"Golf equipment to help you play like a pro! Find the best golf clubs, golf balls and golf accessories to play and look your best..."

 

golf course design


 

Why, Oh Why, Is The Golf Swing So Hard?!
By Jonathan
Why do we find a move that seems so easy to the professionals so incredibly difficult to perform?

Recently I discovered that psychologists believe that we learn differently as adults than we do when we were children. And I believe this may be the key to explaining why we have such a difficult time of it.

The large majority of professional golfers will have taken up golf when they were kids – Tiger Woods was swinging a club well at 3!

But, I would imagine the majority of amateur golfers took golf up when either in their late teens, early twenties or even later in life – as adults.

The psychologists believe that as children we learn from repeating the model that we see – we know that kids are very trusting of what they are told. Yes, they ask lots of questions but they trust the answers given. They see, and are told, and DO.

Now as adults we learn differently. We have already formed opinions about how the world is and how things operate. So when we learn something new we actually test it against the rules that we have already built up in our heads as to what is right and wrong.

Unfortunately for us, the golf swing is actually illogical. That’s where the problem stems from. In our heads we can’t actually accept or believe that that is how the golf swing works. We then trust our instinct and test it against our rules and go back to what we believe is logical.

Here is what is illogical about the golf swing:

A Golf Swing without Effort

 

Sportsbooks.com offers free weekly $1,000.00 NFL Pick'em contests for all active members.
Sportsbooks.com gives all of their active members a free bet each week. This online sportsbook is offering a free weekly $1,000.00 NFL Pick'em contests for all their members. Click here for details on how to participate.
Stankowski wins Canadian Tour Championship
Tom Stankowski birdied his final two holes Sunday to earn his first victory on the Canadian Tour at the Canadian Tour Championship. He shot a final-round, three-under 69 and won the title at by two strokes at 16-under 272. Overnight co-leader Wes ...
Heffernan, Stankowski share Canadian Tour Championship lead
Wes Heffernan and Tom Stankowski both shot five-under 67 Saturday to move into a share of the lead after the third round of the Canadian Tour Championship. Heffernan and Stankowski are tied at 13-under-par 203, one shot off the tournament's 54-hol...
Im still in front at Canadian Tour Championship
Daniel Im posted a four-under 68 on Friday to stay atop the leaderboard after the second round of the Canadian Tour Championship. Im finished 36 holes at 12-under 132 and is one ahead at National Pines Golf Club. Marc Lawless fired a nine-under 63...
Im leads Canadian Tour Championship
Daniel Im fired an eight-under 64 on Thursday to take the first-round lead of the season-ending Canadian Tour Championship at National Pines Golf Club. Leading money winner John Ellis and James Hahn are knotted in second place at seven-under 65. A...
Eger grabs first win at Seaforth Classic
Kent Eger fired a seven-under 64 Sunday to win a shootout at the Seaforth Country Classic. Eger completed the tournament at 26-under-par 258, two strokes clear of three players, two of whom account for five wins this season. John Ellis, a three-ti...
Bland, Eger share lead at Seaforth Classic
Australia's Adam Bland fired a 10-under 61 on Saturday to grab a share of the lead after three rounds of the inaugural Seaforth Country Classic. A two-time Canadian Tour winner, Bland had 10 birdies in a flawless round at Seaforth Golf Club to hea...
Collins, Parr share lead at Seaforth Classic
Wil Collins and Andrew Parr both fired rounds of eight-under 63 Friday to move into a share of the lead after two rounds of the inaugural Seaforth Classic at Seaforth Golf Club. Collins and Parr completed 36 holes at 14-under-par 128. Both players...
Bland leads at Seaforth Classic
Adam Bland fired an eight-under-par 63 on Thursday to take the opening-round lead of the inaugural Seaforth Classic at Seaforth Golf Club. Daniel Im, Clint Rice, Andy Matthews and Matt Daniel share second place at seven-under 64. Bland started on ...
Coe gets first Canadian Tour win
Alex Coe shot a two-under 68 on Sunday to earn his first Canadian Tour victory at the Jane Rogers Championship at Mississauga. Coe, a tour rookie, finished at 15-under 265 and won by three over last week's winner Graham DeLaet, who only managed a ...
Coe two clear in Ontario
Alex Coe fired his second straight five- under 65 Saturday to grab a two-stroke lead after three rounds of the Jane Rogers Championship of Mississauga. Coe completed 54 holes at 13-under-par 197. That bettered the 54-hole scoring record by three s...
Bradford grabs one-shot lead in Ontario
George Bradford posted a four-under 66 Friday to grab a one-shot lead after two rounds of the Jane Rogers Championship of Mississauga. Bradford completed 36 holes at nine-under-par 131. He leads by one over Ryan Yip (66) and Alex Coe (65). Tim Woo...

  Free DVD or Video on Robson Retirement Communities

= A Powerful 300 yard drive

It’s been said before that the secret to the pros swing is that it achieves ‘Power WITHOUT Effort – how illogical is that!

It’s a bit like saying we’re going on a 200 mile car journey, but we’re not going to turn the engine on! No ones going to believe you.

That’s how our brains interpret it – we think there’s no way you can hit a golf ball 300 yards without LOTS of effort.

So next time we coil up on the backswing our brain tells our muscles ‘right guys we need plenty of effort if we’re going to send this ball long and straight’.

Pro’s do actually put effort into their swings to get the ball to go that far (look at Tiger Woods face just before impact and you’ll see what I mean) BUT they put it in at a completely different point in the swing to amateur golfers. They also know the technique that allows them to produce such great results – and it doesn’t involve power, certainly not how the amateur golfer understands it.

Amateur golfers think you need to start the golf swing powerfully BUT the pro golfers know that you put the effort in at the bottom of the swing.

If you try and take this point on board this will start the process of adjusting your mind.

Over the next few pages I’m going to OPEN your EYES to how the golf swing actually works – much of which us amateurs don’t appreciate.

Understanding is the 1st key to unlocking your golfing potential.

Towards the end of my book I’ll show you where to get a piece of software that will by-pass your conscious mind and reprogram your sub-conscious mind to believe what you will see and start to understand about how the pro golf swing works. How YOU can swing powerfully without effort.

EYE-OPENER No. 2

What part of the body contributes the most to generating the maximum speed of the club head?

This single answer allowed me to make a huge leap in my understanding of the golf swing, and in everything I had seen and read about the golf swing none of it emphasised it enough.

I carried out a survey on the Internet over several weeks and asked visitors to my web site the question:- What part of the body contributes the most to generating the maximum speed of the club head?

Only 20% got the answer correct – That’s only 1 in every 5 golfers! And these golfers had a wide range of handicaps down to single figures.

Interestingly this figure corresponds to another golfing statistic - Did you know that only around 20% of golfers have a handicap of less than 18? It made me wonder whether the misunderstanding of the fundamental aspect could be the one thing that is holding so many golfers back.

Which part of the body do you think creates the maximum speed of the club head?

Is it:
Shoulders
Arms
Hands
Hips
Legs
Torso
wrists

(Graphics and explanations omitted here)

....So the answer to the question that I posed above is that it is the hands (or wrists) that contribute the most to generating the maximum club head speed. The club is moved through over 180 degrees whilst the arms move through less than 60 degrees – all of the rest of the movement of the head of the golf club is generated by the movement of the hands. Unfortunately the large majority of golfers think that it is with the shoulders and arms.

Article Source: http://www.article-outlet.com/

 
 
 

Free DVD or Video on Robson Retirement Communities

 
 
     
 
 

 
 
 
   

    IN THE HOLE! Golf