Mike Pedersen is one of the top golf fitness trainers and golf conditioning experts in the country, author of the Ultimate Golf Fitness Manual, and founder of several online golf fitness and exercise websites.
Check out his website PerformBetterGolf.com - Improve Your Driving,Distance,Accuracy and Consistency, for more information about his specifically designed to improve golf specific strength, flexibility, coordination, and overall golf swing mechanics!
Below is one of the articles from this great golf trainer =================================================================
Golf swing instruction starts with an understanding of the different segments of the golf swing. Understanding the golf swing segments will give anybody a firm foundation to learn all the tricks of the trade from others and thus be able to understand any golf swing instruction aimed at helping them improve their game.
There are actually three segments to the golf swing. The segments are the backswing, the downswing and finally the impact and follow through.
Dividing the swing into these 3 segments helps to apply every individual golf swing instruction or tip to the particular segments where they apply.
It also helps the golfer focus on one segment at a time in their golf swing instruction making it easier for them to remember what they learn and also to be able to work on improving their game systematically.
There is another bigger advantage to this approach. And that is the ability to be able to draw ones attention to the many different parts of the body and the many muscles involved in a proper golf swing.
This important in helping a golfer involved in a golf exercise program to be able to appreciate the different exercises they do in the program and what particular muscles the exercises focus on.
All this makes it a lot easier for any golfer to link their exercises to golf swing instructions they receive as they seek to improve on their game.
Actually it is not possible to divorce the basics of golf swing instruction from golf specific exercises. The two go together and chances of improving your game improve dramatically when you combine the two. On the other hand progress is bound to be much slower when you work on golf swing instruction only.
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Friday, April 24, 2009
Perfect Golf Swing Drill - By Mike Pederson
About Mike Pederson :
Mike Pedersen is one of the top golf fitness trainers and golf conditioning experts in the country, author of the Ultimate Golf Fitness Manual, and founder of several online golf fitness and exercise websites.
Check out his website PerformBetterGolf.com - Improve Your Driving,Distance,Accuracy and Consistency, for more information about his specifically designed to improve golf specific strength, flexibility, coordination, and overall golf swing mechanics!
Mike Pedersen is one of the top golf fitness trainers and golf conditioning experts in the country, author of the Ultimate Golf Fitness Manual, and founder of several online golf fitness and exercise websites.
Check out his website PerformBetterGolf.com - Improve Your Driving,Distance,Accuracy and Consistency, for more information about his specifically designed to improve golf specific strength, flexibility, coordination, and overall golf swing mechanics!
Below is one of the articles from this great golf trainer
=================================================================A drill for a perfect golf swing is one that isolates your swing fault and eliminates it permanently. If you can find, and apply a drill like this...it could easily be labeled a perfect drill for your golf swing...
Golf drills are a "dime-a-dozen"...but the ones that REALLY help your swing are only a few. Just open up a golf magazine and you'll seea dozen drills in every issue. The worst thing you could do is clutter your head with all these drills and hope your swing will get better.
Isolate Your Swing Fault
The whole purpose of a drill for your golf swing is to correct a swing fault that you just can't seem to fix on your own. Swing faults are ingrained in your body (and mind) and are nearly impossible to cure, but a drill specific to your swing fault can make all the difference.
For example, if you hook the golf ball. This is a swing fault that can cause so much grief, you nearly want to quit the game. Am I right? This type of swing can cause many balls to go out of bounds on your tee shot, adding two strokes to your score everytime this happens.
But picture doing a drill specific to the cause of your hook. Maybe it's an alignment drill, or a swing path drill. Either way, you can make dramatic improvements, and with a little consistency, eliminate that nasty hook forever!
Do Your Drill Consistently
How many times has your teaching pro given you a drill and you didn't work on it? You then came for another lesson because you haven't improved. Does this sound familiar? I know...because I am guilty of it myself!
The to success in anything is consistency and persistent! Doing something over and over again til you get it right! Isn't that true in life; in business; and even in personal relationships?
Anything you do consistently, you're going to get better at, and maybe even be at the top of your competition. What a motivator to know with persistence, you could dominate your competition (or buddies in your foursome).
Perfect Golf Swing
So when you talk about the perfect golf swing...we are really talking about your BEST golf swing aren't we? A golf swing that you can repeat for 18 holes. A golf swing that even if it goes south (and it will) you can correct on the course and "stop the bleeding". That's a perfect golf swing for you!
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
How To Master The Iron Golf EBook -Review
So what do you think after reading 2 great articles from the author of How To Master The Golf Iron!?
I believe that for most people before buying a product, they will sure need to search for a review. Well, without searching further, here comes the review of this comprehensive EBook
Review of Content :
Jeff Taylor is the author of the book How To Master The Golf Iron!. At Last You Can Master Your Iron Play brings a great offering that will not only let you master the moves of the pros but also enjoy the process. Well-written and succinct, this golf e-book is unlike any others out on the market today. The usual styles of books tend to be too technical, but How to Master the Golf Irons is a refreshing take on the game. Its main selling point is in its well-developed and well-conceptualized formula in eradicating the hours and hours of hard work spent perfecting your golf game and turning it into a couple of hours only. One “eureka-moment” inducing section of this book will make you realize that improving your golf game is actually in knowing when and how exactly you should use your irons. It comes as no surprise then that each type of club comes with a lengthy yet highly interesting descriptions complete with high quality pictures and charts that make you memorize noteworthy tips in an instant.
Review on the Price :
The actual retail value of How To Master The Golf Iron! can be pegged at more than seven hundred and fifty dollars and this is because of the multiplayer golf game software and essential guidebooks that come with it. But as pleasant surprise, the entire package can actually be had for only $47, which is less than twenty percent of what it is valued at!
Overall Summary
There are many golf books around which tell you a thing or two about the game, but none as comprehensive and easily understandable than How To Master The Golf Iron!. More golf enthusiasts can be attracted to this because of the multiplayer golf game software that is highly addicting (and it certainly does a lot to improve your game on a conceptual level!). It can then be said that How to Master the Golf Irons! At Last You Can Master Your Iron Play is one book which is worth its praises and testimonials by other users.
Source : http://www.givemeareview.com/Golf-eBooks/HowtoMastertheGolfIrons-review.html
I believe that for most people before buying a product, they will sure need to search for a review. Well, without searching further, here comes the review of this comprehensive EBook
Review of Content :
Jeff Taylor is the author of the book How To Master The Golf Iron!. At Last You Can Master Your Iron Play brings a great offering that will not only let you master the moves of the pros but also enjoy the process. Well-written and succinct, this golf e-book is unlike any others out on the market today. The usual styles of books tend to be too technical, but How to Master the Golf Irons is a refreshing take on the game. Its main selling point is in its well-developed and well-conceptualized formula in eradicating the hours and hours of hard work spent perfecting your golf game and turning it into a couple of hours only. One “eureka-moment” inducing section of this book will make you realize that improving your golf game is actually in knowing when and how exactly you should use your irons. It comes as no surprise then that each type of club comes with a lengthy yet highly interesting descriptions complete with high quality pictures and charts that make you memorize noteworthy tips in an instant.
Review on the Price :
The actual retail value of How To Master The Golf Iron! can be pegged at more than seven hundred and fifty dollars and this is because of the multiplayer golf game software and essential guidebooks that come with it. But as pleasant surprise, the entire package can actually be had for only $47, which is less than twenty percent of what it is valued at!
Overall Summary
There are many golf books around which tell you a thing or two about the game, but none as comprehensive and easily understandable than How To Master The Golf Iron!. More golf enthusiasts can be attracted to this because of the multiplayer golf game software that is highly addicting (and it certainly does a lot to improve your game on a conceptual level!). It can then be said that How to Master the Golf Irons! At Last You Can Master Your Iron Play is one book which is worth its praises and testimonials by other users.
Source : http://www.givemeareview.com/Golf-eBooks/HowtoMastertheGolfIrons-review.html
Saturday, April 18, 2009
The Overlapping Grip - By Jeff Taylor
Another great article by Jeff Taylor - author of How To Master The Golf Iron!
Although there are many ways to grip the club, themost effective and widely accepted one is the overlapping grip. This grip promotes excellent unity of the hands,allowing them to function as a one-piece unit throughout the swing.
The overlapping grip places initial control in theleft hand and keeps it there throughout the backswingand early in the downswing. The right hand then takes over and applies the powerthrough the clubshaft and clubhead.Positioning your left hand on the club correctly isthe first step towards building a good grip.
A good test to tell if you have the correct left-handgrip is to bring the club up to eye level and open thelast three fingers. If the club does not move, you havethe correct left-hand grip, because the pad of the palmand the crook of the forefinger around the shaft willmaintain a firm grip for you.
About the left thumb: There are two accepted positionsfor it on the shaft, depending upon your experienceand skill.
The straight-down-the-shaft thumb position is generallyused by better players and those who are prone to hooking(a right-to-left flight pattern). The other positionhas the thumb slightly on the right side of the grip.
As you progress in experience and acquire a betterfundamental knowledge of the grip and swing, it ispossible to make the slight adjustment of puttingyour thumb straight down the shaft.
When you have completed your left-hand grip, theV formed by the thumb and forefinger should point toyour right shoulder, or to your right eye if you areprone to hooking.
Looking down, you should be able to see at least two or three knuckles of your left hand. If you cansee only one knuckle, your grip is too weak; and iffour knuckles are showing, your grip is too strong.
One more thing about the left-hand grip, and it isso important that it merits special study and thought.It concerns the gripping pressure applied to the shaftby the left hand.
I have seen some golfers grip the club so tight thatthey can't even flex their wrists. Remember, thereis a difference between firmness and tightness.Never grip the club tightly and with such rigid tension that you lose the feel of the clubhead.
The pressure points for the left hand should bethe last three fingers of the hand, with a lesseramount of pressure exerted by the palm pad and the forefinger.
In other words, the fingers press up and the pad presses down, thus locking the shaft in-between.It is a little more difficult to position your righthand on the club, because it is the overlapping hand.
=========================================================
Go ahead and get the full golf illustrated pictures here: How To Master The Golf Iron!
Friday, April 17, 2009
How To Grip The Club - By Jeff Taylor
Hi there, it's been a long time since I post something on my blog. Its been a busy year for me last year. So I hope to post more this year and also provide more guides to the newbies who are interested to learn more about golf.
Here is an article from Jeff Taylor - Author of How To Master The Golf Iron!.
Good iron play requires a good grip. Without such a grip it is virtually impossible to control yourshots to the green and score with any degree ofconsistency.
Most golfers, particularly beginners, fail to appreciate the importance of the grip and itsinfluence on the over-all swing. After some 20 years of playing golf, both for funand as a profession, spending countless hours of thinking about the swing and how it should function,and hundreds of other hours on the practice tee,I have reached one emphatic conclusion: No one who aspires to become a good golfer can do so without a correct grip. It is as simple as that. Your hands, as the gripping force, are the only physical contact you have with the club. They must, therefore, be positioned on the club correctly if you are to achieve the directional control that is so necessary for consistent iron play.
I experienced trouble with my grip for years before I finally made a major change in 1958.Prior to that time, I had been fortunate enough to win a number of tournaments, but I always had a tendency to hook the ball.The reason was that I had carried my right hand under the shaft too much, invariably resulting in a closed face at the top of the swing. In the fall of 1958, Paul Runyan, La Jolla Country Club professional, advised me to change my grip and position of the club face at the top of my swing. He suggested that I move my right hand slightly counterclockwise, or more on top of the shaft, to have the clubface more open at the top of the swing.
These changes were related, and it took me amonth or more to become accustomed to this newright-hand position.
By moving my right hand more on top of the shaft,there was less tendency to have the right hand exert initial control during the backswing.
The right hand merely rides on the shaft, thus allowing the clubface to remain square, or slightlyopen, as the body is turned away from the ball. Also, this new grip prevented my right hand fromtaking over too soon at the start of the downswing.I would say that this change amounted to moving my right hand about an inch, so that the V formed by my right index finger and thumb pointed to my right eye instead of to my right shoulder as is conventional for the average golfer.
The movement was ever so slight, but it allowed my left hand, arm, and entire left side to exert more control over my swing, particularly, as I have just pointed out, during the early stages of the backswingand downswing.
In the golf swing, the body movements generate the power and the hands apply it through the shaft andclub head with a terrific lashing action of the rightforearm and right hand.This movement can be likened to cracking a whip underhanded.A tremendous amount of clubhead speed can be generated this way, provided you have a proper grip on the club and are on the proper swing plane coming into the ball.On the other hand, if the club is not gripped properly, you lose control at some critical juncture in the swing and the club head cannot be accelerated to its maximum speed.
To see the golf illustrated pictures, you have to claim yourown copy here ==>
How To Master The Golf Iron!.
Here is an article from Jeff Taylor - Author of How To Master The Golf Iron!.
Good iron play requires a good grip. Without such a grip it is virtually impossible to control yourshots to the green and score with any degree ofconsistency.
Most golfers, particularly beginners, fail to appreciate the importance of the grip and itsinfluence on the over-all swing. After some 20 years of playing golf, both for funand as a profession, spending countless hours of thinking about the swing and how it should function,and hundreds of other hours on the practice tee,I have reached one emphatic conclusion: No one who aspires to become a good golfer can do so without a correct grip. It is as simple as that. Your hands, as the gripping force, are the only physical contact you have with the club. They must, therefore, be positioned on the club correctly if you are to achieve the directional control that is so necessary for consistent iron play.
I experienced trouble with my grip for years before I finally made a major change in 1958.Prior to that time, I had been fortunate enough to win a number of tournaments, but I always had a tendency to hook the ball.The reason was that I had carried my right hand under the shaft too much, invariably resulting in a closed face at the top of the swing. In the fall of 1958, Paul Runyan, La Jolla Country Club professional, advised me to change my grip and position of the club face at the top of my swing. He suggested that I move my right hand slightly counterclockwise, or more on top of the shaft, to have the clubface more open at the top of the swing.
These changes were related, and it took me amonth or more to become accustomed to this newright-hand position.
By moving my right hand more on top of the shaft,there was less tendency to have the right hand exert initial control during the backswing.
The right hand merely rides on the shaft, thus allowing the clubface to remain square, or slightlyopen, as the body is turned away from the ball. Also, this new grip prevented my right hand fromtaking over too soon at the start of the downswing.I would say that this change amounted to moving my right hand about an inch, so that the V formed by my right index finger and thumb pointed to my right eye instead of to my right shoulder as is conventional for the average golfer.
The movement was ever so slight, but it allowed my left hand, arm, and entire left side to exert more control over my swing, particularly, as I have just pointed out, during the early stages of the backswingand downswing.
In the golf swing, the body movements generate the power and the hands apply it through the shaft andclub head with a terrific lashing action of the rightforearm and right hand.This movement can be likened to cracking a whip underhanded.A tremendous amount of clubhead speed can be generated this way, provided you have a proper grip on the club and are on the proper swing plane coming into the ball.On the other hand, if the club is not gripped properly, you lose control at some critical juncture in the swing and the club head cannot be accelerated to its maximum speed.
To see the golf illustrated pictures, you have to claim yourown copy here ==>
How To Master The Golf Iron!.
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