
How to Learn the Game of Golf
Are you a golf beginner? If so, do you need some tips on golf techniques? The answer is probably yes. Even those who have been playing for a while could use some helpful golf tips and techniques to improve their game.
STARTING OUT
If you are just starting out, the best advice you can receive is to take some lessons from a golf professional. You can find someone through your local country club, community college or golf course. You can also check your local newspaper.
You really need a pro to teach you the basics in the correct way. If you try to learn on your own without anyone showing you the proper stance, swings, and techniques, you will have a tough time mastering the game.
PRACTICING
Once you start taking lessons, you need to be practicing as much as possible. Initially, you can practice at home or out in a field. This way you can get a feel for swinging a golf club and learn how to handle the small shots like putting and chipping without having other people around to make you nervous.
After you are feeling a bit more comfortable with the ball, go to the golf course or driving range and practice there. You can observe others and see what styles and techniques they use. This can be very helpful to you.
As you are learning to play the game of golf, you need to work on developing the muscles in your back and legs. When you swing a golf club, all the power is coming from those areas. Remember, practice is the key and will make all the difference in the world to your golf game.
GOLF CLUBS
Choosing golf clubs is a challenge for experienced players and can be even more frustrating for a golf beginner. There are many variables involved in the selection of a golf club, not the least is what your personal needs are.
Golf clubs are available in a wide range of sizes to suit the individual player. A standard club has a smaller head (and small sweet spot) and is the preferred type for golf professionals and those who have plenty of experience on the golf course.
A mid-size golf club has a larger sweet spot and head size than the standard size, making it easier for ball contact. Golf players with intermediate skills usually choose these clubs.
If you are just starting out as a golf beginner, you should choose an over-sized golf club. This type of club has a very large sweet spot making it much easier to hit. You may not have as much control but you will have longer distance.
GOLF CLUB TYPES
There are two types of golf clubs, the cast iron club and the forged iron club. The bulk of the weight in the cast iron club is around the border of the head. This creates a bigger sweet spot, making it the preferred club for golf beginners who are challenged by making full contact with the ball.
The forged iron club is heavier with the bulk of the weight at the center of the head. This club is the choice for seasoned golf pros. As your skill and comfort level increase, you will probably want to use this club either in addition to or instead of the cast iron club.
Golf is a game of skill. For most people, however, it is a great stress reliever and is played for fun. Once you have chosen your golf clubs and have mastered the basics of the game, you are ready to go out and have fun on the greens.
About the Author
Debra Gropp enjoys working on the Internet by doing everything from paid surveys and working for affiliate programs to blogging about her interests. Her articles pertain to some of the subjects she is most interested in, ways to save money, hobbies, work from home information, and diet, fitness, and health-related information.
|
|
Swing The Handle Golf Video Collection $21.98 The Eddie Merrins Swing the Handle DVD set includes 9 tip and training segments on 5 DVD discs. In Swing the Handle Volume I, Fundamentals, The Little Pro teaches you and Film and Television star Craig T. Nelson a comprehensive yet simple plan to start you on your way to better golf now and for a lifetime. Eddie and Craig take you step by step through the proper way to build a solid base of fundam… |
|
|
The Keys to the Effortless Golf Swing: Curing Your Hit Impulse in Seven Simple Lessons $13.00 The biggest paradox in golf is that the harder you try to hit the ball, the worse you do so. In The Keys to the Effortless Golf Swing, Michael McTeigue offers you a simple system of sequential body movements that produces a true swinging motion with every club in the bag. The result is increased distance and greater accuracy for all sizes, shapes, and ages of golfers for a minimum investment in le… |
|
|
Swing the Handle- Not the Clubhead: A Great Method to Improve Your Golf Game $177.24 In this book, Eddie Merrins, a highly respected teacher and player, offers golfers a total, yet amazingly simple, method for producing a mechanically perfect swing. The cancer of golf shotmaking, says Merrins, is the player’s attempt to control the moving clubhead with his or her hands and wrists, an attempt that is doomed to mis-align the clubhead, throw it off track and reduce its speed through … |
|
|
Play the Best Golf of Your Life: Drive, Chip, Putt and Handle Sand Traps Like A Pro $0.99 Here is a book filled with great golf tips to lower your golf score and make you the star in the clubhouse. Easy to read and understand with attention to solving the most common and serious problems golfers face for driving, putting, chipping and how to effectively handle sand traps.It is at times serious and at other times hilarious. Filled with humorous quotes from great golfers and other celebr… |