Jump to content
IGNORED

Out to in or not? I can't decide?


Note: This thread is 2531 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

Hello all, how is everyone? So I've posted on here before and everyone was extremely helpful so I thought I'd ask for some opinions.

 I'm struggling with a slice since I started with a new pro (other than that everything is spot on) and I can't decide if I'm hitting in to out or if it's something else? 

The video to me doesn't look too much in to out, but I'm no expert.

I'm struggling with it most of all, as during my lessons or when I practice on the range I hit a pretty nice draw. Hard to fix when in only happens on the course 

note: upon watching my self, I realised my shoulder plane was a little shallow, I've addressed this, didnt really help

 

https://youtu.be/TK6LZRczi1c

Edited by RandallT
Fixed embed
Link to comment
Share on other sites


I was just wanting to know if my swing looked out to in/over the top. Not really after tip as such, although they're welcome. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Just now, Joefree said:

I was just wanting to know if my swing looked out to in/over the top. Not really after tip as such, although they're welcome. 

Can't tell much from goofy camera angle.  

Id say listen to your pro.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Ok mate, thanks, I can tell either. 

My pro thinks I'm mad cos I hardly ever have a bad shot during my lessons haha. Typical right!?

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Sounds too me like you need to shallow out your club path. I'd be interested to see how deep your divots are. You might need to look online for some videos about " shallowing out swing path golf ." This should help. Undoubtedly someone else out there has had this same problem. Hope this helps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


8 minutes ago, span3636 said:

Sounds too me like you need to shallow out your club path. I'd be interested to see how deep your divots are. You might need to look online for some videos about " shallowing out swing path golf ." This should help. Undoubtedly someone else out there has had this same problem. Hope this helps.

Yeah, it's something I'm working on, I used to take HUGE divots, not to bad anymore, I hit a nice draw with my irons.

I've been trying to tame my driver for years, I just can't seem to getting coming from the inside. 

Im gonna get my pro to play a couple of rounds with me so he can see what's different from when I hit on the range. 

 

Thsnks all for confirming for me, I wasn't sure if maybe it was something else. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites


9 hours ago, Joefree said:

I'm struggling with it most of all, as during my lessons or when I practice on the range I hit a pretty nice draw. Hard to fix when in only happens on the course 

No comment on your swing, as even with proper video, I'm in no way qualified to help there. But I will offer this... I've spent the past 3 months or so learning to hit a draw (on purpose and) consistently and my experience was similar at first. Perfect draws on the range or while practicing at home, but straight-fades, pushes, and slices on the course.

On the range one day before a round, it just kind of hit me all of the sudden that when I'm on the range, I'm aiming at a target, but not trying to hit a specific yardage. Especially before a round, where I'm more focused on warming up and making proper swings and then watching to see how far the ball goes to get a gauge for the day. The minute I step on the course, I'm trying to hit a yardage and I swing harder. I started hitting draws during the round that day and have kept it up since. They don't always draw enough (or at all), but the bad misses to the right have all but disappeared. YMMV. :-)

Jake
"If you need to carry a water hazard, take one extra club or two extra balls." - Unknown (to me)

My Swing | Course Vlogs | Favorite Post | Roamin' for life. (MCATDT)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

2 hours ago, roamin said:

No comment on your swing, as even with proper video, I'm in no way qualified to help there. But I will offer this... I've spent the past 3 months or so learning to hit a draw (on purpose and) consistently and my experience was similar at first. Perfect draws on the range or while practicing at home, but straight-fades, pushes, and slices on the course.

On the range one day before a round, it just kind of hit me all of the sudden that when I'm on the range, I'm aiming at a target, but not trying to hit a specific yardage. Especially before a round, where I'm more focused on warming up and making proper swings and then watching to see how far the ball goes to get a gauge for the day. The minute I step on the course, I'm trying to hit a yardage and I swing harder. I started hitting draws during the round that day and have kept it up since. They don't always draw enough (or at all), but the bad misses to the right have all but disappeared. YMMV. :-)

I think I do (we all do) swing harder on the course, I might try and have a swing though of only hitting the ball 100 yards with my driver. Maybe that will slow me down. Thanks mate.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


11 hours ago, Joefree said:

I think I do (we all do) swing harder on the course, I might try and have a swing though of only hitting the ball 100 yards with my driver. Maybe that will slow me down. Thanks mate.

I tried this today, still hitting a strong fade/slice, just lost 30-40 yards lol. 

 

I did see one one of the pros briefly today and he said my driver probably isn't helping. It's 9.5 degs with quite a light, reg flex shaft. I swing at 105 miles per hour according to trackman. Clearly not the root of the problem but it's not doing me any favours.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I see out to in..

If you care to hear a perspective from a higher handicapper like me. I can tell you, It seems (to me) that the driver is not coming from "the inside" enough. But It also looks like you are making your first downswing move with your upper body right at the 7th second of the video. I think that is causing you to come just a little over the top, I guess both statements are related..One way or the other I can see the club literally slicing the ball.

That one little move on the 7th second of the video with your upper body might be the problem. 

If I was you...and again, we are all different but I would, and I do when I slice:

1 Try to swing the club a little from further inside and trust it...as if I wanted to hit it to the right, that helps me to flatten the club a little on the downswing just in case i'm coming from over the top but I have to stay connected, follow thru, round and finish my swing other ways I will obviously push the ball

2 I forget your upper body for just the first second of the downswing..leave it behind at first and then accelerate..try not to let your legs fully out race your upper body though. 

3 Finally I would check the grip, for me that is a rare issue though. 

4 posture related to my hips pooping out, and alignment of course some times I close my stance just a little.

I bet you fix this one really soon. I'd be curios to know if what works for me worked for you. 

 

Edited by Hategolf
Link to comment
Share on other sites


On May 14, 2017 at 1:20 PM, Joefree said:

Hello all, how is everyone? So I've posted on here before and everyone was extremely helpful so I thought I'd ask for some opinions.

 I'm struggling with a slice since I started with a new pro (other than that everything is spot on) and I can't decide if I'm hitting in to out or if it's something else? 

The video to me doesn't look too much in to out, but I'm no expert.

I'm struggling with it most of all, as during my lessons or when I practice on the range I hit a pretty nice draw. Hard to fix when in only happens on the course 

note: upon watching my self, I realised my shoulder plane was a little shallow, I've addressed this, didnt really help

 

https://youtu.be/TK6LZRczi1c

I'm not an instructor, so I won't try to fix your issue.  I can however, answer your question, and I don't have to see your swing to do so.

A ball slices (curves to the right for a right handed golfer) because the swing path is outside to inside relative to the club face.  The curve has nothing to do with your target line, or even where your body is pointed.  

If you want to draw the ball (curve it left, as a righty) you need to change the club path so that it is inside to out, again, relative to the club face.

Here's an excellent thread that discusses the subject in detail.

 

  • Upvote 1

In David's bag....

Driver: Titleist 910 D-3;  9.5* Diamana Kai'li
3-Wood: Titleist 910F;  15* Diamana Kai'li
Hybrids: Titleist 910H 19* and 21* Diamana Kai'li
Irons: Titleist 695cb 5-Pw

Wedges: Scratch 51-11 TNC grind, Vokey SM-5's;  56-14 F grind and 60-11 K grind
Putter: Scotty Cameron Kombi S
Ball: ProV1

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

(edited)
1 hour ago, Hategolf said:

I see out to in..

If you care to hear a perspective from a higher handicapper like me. I can tell you, It seems (to me) that the driver is not coming from "the inside" enough. But It also looks like you are making your first downswing move with your upper body right at the 7th second of the video. I think that is causing you to come just a little over the top, I guess both statements are related..One way or the other I can see the club literally slicing the ball.

That one little move on the 7th second of the video with your upper body might be the problem. 

If I was you...and again, we are all different but I would, and I do when I slice:

1 Try to swing the club a little from further inside and trust it...as if I wanted to hit it to the right, that helps me to flatten the club a little on the downswing just in case i'm coming from over the top but I have to stay connected, follow thru, round and finish my swing other ways I will obviously push the ball

2 I forget your upper body for just the first second of the downswing..leave it behind at first and then accelerate..try not to let your legs fully out race your upper body though. 

3 Finally I would check the grip, for me that is a rare issue though. 

4 posture related to my hips pooping out, and alignment of course some times I close my stance just a little.

I bet you fix this one really soon. I'd be curios to know if what works for me worked for you. 

 

Thanks, i naturally want to swing out to in, I've fought with it for years, I just wanted to confirm I wasn't trying to fix something that wasn't happening anymore, as the trackman says in pretty much on plane.

i agree about my swing sequencing, but my pro doesn't seem too worried about it? Maybe that's what I'm doing differently on the range?

Thanks for the tips, i have literally tried everything to get free of this slice with my driver, including all of the above, hundreds of pounds on lessons, hours and hours of practice, I've done all you mention to death and more and it never seems to even make things even slightly better.

i will  persevere though. 

1 hour ago, David in FL said:

I'm not an instructor, so I won't try to fix your issue.  I can however, answer your question, and I don't have to see your swing to do so.

A ball slices (curves to the right for a right handed golfer) because the swing path is outside to inside relative to the club face.  The curve has nothing to do with your target line, or even where your body is pointed.  

If you want to draw the ball (curve it left, as a righty) you need to change the club path so that it is inside to out, again, relative to the club face.

Here's an excellent thread that discusses the subject in detail.

 

Thanks, I understand the mechanics of what causes my slice, I only wanted to get another POV. For 2 reasons, 1. The track man says I'm pretty much on plane. 2. I had been told that as my ball flight goes right then further right, it could be the result of an open club face. 

 

Now that I know that it's just my good old out to in swing I can get back to banging my head against a brick wall trying to fix it. 5 years, no change. It's killing me lol. 

 

I'll defo have a read of the link though thank you. 

Edited by Joefree
Link to comment
Share on other sites


I understand how frustrating can be when you just can't figure it out no matter what you try...but the answer has to be in the mechanics. 

Since the face of the club is open no matter what you have tried..may be ....the old "LET IT GO" is in order...soft grip and arms literally, tension 3 out of 10. The club weight placement is there to let the face of the club close on time..I'm 210lbs when I tense up..I get on the way of the club doing its thing and I slice and or hit it short. Or your ball is too far forward? ..I'm sure your pro has addressed ball positioning.

But I am telling you, I see a little out to in swing, as far as I know, the only way to get rid of it is to swing in to out.....:-D, not being sarcastic, just saying some times we over analyze.. I think once you get the right feeling, the slice will be history...pay attention to the feeling when you hit it straight..

 

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites


1 hour ago, Joefree said:

Thanks, i naturally want to swing out to in, I've fought with it for years, I just wanted to confirm I wasn't trying to fix something that wasn't happening anymore, as the trackman says in pretty much on plane.

i agree about my swing sequencing, but my pro doesn't seem too worried about it? Maybe that's what I'm doing differently on the range?

Thanks for the tips, i have literally tried everything to get free of this slice with my driver, including all of the above, hundreds of pounds on lessons, hours and hours of practice, I've done all you mention to death and more and it never seems to even make things even slightly better.

i will  persevere though. 

Thanks, I understand the mechanics of what causes my slice, I only wanted to get another POV. For 2 reasons, 1. The track man says I'm pretty much on plane. 2. I had been told that as my ball flight goes right then further right, it could be the result of an open club face. 

 

Now that I know that it's just my good old out to in swing I can get back to banging my head against a brick wall trying to fix it. 5 years, no change. It's killing me lol. 

 

I'll defo have a read of the link though thank you. 

It looks like you're one of those rare slicers who hits the ball with a square path and an open face. 

Your clubface appears open at the top and appears to be quite open at impact. 

 - Joel

TM M3 10.5 | TM M3 17 | Adams A12 3-4 hybrid | Mizuno JPX 919 Tour 5-PW

Vokey 50/54/60 | Odyssey Stroke Lab 7s | Bridgestone Tour B XS

Home Courses - Willow Run & Bakker Crossing

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

 

48 minutes ago, Hategolf said:

I understand how frustrating can be when you just can't figure it out no matter what you try...but the answer has to be in the mechanics. 

Since the face of the club is open no matter what you have tried..may be ....the old "LET IT GO" is in order...soft grip and arms literally, tension 3 out of 10. The club weight placement is there to let the face of the club close on time..I'm 210lbs when I tense up..I get on the way of the club doing its thing and I slice and or hit it short. Or your ball is too far forward? ..I'm sure your pro has addressed ball positioning.

But I am telling you, I see a little out to in swing, as far as I know, the only way to get rid of it is to swing in to out.....:-D, not being sarcastic, just saying some times we over analyze.. I think once you get the right feeling, the slice will be history...pay attention to the feeling when you hit it straight..

 

 

20 minutes ago, shortstop20 said:

It looks like you're one of those rare slicers who hits the ball with a square path and an open face. 

Your clubface appears open at the top and appears to be quite open at impact. 

I think it's probably a little of both making a big problem.

i should just leave my driver in the car, I hit my 5i pretty well about 190-200 yards, (everything above that is unreliable) I'd probably walk off with a great score. 

You just cant beat that feeling when you cream a drive 300+ yards down the fair way though, I miss it.

I'm gonna book in with my pro again, it will be my 4th lesson with this pro, not seen any sign of an improvement...yet. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Note: This thread is 2531 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

    • Day 12: Same as last couple days, but focus was on recentering aspect of flow. When I recenter earlier I make decent contact most swings but if I recenter late or not at all it’s a roll of the dice. 
    • A couple of things.  Some of the clubs in your bag should be dropped immediately.  A 2-iron for example with what obviously seems to be a lower swing speed or possibly not great swing yet is a definite no-no.  To be hitting that 120-140 yards, which I assume includes run, is a sign that you are not getting the ball airborne at the correct angle to maximise distance.  The reason your 3 and 5 hybrid are going the same distance is that your launch angle is better with the 5.  Loft is your friend. Ideally I would suggest going to a golf or sporting store where you can hit golf balls on a simulator without being disturbed to understand your club carry distances and hopefully swing speed.  With that information we can definitely guide you better.
    • Let us be clear, unless you have proof of cheating, you just sound like a case of sour grapes.  In our club we have a guy who won club titles for many years.  Yes, he was a low single digit handicapper, but there have been quite a few others who played at his level.  Yet his mental strength and experience helped him win in many years when he shouldn't have.  Did he sandbag.  DEFINITELY NOT.  Did he just minimize his mistakes and pull out shots as and when needed.  Definitely.
    • Day 111 - Worked on my grip and higher hands in the backswing. Full swings with the PRGR. 
    • First off please forgive me if this is not a proper post or not in the proper location, still learning the ropes around here. Second, it's important that I mention I am very new to the game with only about 10 rounds of golf under my belt, most being 9 holes. Only this year have I started playing 18. That being said, I am hooked, love the game and am very eager to learn and improve. To give you an idea of my skill, the last 2 18 rounds I played were 110 and 105. Not great at all, however I am slowly improving as I learn. Had been having bad slicing issues with the driver and hybrids but after playing some more and hitting the range, I've been able to improve on that quite a bit and have been hitting more straight on average. Irons have always come easier to me as far as hitting straight for some reason. Wedges have needed a lot of improvement, but I practice chipping about 20-30 mins about 3-5 times a week and that's helped a lot. Today I went to the range and started to note down some distance data, mind you I am averaging the distances based off my best guess compared to the distance markers on the range. I do not currently own a range finder or tracker. From reading some similar posts I do understand that filling gaps is ideal, but I am having a some issues figuring out those gaps and understanding which clubs to keep and remove as some gaps are minimal between clubs. Below is an image of the chart I put together showing the clubs and average distances I've been hitting and power applied. For some reason I am hitting my hybrids around the same distances and I am not sure why. Wondering if one of them should be removed. I didn't notice a huge loft difference either. The irons I have are hand me downs from my grandfather and after playing with them a bit, I feel like they're just not giving me what could potentially be there. The feel is a bit hard/harsh and underwhelming if that makes sense and I can't seem to get decent distances from them. Wondering if I should be looking to invest in some more updated irons and if those should be muscle backs or cavity backs? My knowledge here is minimal. I have never played with modern fairway woods, only the classic clubs that are actually wood and much smaller than modern clubs. I recently removed the 4 and 5 woods from my bag as I was never using them and I don't hit them very well or very far. Wondering if I should look into some more modern fairway wood options? I appreciate any feedback or advice anyone is willing to give, please forgive my lack of knowledge. I am eager to learn! Thank you.  
×
×
  • 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...