A fairway wood is a golf club that is designed to hit a little farther than your long irons, but not as far as your driver. Fairway woods have a lower loft than irons for those longer fairway shots where you need more distance than height. Fairway woods include your 3-wood, 5-wood and 7-wood, and could include your hybrid, which is somewhere between and iron and wood. It is easy to hit a fairway wood improperly, so observing proper technique is a key to launching good shots.
How you swing your driver off the tee box determines the ball flight. Swinging a square, or open-faced driver from the outside in, sends your ball to the right of your target, often landing in the rough, weeds, trees or water -...
Timing, coordination and core strength are all required to produce a swing that launches the golf ball long and straight. Starting the downswing by syncing the arms and hips requires practice, as it is a timing move. However, on
After all, professionals surely use the best equipment available. The facts, however, suggest otherwise. The average swing speed of a touring pro -- somewhere between 110 and 115 mph -- brings vastly different results with the ...
While taking a practice swing during a golf game, you might accidentally hit your ball, moving it from its original position. The rules on how to handle a ball that is accidentally moved vary, depending on whether the ball is i...
Understanding all aspects of your golf equipment can be beneficial to your overall performance on the course during your next round. Most golf equipment, including golf balls, is manufactured for a specific skill set and golfi...
Many longtime golfers will tell you that the idea of planning for a hole in one is ludicrous. Standing 150 yards or more from the hole and launching the ball with the intention of having it end up in the hole is sheer arrogance...
For many golfers, choosing the type of ball you see professional golfers using is not always the best idea. PGA Tour players use balls tailored to their individual swings. So should you. Golf balls are designed to take into acc...
When you sway back in the backswing or forward in the downswing, it's almost a matter of luck to get back to the ball properly. To increase your chances, stay still, make a balanced turn and don't swing too hard.
Although most golfers know what a slice is and know several tips for fixing it, shots such as the push, pull, hook and fade receive less attention. A push is a ball that travels to the right of your target but without sidespin....
The ability to keep your eye on the ball during your golf swing helps keep your mind focused on the task at hand. It also helps with the hand-eye coordination necessary to a solid golf shot. Many golfers try to keep their head ...
It's perhaps the second dirtiest word in a golfer's vocabulary. After the dreaded shank, nothing leaves a golfer with a feeling of greater dread and doom then topping the golf ball. Whether you are on the tee, in the fairway or...
Arnold Palmer, known as The King of Golf, curved almost every shot from right to left. Jack Nicklaus won many of his tournaments by curving the ball left to right. And Ben Hogan prided himself on the ability to hit straight sho...
Where you place the ball in your golf stance has as much to do with where and how the ball will travel as your swing or club selection does. Using the exact same swing to hit a ball lying closer to your front foot as you do to ...