Hi, just a few tips. Firstly, your club head should never be ahead of your hands as this will have a tendency of making you swing as if you are trying to lift the ball of the tee. If you are doing this, you are probably leaning too far right at address. It will also prevent you from turning your body comfortably around the ball, and I would hazard a guess that you will be causing some hip sway as a result, and you could even be hitting the ground before the ball.
The left hand should be placed around the club so that the club face is square to the target, and the grip sits comfortably between your fingers and your palm. At address you should see 2 - 3 knuckles on your left hand. The left thumb should be situated across the grip with the V between your thumb and forefinger pointing towards your right shoulder. The right hand sits comfortably overlapping the left hand, with the little finger overlapping the left forefinger. The thumb also as above with the V pointing the same direction. The right forefinger should be separated slightly from the rest of the hand, and cupped around the club as if holding a trigger. Also, don't squeeze the club hard as if your life depended on it. You still need to be firm, but a correct grip will allow you to do this without tensing up.
At address, the ball should be level with the left heel. The wrists should be comfortably straight with a straight left arm. Swing naturally from the hips and shoulders, not the hands. In fact, contrary to most instruction books, I keep the ball level with my left heel for all my clubs. Instead I narrow my stance and move my hands slightly more forward in front of the ball as I go up the clubs. I read this from a very old Jack Nicklaus instruction book and it has given me more control.
If you don't mind doing a bit of reading and research, try this link for some instruction.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sportacademy/h...lf/default.stm
It's the BBC's sport academy website, but has many useful tips from the pros.
Good golfing.
Cheers.
Lee.