Saturday, February 5, 2011

Fairways hit more by following these guidelines.

Photo of tee is the most critical shot Golf for the recreational golfer. It defines how you play the rest of the hole: If you try good music, or if you are in the fight against damage. Here are some ideas on how to obtain longer tee shots in the fairway, so you can get good score you deserve.

First thought should do not what club to use, but where you want the ball. The pros think still to come. They want the ball to go where they will have the best looking green with their next move. They do not think that only they want bullet go "a long way in that direction."

There are two reasons why this last thought is not the best. While in the channel is better, some places in the fairway are better than others. The left side could provide a safer shot in green, i.e. the penalty for a miss might be much lower than for a shot on the right side. Also, focusing your mind on the smallest target possible is your swing so that greatly increases your chances of hitting the ball where you want to go.

One of the things to do, then, for a course you play frequently, is to learn where the best place to put your tee shot is on each hole. Learn how to find that spot from the tee to bottom alignment markers, such as a tree or a building, something that points you in the right direction.

Once you've included management, there is distance. You've found the location you want to pay your second shot, if what club will get the ball it? Sometimes it will be your pilot, but other times it won't. Sometimes the ideal place is too risky to try, given your skill level, or if you touch your driver you would go beyond in a place that would make the next blow harder, not easier. Distance isn't always a virtue.

A good rule to follow is, what is the shorter club, that I can use to give me a second shot feasible? Here is an example. One of the holes on my journey is 335 metres long. Normally I will play a pilot and a corner, but there is a large pond near my typical drive landing zone. I can take a long iron off the tee instead of this, hit the ball to a place where the pond is out of the room and have a 7-iron in the green. It is a better choice.

I could go on with more examples, but the idea is to find a place in the channel make you safely and reliability, give you the best chance to make a good second shot and then choose your club tee on this basis. Thinking that this will keep the ball into play more often otherwise, which is key to lower rating.

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