10 Keys : Basic Elements of the Golf Swing
10 Keys : Basic Elements of the Golf Swing
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Author(s): Grissett, Bob
ISBN No.: 9780999775318
Year: 201703
Format: Spiral
Price: $ 34.50
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

This book is written for the Beginner to Intermediate Golfer. Golf instruction books, videos, and lessons for the last hundred years have been misleading and contradictory and in many cases downright wrong. The basic Ball Flight Laws, that dictate the direction the ball starts its initial flight and how it curves have been published with incorrect information. The clear majority of golfers slice their drivers and long clubs and sometimes all clubs or they slice their woods and pull their irons.The problem with most golfers is that they don't know what to do. Their friends, family, and maybe even well-meaning Golf Professionals have given them a lot of advice & tips. They tell them that they are ¿looking up¿, "bending their left arm", "rising up through the shot with their body¿, ¿not bending their knees enough¿, ¿swinging too fast¿, "coming over the top" and host of other swing faults. None of these have anything to do with why you¿re hitting the ball poorly and these are the same people that shoot the same scores you do! What could they possibly tell you that would improve your game? Many of the things thought to be fundamentals have nothing to do with improving your game.


For decades, golfers have been learning the wrong things, their games have not been improving. Why is this happening? For one, there has been no consensus on the basic physics of the game, such as what makes the ball go where it goes. Plus, there has been no universal language for golfers to communicate the moves they¿re making or the shots they¿re hitting. Consequently, they¿re forced to use vague clichés, like ¿I swung too fast¿ or ¿I looked up,¿ or other bits of handed-down jargon or as Ben Hogan once said, ¿bromides that don¿t matter.¿These impediments have made the barrier of entry into golf unnecessarily high. Golfers routinely leave the game out of frustration, lack of direction, regression, or improvement that comes too slowly or not at all.


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