Golf Swing
Searching for information about the proper golf swing? Welcome to
InTheHoleGolf.com, your #1 resource for golf equipment, golf clubs, and golf
training aids. Whether you are a high handicap player, a low handicap
amateur player, or a pro, we invite you to take a look at our golf training
aids department with one of the largest selections of products in the market
aimed at helping you with your golf swing.
A proper golf swing obviously has an enormous impact on your game of golf.
Yet many golf instructors will agree that the perfect golf swing is a myth.
Although you will see a variety of different swings on the PGA and LPGA tour
each weekend on television, each golf swing has some common elements. Every
player’s golf swing needs to starts with good basics: grip, aim and setup.
Once the player addresses the ball they can begin their golf swing. Putts
and short chips are ideally played without much movement of the body, but
most other golf shots use variants of the full golf swing. The full golf
swing one uses to drive the ball from the tee as well as in most fairway
shots requires a consistency that comes from constant practice. The golf
training aid department at IN THE HOLE! Golf offers a variety of golf
training devices and golf swing aids. If you need any help or suggestions
finding the correct swing trainer for your specific golf swing flaw, please
give us a toll free call at 1-888-733-8383. Our golf swing experts will be
more than happy to assist you with the proper training aid for your golf
swing needs.
The full golf swing is an unnatural,
complex rotation of the body aimed at accelerating the club head to
a great speed. For the average golfer it is usually very difficult
to acquire a stable and successful golf swing without professional
instruction. Even highly skilled golfers may continue to take golf
lessons for many years making subtle adjustments to their golf
swing. A full golf swing consists of addressing the ball and then
commencing with the backswing, proceeding to the downswing in which
the ball is hit, and ending with the follow through. Chipping out of
a sand trap and putting require different golf swings from the golf
swing used for a drive or a shot from the fairway. A good golfer
must also know how to adapt his golf swing, particularly his drive
from the tee or other fairway shots according to the weather. If
wind is present, the golfer must adjust his golf swing to the angle
of flight the ball follows off the tee shot to maximize the distance
of the drive. Besides the physical part, there is a mental aspect
that contributes to the difficulty of the golf swing. Since golfers
play against the course and hit a stationary object not put into
motion by an opponent, there is never anyone to blame but oneself
for bad results. This can create a great deal of psychological
pressure on the golfer at all levels of play, particularly if they
are very competitive.
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