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Posted
Hi, I'm new here. A friend referred me. Anyway, I just started playing about 2 months ago and got a friends pair of handmedown Taylormade RBladez. I am taking lessons because my dad who them at a business raffle and had no intention on using them so I took them, and right away I noticed that I have really good distances with all my irons, but terrible consistency. My instructor says my swing is pretty good, but a little too inside and over the top so I've been working on fixing that. The last time I went to my instructor he made no swing changes just made me turn my feet out a little and my shots got a little more accurate, but nothing spectacular. But every time I go to the course, I start slicing , or hitting the ground too much, or topping the ball, or this, or that, you name it. My instructor says I have pure natural talent and if I put the effort in I could make it pretty high in the golf world. I spend 1 day a week at my lessons and 2 a week at the range and 1 a week playing. I think I want to go to lessons twice a week and the range once and play a round once. Please help me stop from quitting what everyone says I have potential to be good at. EDIT: I'm also thinking about taking lessons at Mistwood Golf Course with a PGA instructor instead of GolfTec.

Posted
I'd say spend time hitting short chips and pitches. Work on making sold contact to get a feel for that. At the same time practice hitting the ball before the ground on those chips as well as center contact. Always chip or pitch to a target. Sounds like you just need some time and reps getting a feel for contact. Don't worry too much about form have a clear intention and your body and mind will work the details out. It's a great game you can play all your life but it's difficult. Hang in there!!

Posted
I'd say spend time hitting short chips and pitches. Work on making sold contact to get a feel for that. At the same time practice hitting the ball before the ground on those chips as well as center contact. Always chip or pitch to a target. Sounds like you just need some time and reps getting a feel for contact. Don't worry too much about form have a clear intention and your body and mind will work the details out. It's a great game you can play all your life but it's difficult. Hang in there!!

I think I'll definitely start doing this; about how far should I be? just off the green or about 10-15 yards off?


Posted

You're going to be extremely frustrated for about a year, trust me. Just keep at it.

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Posted

Change the practice/lesson ratio the opposite direction you were thinking. Go 10 practice sessions for every one lesson.


Posted

Give it some time!  Golf lessons are a great idea.  Kudos to you for understanding the importance of that aspect of the learning process.

You want to try difficult?  Pick up a guitar!  I can't imagine too many other activities that look as easy as golf and playing guitar yet are both REALLY hard to achieve any level of competency in a short period of time.

Keep up with the lessons. Continue to find time to practice.  And also practice that short game!  Pitching, chipping and putting will play a really important role in your scoring until you can get the full-swing issues sorted out.

Good luck and keep us posted on the progress you'll soon see.

dave

The ultimate "old man" setup:

Ping G30 driver
Ping G Fairway woods - 5 and 7 woods
Callaway X-Hot #5 hybrid; Old school secret weapon
Ping G #6-9 irons; W and U wedges
Vokey 54 and 58* Wedges
Odyssey Versa Putter
Golf Balls

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Posted
Change the practice/lesson ratio the opposite direction you were thinking. Go 10 practice sessions for every one lesson.

do you have any advice on whether I should stay with GolfTec or go to the PGA instructor at Mistwood?


Posted

do you have any advice on whether I should stay with GolfTec or go to the PGA instructor at Mistwood?

Couldn't really say. Don't know anything about the PGA guy at Mistwood. I've heard mixed things about golftec. One thing for certain, if you want to get even remotely decent at this game, you need to beat balls until your hands bleed....no matter how much talent you have.


Note: This thread is 3808 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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    • Day 1: 2025.12.26 Worked on LH position on grip, trying to keep fingers closer to perpendicular to the club. Feels awkward but change is meant to.
    • Please see this topic for updated information:
    • Please see this topic for updated information:
    • When you've been teaching golf as long as I have, you're going to find that you can teach some things better than you previously had, and you're probably going to find some things that you taught incorrectly. I don't see that as a bad thing — what would be worse is refusing to adapt and grow given new information. I've always said that my goal with my instruction isn't to be right, but it's to get things right. To that end, I'm about five years late in issuing a public proclamation on something… When I first got my GEARS system, I immediately looked at the golf swings of the dozens and dozens of Tour players for which I suddenly had full 3D data. I created a huge spreadsheet showing how their bodies moved, how the club moved, at various points in the swing. I mapped knee and elbow angles, hand speeds, shoulder turns and pelvis turns… etc. I re-considered what I thought I knew about the golf swing as performed by the best players. 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Disrupts the Pressure Shift/Transition When the trail leg extends too much, it often can't "push" forward normally. The forward push begins much earlier than forward motion begins — pushing forward begins as early as about P1.5 to P2 in the swings of most good golfers. It can push forward by abducting, again, but that's a weaker movement that shoves the pelvis forward (toward the target) and turns it more than it generally should (see the next point). Limits Internal Rotation of the Trail Hip Internal rotation of the trail hip is a sort of "limiter" on the backswing. I have seen many golfers on GEARS whose trail knee extends, whose pelvis shifts forward (toward the target), and who turn over 50°, 60°, and rarely but not never, over 70° in the backswing. If you turn 60° in the backswing, it's going to be almost impossible to get "open enough" in the downswing to arrive at a good impact position. 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