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Making Contact


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I've been playing a lot of golf lately. And one of my worst habits, it's not making solid contact on the ball every time. Whether it's topping the ball, chunking it, or not making contact with the center of the club...Every round, i probably hit 6-8 mis-hits. It's frustrating. I know to keep my head down, and watch the ball. I focus on a letter on the ball, like a nike sign. Any tips or drills i can do to improve consistency in contact with the ball? BTW..it's with the driver, woods, and irons.
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Grip, stance, and posture are so important. If you do those the exact same every time, it'll be a lot easier to diagnose your problems. That diagnosis will be done by a pro instructor, not a website!

Ben Hogan is my swing coach.

Driver: Burner TP
3 & 5 Woods: No-name
3H:No-name4i-PW: MP-32...unapologetically...You should try blades, too56*: CG12Putter: Spider

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I know this frustration well. I've drastically cut down my iron mishits by concentrating on making a divot after the ball. Same for the hybrids. For all my clubs I take practice swings before addressing the ball and won't address the ball until I"ve had a practice swing that properly simulates what I want my actual swing to be. Usually takes 2 or 3 swings.
Driver :Adams Speedline 9032LS 10.5*
Woods:Wilson Staff FYbrid 3W
Hybrids:Wilson Staff FYbrid (wood/hybrid gap)
Hybrids:Ben Hogan Edge CFT 3H & 4H
Irons:King Cobra S9 5I-PWSand Wedge:Cleveland CG12-58*Putter:Ping Redwood AnserBall:Nike Karma/Topflite GamerFavourite Gizmo:Club Caddy
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I know this frustration well. I've drastically cut down my iron mishits by concentrating on making a divot after the ball. Same for the hybrids. For all my clubs I take practice swings before addressing the ball and won't address the ball until I"ve had a practice swing that properly simulates what I want my actual swing to be. Usually takes 2 or 3 swings.

Right. You have to get comfortable with hitting the ball first and going down into the ground in front of it. Hitting 40-50 yard shots with a SW is a good way to groove this feeling.

J. Miller said the other day that where the hands/grip are at impact will determine where the divot is. If the handle is not in front of the ball when you hit it, you can't hit down on the ball to impart spin and also maximize club head speed. SubPar
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I too suffer slightly with the occasional heavy shot. What I found works for me is this. Kind of like a boxer's goal is to punch through their target (ie Back of the head not front of face). I use the front of the ball as my impact target and think about making contact there. Has improved my contact consierably on all shots.
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I've been playing a lot of golf lately. And one of my worst habits, it's not making solid contact on the ball every time. Whether it's topping the ball, chunking it, or not making contact with the center of the club...Every round, i probably hit 6-8 mis-hits. It's frustrating. I know to keep my head down, and watch the ball. I focus on a letter on the ball, like a nike sign. Any tips or drills i can do to improve consistency in contact with the ball? BTW..it's with the driver, woods, and irons.

What helps me make solid contact is not move my head until my right should pushes my chin to the left.

Craig 

Yeah, wanna make 14 dollars the hard way?

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Hit down on the ball. If you are hitting down on the ball, but catch it thin or fat, you're gonna lose distance, but u'll at least get it airborne. Skullers are usually a result of sweeping/hitting up on a ball and catching it thin.

...

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grip, setup, stance. But I'd say, most importantly is grip. My biggest problem was that I'd let momentum carry my swing and the club would come looser in my hands because I was comfortable with the momentum. That little bit of laxity takes away that precise control that you naturally have over the club. Keep those hands connected to the club at all times.
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Note: This thread is 5437 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!

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