the clubhead wouldn't move much past 6 o'clock.
But clearly, as you can see while observing the swing sequence, good golfers don't swing
at the ball, they swing THROUGH THE BALL.
FINISH SWING WITH WEIGHT OFF BACK FOOT, ON FRONT FOOT, WITH YOUR BELT BUCKLE FACING
THE TARGET
The feet play an important, underrated part of the golf swing. The transition from
backswing to downswing must include a transition from the back foot to front foot to
support the weight shift. The natural follow through position you arrive at after striking
the ball is with your belt buckle facing the target. Look at professional golfers. They
all end up in that position. You should too.
DURING DOWNSWING YOU MUST THINK ABOUT AND CONCENTRATE ON SWINGING THROUGH THE BALL
You can only be thinking of one thing once you've begun your downswing, and that one thing
must be striking the ball as your clubhead comes through the hitting area. If you're
thinking of anything else, you're either in a hurry and way ahead of yourself, or you've
got your priorities wrong. Because this is where you've got to be concentrating on hitting
the ball, and if you've allowed yourself to be thinking about other things, you've got to
get back in control of what's important. And that is striking the ball cleanly. Do that
well first and foremost, and the rest of the game will follow.