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| To Draw Or Not To Draw? I recently watched the Tiger's Clinic from the 2nd disc in his 3 Set disc special. He said his natural shot is a draw. Is that just him or do most professionals draw the ball on purpose? My PGA instructor did tell me the correct golf shot is a slight draw, not straight. Is this true? |
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| Re: To Draw Or Not To Draw? Hey, Big... This argument about the Draw vs the Slice will run and run. Basically there is no 'correct' shape. Better players just happen to draw the ball because of the path of their swing. A good players destructive shot is always the hook. A straight shot is the hardest to do since it requires your swing path and club face to be perfectly true and very few people can do that. Jack Nicklaus is actually a bit of an anomaly since he claims his natural shot was the fade and only learnt to really draw the ball to order some years into his career. As far as the majority of pro's go most of them would say a draw is their shot but they can all play pretty much every shot anyway so it doesnt matter. For club players most lower handicappers (single figure down to plus numbers) play with a draw. In an ideal world you would draw your driver and fade your irons the draw giving better distance and the fade better control. D |
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| Re: To Draw Or Not To Draw? I can answer one aspect of your question really quickly: whether or not most pros play a draw? Well, I played the tours in America and Europe, "most" of the players did play a draw as their preferred shot which is different to their natural shot. Another problem with watching touring professionals is they can play any shot, any time and make it look as natural as breathing so it's really tough to know whether that's their natural shot shape or not! In Spain in 2002, I sat and watched Jose Maria Olazabal (my golfing icon!) practicing and his natural shot is a draw. But he striped every shot exactly where he wanted it to go, from a gentle draw to a strong fade! In early 2003, I watched Greg Norman (also a natural drawer) practice at a facility in Miami. The "caddy" who was picking up the golf balls stood with a baseball glove wherever Greg wanted him to stand. The caddy didn't move, all he had to do was stretch his arm out and catch the ball as it rolled or bounced past him! On the draw or fade side of the target ... That was seriously scary ...
__________________ Golf is easy ... once you know how. Graham Arnott, teaching professional Kelrosa Golf Studios www.kelrosagolf.com Class 'A' PGA Member Full Member: World Golf Teachers Federation (GB&I) |
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