In other words, your clubface will be open to the target (the first ‘right’) but square to its ARC. Now, if you don’t spin the shaft on its own axis as you turn (aka quiet forearms), the clubface will stay square to whatever path or arc the club is moving on. This is because your body is rotating a few degrees to produce coil. When your clubface starts away from the ball, it’s in the process of opening (pointing to the right of target – left if you’re left handed). To see a square clubface lay the leading edge on the bottom of your clubhead flush with a flat surface – this looks open to many golfers the first few times they do it.Īll full swing clubfaces open during the backswing, and once the takeaway starts, there are two ways to open the clubface: (1) body rotation, (2) forearm rotation. You might be surprised that many golfers don’t know what a square clubface at address should look like – the toe is slightly behind the heel. To feel connection, place a head-cover or a towel under your arms, then keep it there with light pressure all the way to the top of your swing and well into your follow-through, at which point your connection is naturally broken. Once you get use to the feeling hit some full shots with a driver. Start with some 60- to 80-yard wedges to get the feel of having your elbows close together with a quiet face. The Drill: hit some balls with a belt or elastic tubing tied around your arms just above the elbows to keep them close to one another. Thirdly, velcro your triceps to your pecs. Next, feel as if your elbows are always pointing at the ground, stabilizing the face so it doesn’t spin. By keeping your elbows close together, especially in the downswing, you’ll find it’s much easier to have a repetitive motion. Most amateurs have elbows that separate as they swing, and that forces the clubface to point off the swing arc, so that depending on split second compensations, impact is never the same twice in a row. Try This to “Own” Your Clubfaceįirst, keep your elbows close together. Remember that the clubface determines 75-90% of the initial ball direction, depending on the club, so if you want to be accurate, you must find a way to “own” your clubface. Tiny Tim (5’7”, 165 pounds) averaged 69 strokes per round in 2009, an impressive feat that demonstrated the value of clubface stabilization. In 1966 at age 23 he played his first game of golf and qualified for the PGA tour a mere seven years later – then over a 20+ year career, he won 12 times and led the PGA Tour in driving accuracy for 10 consecutive seasons.Ī few years later, there was another player (Tim Clark) who also had issues with his lead forearm – a congenital problem that made it difficult for the 2010 Player’s champion to pronate or rotate his left palm toward the ground, so his clubface was protected against excess rotation. However, it never healed correctly, so his forearm couldn’t rotate and neither could the clubface. When he was 11, he fell out of a tree and broke his left arm in three places. So accurate was Calvin Peete that they called him Peete and Re-Peete. (3) Keeping the top of the arms in contact with the chest so they move together.īut Hogan wasn’t the only sharp shooter who demonstrated clubface control. (2) Keeping them the same distance apart during the swing and (1) Keeping the elbows pointing down to the ground In fact, early in his career he called himself ‘the terror of the field mice’ because he had an uncontrollable duck hook that got low and left in a hurry.Īfter going broke on tour, it became clear to him that he couldn’t cash a ticket with that ‘snake in the bag.’īut through hard work on the range (‘I found it in the dirt’ he said), he came to understand clubface control, and in 1957, Hogan wrote what would become the most influential golf instruction book ever – Five Lessons – in which he outlined three keys to clubface control: In my opinion, of the great players, Ben Hogan had the most clubface control – but it wasn’t always that way i.e., Hogan wasn’t always “Hogan.” TJ Tomasi, College of Golf Senior Faculty and Director of Research Blog To Be a Good Player You Must “Own” the Clubfaceīy Dr.
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