This Extra Credit video from Martin has a simple way to keep control of your drive in a slice wind... but it may not be obvious to you at first.
The purpose I say this might no longer be apparent is due to the fact I suspect a lot of you continual slicers have attempted something similar that allows you to straighten out your drive... And you could not get it to work even though there has been no slice wind!
Let's see if we cannot make this method paintings whenever you need it.
The fundamentals are easy enough. If you shut the face of your driver a piece at address -- that's what Martin manner when he says to 'toe it in' -- and you don't alternate some thing else, the face need to be a touch closed while it contacts the ball, and the ball should draw. (Or, within the case of a slice wind, it would go quite straight or maybe fade just a little if the wind is actually strong.)
Why doesn't this give you the results you want? Why does the ball either duck hook (that is, start with a pull and then hook even more) or just make a bigger slice?
It's due to the fact you do not make your ordinary swing. You do one of two matters:
- You swing more out-to-in (across the line, if you prefer the term, or pull the shot) and then the closed face makes the ball hook even more. You still end up in trouble, just on the opposite side of the fairway than normal.
- Or you make a normal swing but open the face at impact, so the ball slices anyway. And if you have an over-the-top swing, you get a bigger than normal slice.
- In the first case, you don't trust the closed face. You try to 'help' the ball hook by pulling the club across your body. Other than learning to trust your swing -- which is the best way but may also be the hardest -- you can try closing your stance so you have to swing more from in-to-out. Even if it just makes you swing straight down the line (because you came over-the-top or pulled the shot), the hook you gain from the closed face will keep the ball from slicing.
- And in the second case, there's a good chance you're not really closing the face of the club. Rather, you're just twisting your forearms so the face looks closed. What will actually happen is, when you make your normal swing, your forearms will twist back into their normal position and you'll open the face like normal. You have to turn the club handle in your hands so your forearms are in their normal address position even though the clubface is closed. That's just something you'll have to learn through practice -- you have to get used to seeing your arms and hands in their normal position while the clubface is closed.
Something which can assist you solve the first problem is in reality setting up with the ball multiple inches farther from your body. That will force you to swing more in-to-out than common for you to hit the ball.
For the second problem, try setting up by turning your forearms to a stronger position while keeping the clubface pointed straight down the line, then turn your forearms back to your normal address position without regripping the club. That will cause the clubface to be closed while you're in your normal address position. Then when you make your normal swing, you won't open the face at impact.
Once you get in which you may address the ball with a closed clubface and then return the clubface to the ball whilst it is nonetheless closed, you may be able to hit a draw each time you need. Even if the wind is not blowing!
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