How to get rid of a slice golf swing
Do your golf balls have a tendency to fly off into the void? Slices are as unwelcome as a sandtrap in a storm. To eliminate the slice from your golf swing you need to make more than a few tweaks. You have to go all out. Read more now on golf swing doctor
Imagine playing golf on a beautiful afternoon; the fairway gleams like a green sea before you, and then the terrible thing happens: your drive makes a disastrous veer right.
The slice is the most common culprit. A slice is when the clubface hits the ball at an unnatural angle. The goal? To square up the clubface to the ball and send your shot directly down the fairway, like a laser splitting butter clean in half. Take a minute to practice your grip. Your grip is often as telling as your poker hand. A weak grip-where the hands rotate toward the target-can be the silent culprit. Make sure your knuckles say hello. Grip the club in such a way that you can clearly see at least two or three of your fingers. Consider holding hands with a friend instead of strangling the garden hose. Your grip should be a balance between firmness and flexibility. Imagine that you're about to take a photo, just for argument sake. Perfect posture is important. Set up with most of your weight on your back foot; as you make your swing through, shift your weight forward. The pendulum rocks back and forth without jerking this way and that, much like an old grandfather clock. This balance can take the smallest of swings, and make them more graceful than chaos.