Improve Golf Swing By Correcting Your Slicing Problem!
July 27, 2010 by Parshooters · 13 Comments
The worst feeling in the world is when your playing your best golf ever, and you come to one of the easiest holes on the golf course. With the opportunity to improve your golf score even better than what you have up until now. So, you reach back with everything you can muster in strength, and you knock the golf ball out of bounds with a terrible hook or slice. What happened? Your upset and frustrated after this hit, and your ready to let loose on anyone who opens their mouth. The only problem, it was your own damn fault. You went for that extra distance by over-swinging, and it cost you most likely of breaking your best golf score ever.
It really is sad to see someone go from being happy go-lucky on the first tee to total frustration by the 18′th tee. The game of golf becomes an instrument of torture instead of one of pleasure. Slicing your shots can cause a lot of embarrassment and frustration. If your a consistent slicer, does that frustrate you at all? Doesn’t that stimulate you to put forth a greater effort to figure out how to cure your slice? The whole idea of doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results that only gets worse. You know what they call that don’t you. Insanity. It becomes a major swing problem that does effect the majority of golfers at some point. Yet it’s something that can be fixed fairly easily. Don’t let your slice bring you down with frustration. Learn how to improve golf swing, and eliminate the unwanted hooks and slices.
I’m going to talk about how to improve golf swing by correcting the slicing problem in this post, because I still have tendencies to do this during an average golf round. I haven’t been able to draw or hook the golf ball on a consistent basis for a very long time now. The reason I can’t play a draw, is because I have a broken left wrist that never healed properly. When finishing with your follow through you need to feel your wrists rolling to the left. I don’t have that mobility. I have more of a trained cut-fade shot today which is good, because I can count on this consistently bringing the golf ball from left to right-middle of the fairway. Jack Nicklaus, played with a cut-fade shot, and it didn’t hurt him with regards to accuracy and distance.





