quarta-feira, 12 de agosto de 2009

Golf consistency

Golf amateurs mostly have problems with consistency. One category especially becomes desperate with that – the bogey players. They are in the frontier to become scratch golfers - the dream of all amateurs - and each bad stroke is real torture and most of times are difficult to overcome in the following hole. One day it is the power game that doesn’t work, another day it is the short game, other the putting and the player don’t know what the reason for his inconsistency is.

Those who care about and look for the reasons behind the results need to register their performance in all aspects of the game. A tool very helpful for that is now available on the Internet at the site http://www.golfcaddyfile.com/. You can try it for free during some months and check for the aspects you need to improve systematically in training with or without professional aid. The tool provided is a kind of tailor-made one. You can use it in full or just in the aspects you intend.

Let’s explain how it works. Usually a golf player takes note of the number of strokes and some others of the number of putts too. This is important but is not enough. If you just count these two numbers in each hole you get at that site important information as for example: the average in Greens in Regulation, the average number of putts in a round and in the Greens in Regulation, the average performance in the pars 3, 4 and 5. This information tells you what are the pars with better performance and allows a comparison with the best performances in the world so that you know where you are in a global ranking of performance.

But there are other aspects in the game that can be systematically analysed what requires statistic information too. That site in full use provides you with 17 indicators of different aspects of your game performance. You just need to collect 6 different data from each hole: the number of strokes and putts, the driving accuracy and distance, the sand saves and the up & downs. Comparing this data of your performance with the one of the best players worldwide you have a clear notion where you need to improve: the driving, the putting, the middle game, the bunker shots, the shorter game around the greens and it is not all. The site gives you information about how you react to bad holes and how you recover from – the bounce back indicator tells you if you recover from a previous bad performance. With all that information you are ready to tackle the weakest aspects of your game during training and to tell your golf professional what you really need to improve.

Most of the times the golf professional only looks at your swing in the driving range trying to fit it in his concepts of the perfect swing. But average golf amateurs will never get the perfect swing ever. They have their own swing and want to play and get better results. So, as the golf professional doesn’t know what your real performance in the course is, in fact he doesn’t know which aspects of your game you really need to improve. That information only you can provide him. But, as one day is one aspect and the other day another, you need to collect statistical information and compare it with the best performers.

That is what provides the tool of the http://www.golfcaddyfile.com/ . Try it and enjoy your game!

terça-feira, 11 de agosto de 2009

Pitch or chip?

Most of the golf players have difficulties to choose which one – pitch or chip - is the best shot in many situations on the course. It is also frequent to find golfers that don’t distinguish a chip from a pitch. Some even think that a pitch shot is only executed with a pitch iron and a chip with a chipper. The purpose of this text is to elucidate golfers that have such difficulties.

The first aspect to clear is that the names of the shots are not related to the specific irons or wedges used to play although there are clubs with those names. You might remember that there is even a chip club that was very popular some years ago with two equal faces to be used from left or right side, very useful when the usual side swing cannot be performed by the player due to a fixed obstacle, tree, wall or other impediment. You can chip or pitch or even make other kind of shots with most of the wedges and irons. What makes the real difference between a chip and a pitch shot is the type of swing you perform.

So, what is a pitch shot? We could say that it is a regular shot in the normal stance with full or shorter swing causing the normal parabolic trajectory of the ball. The ball travels up according the loft of the club and the speed of the swing and falls down with a shorter movement forward or even back in consequence of the spin acquired by the ball in contact with the club face. This kind of shot is recommended when there obstacles in the trajectory of the ball and in the limit when a tall tree is between the player and the hole a balloon pitch shot can be the right choice. You can pitch with whatever club you want - usually the shorter irons and wedges - but if you open the face of longer irons you will be surprised with the beautiful and higher & longer shots you can obtain. However, the usual situation for a pitch is during the short game when a pitch shot most of the times is recommendable around the green with obstacles between. The ball flies after the impact and falls down with a shorter movement on the green. It is recommended especially when we want to place the ball nearest the hole.

Is that clear? And what’s a chip shot?

A chip shot is a totally different shot: in the swing and in the usual stance. First of all the stance must be opened and the ball placed at the back foot. The swing is more similar to the putting following a line in the desired direction (tacking in account a putting line after the ball touches the green) without wrist cocking and gripping near the lower limit of the grip. The club, as it is played with the ball at the back foot, is closed in relation to the usual position. The shaft of the club should be closer to the left arm (for right players) and move without rotation, that is paralell to itself. The ball will fly over the rough and the border of the green and then fall in the green make one or two little jumps and adopt a trajectory to the hole. Usually you should adopt a falling point outside the rolling trajectory, because the more loft the wedge has the tendancy to right spin increases.

After these preliminary considerations which club should be chosen? Depending on the distance to the border of the green and the distance from this border till the hole the club should be choose between a pitch club and any wedge. Usually, in normal horizontal greens and played as it was said before, the ball fly one third of the distance and rolls on the green two thirds of the total distance. A 9 or an 8 or even a 7 club can also be used in special circumstances, when a longer rolling distance is required after the flight of the ball. If you are a skilled golfer you can also use a wood or a hybrid According with the local conditions of the green the position of the ball can be changed: if the ball should roll less distance we approach the ball to the centre of the stance and use a higher loft club. Compared with the pitch shot the chip is a much easier shot. Around the green and inside a circumference of 50 m from the hole the chip shot is safer, unless the ball is near the border and immediately after deep rough. So, read the green carefully and the conditions of its border before choose the best shot.
And if you have tendency to shank choose always a chip instead of a pitch if possible.

Practice both shots in the driving range and fit your own best club for each situation!
Enjoy your game!
Key words in golf.
Address Albatroz Approach Average Backspin Backswing Ball Birdie Bogey Bounce Bounce-back Buggie Bunker Caddie Caddy Card Chip Club Clubhead Course Divot Dog leg Downswing Draw Drive Driver Drop Eagle Fade Fairway Fitness Fitting Flag Follow through Fresh air Green Grip Golf assessment Golf consistency Golf mprovement Green in Regulation Gross Handicap Hazard Hole Hole-in-one Hook Hybrid club Iron Lie Links Lob Loft Longest-drive Master Match play Matching of clubs Mulligan Nearest-the-pin Net Out-of-bounds Par Par 3 Par 4 Par 5 Pitch Pitch mark Play-off Power-game Practice of golf Professional Putt Putting Rough Sand wedge Score Scoring Scramble Scratch Shaft Shank Short-game Shot Slice Spin Stableford Stance Statistics Stiffness Stroke Stroke-play Sway Sweet spot Swing Tee Tracker Up-and- own Wedge Wood Wrist cock