Jump to content
IGNORED

Where do you focus your eyes?


Note: This thread is 5867 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Recommended Posts

In the March issue of Golf Magazine, Jim Murphy has a tip on how to hit good Iron shots, He says to focus your eyes on a spot 2 feet in front of the ball (To me this seems way too far forward) Where do you focus your eyes at?

In the Bag
Driver: R580XD 10.5*/Stiff Flex
3 wood: R7 Steel/Reg Flex
Hybrid: Tight Lies 17*/Reg Flex
Irons: R7CGB Max/Regular FlexWedges: R7CGB Max/Regular FlexPutter: Heavy Putter A2-M Ball: NXT tour

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Two feet IMO is way too forward. I did try it at beginning playing golf and the result were horrible.

What I do usually is focusing on the ball, BUT acknowledging that I need to hit approximately 2.5-3 inches in front of it. It's just like you're not looking at something but you know it's there.

What's in the bag:
Driver: r7 SuperQuad 10.5° ~ UST Proforce V2 65g Regular
Wood: 906F4 18.5° ~ Aldila VS Proto 80g Stiff
Irons: MP-60 3-PW ~ True Temper Tour Concept S3
Wedges: Vokey Oil Can 252.08, SM56.10 & SM60.08Putter: Marxman Mallet 33"
Link to comment
Share on other sites


This is a good question. I've tried a few different spots and like what Zach Johnson suggests. He looks at the ball but purposely blurs his vision. He claims that this helps him avoid the thought of hitting the ball, and instead, striking through it.
Link to comment
Share on other sites


your thinking about the wrong thing, dont try to focus your eyes on anything, just let it happen

you can not get too cought up in every detail, its like driving a car - where are you looking while driving? its impossible to tell
Link to comment
Share on other sites


This is a good question. I've tried a few different spots and like what Zach Johnson suggests. He looks at the ball but purposely blurs his vision. He claims that this helps him avoid the thought of hitting the ball, and instead, striking through it.

That is interesting - never thought about that. Might have to try it out and see what happens on the range :)

Thanks!
What's in R7 Bag:

R5 Dual 9.5 degree
3DX Pro 4-PW irons
3FT Hybrid 54 & 56 wedges*Gigagolf Trufeel putterMy blog:http://matt10-livethedream.blogspot.com/
Link to comment
Share on other sites


This is a good question. I've tried a few different spots and like what Zach Johnson suggests. He looks at the ball but purposely blurs his vision. He claims that this helps him avoid the thought of hitting the ball, and instead, striking through it.

what do you mean purposely blurs vision?

Link to comment
Share on other sites


what do you mean purposely blurs vision?

He must spit on his finger and rub it in his eyes....... Blurr his vision....come on did he really say that?
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Well, guys - just try focusing on something - then blur it with your eyes... - some would say, if they looked at you, you'd look cross eyed.

Maybe this is why Johnson wears shades the majority of the time :P
What's in R7 Bag:

R5 Dual 9.5 degree
3DX Pro 4-PW irons
3FT Hybrid 54 & 56 wedges*Gigagolf Trufeel putterMy blog:http://matt10-livethedream.blogspot.com/
Link to comment
Share on other sites


I focus directly underneath the middle of the ball.

A good drill to try is sticking a tee about a 1/4 inch in front of the ball. Stay down and through until your club hits the tee. Make sure to see your club hits the tee.

Titleist 905T Accra SC75 M4 Shaft

Nike SQ 4W Accra T70 M4 Shaft
HB001 17* Hybrid with Mitsubishi Diamana Thump X Stiff Flex
Baffler Pro 20* Accra Axiv 105 Tour Hybrid Shaft

Taylor Made 24* Burner Accra Axiv 105 Tour Hybrid Shaft

Mizuno MP-32 5-PW Black Oxide Finish Project X 6.0 Shafts

Vokey 52* Oil Can Finish TTDG S400 Shaft

Cleveland 588 60* TTDG S400 Shaft

Rife Bimini Blade Putter

 

Ball-White and Round

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I personally keep my eyes on the ball. If I focus on something else I usually end up not hitting the ball cleanly.
In my bag:

Driver: R7 SuperQuad
Woods: RPM LP 3W & 5W
Irons: MX-25 4-SWPutter: Detour
Link to comment
Share on other sites


i look at the BACK of the ball. I've had great success thinking only of slowing my takeaway and bringing my weight onto a solid right leg, and then hitting the back of the ball. no other thoughts just let the mechanics take care of themselves.
Bag: Flight SS
Driver: 10.5* r5 draw with Pro Launch blue 65 Stiff
Irons: CCi Forged 3i-pw
Wedges: 56* CG12 black pearl and 60* low bounce RTG 900
Putter: i-Series Anser 35"Ball: e5+Tee: Zero FrictionGlove: FootJoy WeatherSofRangefinder: MedalistShoes: Sp-6 II, Adidas 360Scores this year:92 91...
Link to comment
Share on other sites


I want to tell you something that i use exclusively for all shots..I keep my eye on the logo of the ball...This increases my chances of hitting it solid because i am focused on that one letter or word on the ball..It made a lot of sense to me whenever driving the ball because you can put the logo wherever you want...its more of a hand eye coordination kind of tip but it works wonders..Best of Luck

"People think the size of the head is most important. Wrong. It's getting a quality shaft. test different shafts to see which goes the straightest. Also, more degrees of loft on the head is better than less. Eleven degrees is about right."

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I used to look at the "inside quarter" or the back of the ball. After reading Harvey Penick, I look at the ball - all of it. He was right. There's a lot less to clutter my mind that way.

Best, Mike Elzey

In my bag:
Driver: Cleveland Launcher 10.5 stiff
Woods: Ping ISI 3 and 5 - metal stiffIrons: Ping ISI 4-GW - metal stiffSand Wedges: 1987 Staff, 1987 R-90Putter: two ball - black bladeBall: NXT Tour"I think what I said is right but maybe not.""If you know so much, why are you...

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I tend to look at the back half of the ball in a general way. I dont focus to hard on anything. I know some guys at the club that will lock on to a dimple on the ball. I feel it produces stiff, jabby swings.
THE WEAPONS CACHE..

Titleist 909 D2 9.5 Degree Driver| Titleist 906f4 13.5 degree 3-Wood | Titleist 909 17 & 21 degree hybrid | Titleist AP2 irons
Titleist Vokey Wedges - 52 & 58 | Scotty Cameron Studio Select Newport 2 Putter | ProV1 Ball
Link to comment
Share on other sites


I used to look at the "inside quarter" or the back of the ball. After reading Harvey Penick, I look at the ball - all of it. He was right. There's a lot less to clutter my mind that way.

I second that. I think Harvey got it right. I think of my shot, take my practice swings, setup my aiming point, and look at the ball as a whole. Then I go through my swing and follow through it.

-----------------------------------------------------
Driver - MX560 10.5 stiff
Hybrid Tour Edge rescue 18 degree
Irons - Knife 3-PW
Wedge - SV Tour 58 deg.Putter - Harmonized 425 Soft TouchBall - e6+or Feel

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I have the ball in a general "soft focus". I'm not even conscious of looking at it at all. It's sort of a blob. I'm focusing on the target and the flight of the ball going to it.

Driver- Geek Dot Com This! 12 degree Matrix Ozik Xcon 6 Stiff
Adams Tour Issue 4350 Dual Can Matrix Ozik Xcon 5

Hybrids- Srixon 18 deg
Srixon 21 deg Irons- Tourstage Z101 3-PW w/Nippon NS Pro 950 GH - Stiff Srixon i701 4-PW w/ Nippon NS Pro 950 GH-Stiff MacGregor...

Link to comment
Share on other sites


He must spit on his finger and rub it in his eyes.......

Actually, he did say that. July 2007 issue of Golf Digest with Luke Donald on the cover. It's in the breaking 100/90/80 section.

I don't really concentrate too hard on the ball but my coach suggested that I look at the back of the ball. I think it was pretty funny that he said: "when you hammer a nail, you don't look at the middle, you look at the end where you want to hit it."
Link to comment
Share on other sites


so this tip (the first one 2 ft in front of the ball) is good for all clubs??? it seems most appropriate in my mind with the driver, but i like the idea in general. I may start a little closer to the ball like 6" :)

Tour Burner 9.5 w real Diamana 63 S
906f4 15.5 Proforce V2 S
909H 19 Diamana S
755 4-PW
Vokey 50/56/60Yes! NatalieBushnell Medalist w/ PinseekerI'll play just about any ball

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Note: This thread is 5867 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    TourStriker PlaneMate
    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-15%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope.
  • Posts

    • @boogielicious and I are definitely in for the Stay & Play and will need the extra night's stay on Friday. I don't know what the plans are for our group on Friday but even if we don't make it for dinner with the rest of the Friday arrivals, I'll be more than happy to meet up somewhere for a beer or something.
    • Taking your dispersion and distance in consideration I analyzed the 4 posible ways to play the hole, or at least the ones that were listed here. I took the brown grass on the left as fescue were you need to punch out sideways to the fairway and rigth of the car path to be fescue too.  Driver "going for the green"  You have to aim more rigth, to the bunker in order to center your shotzone in between the fescue.  Wood of 240 over the bunkers I already like this one more for you. More room to land between the fescue. Balls in the fescue 11% down from 30% with driver. Improve of score from 4.55 to 4.40. 4 iron 210 yards besides the bunkers.    Also a wide area and your shot zone is better than previous ones. This makes almost the fescue dissapear. You really need to hit a bad one (sometimes shit happens). Because of that and only having 120 yards in this is the best choice so far. Down to 4.32 from 4.40. Finally the 6 Iron 180 yards to avoid all trouble.    Wide area an narrow dispersion for almost been in the fairway all the time. Similar than the previous one but 25 yards farther for the hole to avoid been in the bunkers. Average remains the same, 4.33 to 4.32.  Conclusion is easy. Either your 4iron or 6 iron of the tee are equaly good for you. Glad that you made par!
    • Wish I could have spent 5 minutes in the middle of the morning round to hit some balls at the range. Just did much more of right side through with keeping the shoulders feeling level (not dipping), and I was flushing them. Lol. Maybe too much focus on hands stuff while playing.
    • Last year I made an excel that can easily measure with my own SG data the average score for each club of the tee. Even the difference in score if you aim more left or right with the same club. I like it because it can be tweaked to account for different kind of rough, trees, hazards, greens etc.     As an example, On Par 5's that you have fescue on both sides were you can count them as a water hazard (penalty or punch out sideways), unless 3 wood or hybrid lands in a wider area between the fescue you should always hit driver. With a shorter club you are going to hit a couple less balls in the fescue than driver but you are not going to offset the fact that 100% of the shots are going to be played 30 or more yards longer. Here is a 560 par 5. Driver distance 280 yards total, 3 wood 250, hybrid 220. Distance between fescue is 30 yards (pretty tight). Dispersion for Driver is 62 yards. 56 for 3 wood and 49 for hybrid. Aiming of course at the middle of the fairway (20 yards wide) with driver you are going to hit 34% of balls on the fescue (17% left/17% right). 48% to the fairway and the rest to the rough.  The average score is going to be around 5.14. Looking at the result with 3 wood and hybrid you are going to hit less balls in the fescue but because of having longer 2nd shots you are going to score slightly worst. 5.17 and 5.25 respectively.    Things changes when the fescue is taller and you are probably going to loose the ball so changing the penalty of hitting there playing a 3 wood or hybrid gives a better score in the hole.  Off course 30 yards between penalty hazards is way to small. You normally have 60 or more, in that cases the score is going to be more close to 5 and been the Driver the weapon of choice.  The point is to see that no matter how tight the hole is, depending on the hole sometimes Driver is the play and sometimes 6 irons is the play. Is easy to see that on easy holes, but holes like this:  you need to crunch the numbers to find the best strategy.     
    • Very much so. I think the intimidation factor that a lot of people feel playing against someone who's actually very good is significant. I know that Winged Foot pride themselves on the strength of the club. I think they have something like 40-50 players who are plus something. Club championships there are pretty competitive. Can't imagine Oakmont isn't similar. The more I think about this, the more likely it seems that this club is legit. Winning also breeds confidence and I'm sure the other clubs when they play this one are expecting to lose - that can easily become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.

The popup will be closed in 10 seconds...