Entries Tagged as 'Golf Courses'

Driving Range vs. Golf Training Aids


What makes a good golf training aid, one that professional golfers would not scoff at? It is a fair question, given the sheer number of supposedly valuable tools offered on the market for golfers. The answer, however, is a simple one once you understand what you are looking for and ignore the advertising hype surrounding products that may not be beneficial, but in fact hinder, your training in the sport. The perfect golf training aid is one that does what it promises to do, without any more costs associated with it, and is easy enough to use that it won't be abandoned weeks after its purchase due to frustration levels.

For many players, the driving range is the place to go when they want to get some serious practice in. Unfortunately, there can be a few problems with that.

First, there is the problem of getting to driving range. Many people these days simply have too many obligations and responsibilities to devote two or three hour periods of time to use exclusively for practice, directly affecting your game. When you can finally find the time, family, friends, and social engagements often demand that we use it with them and not honing your skill on the greens.

Another problem with the driving range, once you have managed to spare the time, is that the mats they provide are often made of inferior materials. This may not sound like a major problem, but it can actually harm your game if you are not careful. In simpler terms, if your feet are not connected to the ground in the same way as they would be grass, your body will have to make minute, yet vital, adjustments to keep you on balance leading to the chain of reaction mechanism that we have all heard of in the past. In many of these cases, we are actually teaching ourselves how to hit incorrectly under the assumption that we are learning to do just the opposite. This important factor is necessary to figuring out what type of golf training aid matches as closely as possible the conditions you will be playing under.

Lastly, a big problem with driving range mats is that they do not allow you to adjust the rubber tee that is embedded in them. For those of us who use dig drivers, like the 460cc, that is unacceptable. These bigger drivers demand that the tee be set to a certain height. A one-height-fits-all approach in this case will be devastating to a player's drive.

These three elements should be used selecting the right golf training aid for you and your game. J.R. Mats, Inc. has developed a truly useful and beneficial golf pad called the Country Club Elite T-turf

Motion Golf Training video “Proper Balance”



LaserT – The Best Golf Training Aid for Putting and Chipping



How To Use Golf Training Aids To Get Rid Of Your Slice


Whack! Arrrrrgh! The erstwhile golfer groans as the ball dives impudently to the right into trouble, despite his best efforts to guide it to the left. This all too familiar scenario is played out over and over at golf courses across the country. Many golfers are stricken with that most dreaded of golf ailments, the vicious slice.

Likewise, most golfers don't know how to fix the problem so they do the intuitive thing, which is to line up their feet and shoulders to the left of the target. This only exaggerates the slice and leads to great frustration. As if the game of golf isn't frustrating enough already without adding additional difficulties.

Fortunately, it doesn't have to be that way. If you want to ditch the slice and improve your game, then consider adding a couple golf training aids to your practice routine. There are a large variety of training aids designed to help the average guy hit it straighter. So many, in fact, that it can be confusing finding ones that will actually help. I'll give you some tips here that will set you on the right path (pun intended) to getting rid of your slice affliction.

The first type of golf training aid you will need is a swing path device. Most slicers suffer from a nasty outside-in swing path. This means that the clubhead comes from outside the ball (away from the golfer's body) to the inside (closest to the body) at impact, cutting across the ball. This leads to both a loss of power and a tendency to slice.

To correct this problem, get a golf training aid that visually (or physically) shows you the correct path through the ball at impact, which is square to slightly inside-out. Some training aids have a foam device that the club will hit if you swing outside to in. This is great because it gives you instant feedback when you make a bad swing. Grove the inside-out swing path and you will be 90% of the way to getting rid of your slice.

The second golf training aid that can help get rid of a slice is a device to help you train the timing of your release. This is the point of the downswing at which the wrists release, snapping the club through the ball. The release point is important in generating clubhead speed at impact, and also in squaring the clubface.

If your release is late, then the clubface will be left open at impact, resulting in a fade or slice. Golf training aids for the release point are usually some type of shortened club with a device built in that 'clicks' when you release your wrists properly. This provides the instant feedback you need to time your release for impact.

Using these two types of golf training aids, swing path and release, you should straighten out your shots and add some yards as well. Good luck and happy hitting!


Stanford Golf Training Complex