Keep it Square

15 11 2009

Everything in moderation is a pretty good philosophy in life and it is in your golf game as well. Opening your stance for short game shots is ok if it is done in moderation but opening it too much leads to disaster. Setting up too open leads to glancing blows, pulls, chunks and excessive sidespin on your short game shots. More importantly, it seeps into other parts of your game which leads to inconsistency.

I recommend putting a shaft down on the ground to monitor your alignment. It will give you the sense of what is square so when you remove the club, anything other than square will feel awkward. If square is your baseline, you are setting yourself up for success. Setting up square leads to solid contact due to an on plane swing. Your ball will come off with pure backspin and an absence of sidespin. You hear people talk about trying to get the ball within a three foot circle in order to have a good chance at getting up and down. I try to hole all my short game shots. Knowing that my ball will have a predictable bounce because of pure backspin enables me to give the ball a good chance of going in. I even read the green on my chip shots much like you would on a lag putt. If your goal is to hole your shot, chances are that if it doesn’t go in, it will be inside that three foot circle.

The key to scoring in golf is predictability. Whether you are a hooker or a slicer, you can plan your aim and find the fairway if you know beforehand how your ball will curve. Setting up square will give you predictability of distance control because of your solid contact and predictability of direction due to square spin. Now go practice and hole some short game shots. -jz





Sequence, The Key to Power

15 11 2009

I have been teaching golf for 15 years and I can’t remember a student who has not asked me for more distance. The Titleist Performance Institute has studied hundreds of touring professionals and the best ball-strikers all have the same downswing “signature” (downswing sequence) to maximize their distance. The proper sequence in the downswing is hips, torso, lead arm and then the golf club. If you look at a computer reading of Jim Furyk and Ernie Els’ downswing sequence, you will not be able to tell the difference between the players. Obviously Els’ frame can produce more power that Furyk’s but they both maximize their power in the same way.

The sequence is the same in any sport where you are looking to hit or throw something with power. If you look at a baseball hitter, baseball pitcher, hockey player or tennis player, you will see the same sequence of motion. The chain reaction as one part of the body transfers the energy to the next leads to efficiency and power. When you see a great ball-striker just prior to impact, you see a significant “lag” where the handle of the club is well ahead of the clubhead. This angle is produced by the proper sequence in the downswing. When an instructor talks about delaying the hit, holding the angle or creating lag, please understand that you cannot achieve this unless your body is firing in the proper sequence.

So how do you learn the proper sequence? If you are late to golf and have played other sports, tap into that sequence. Your brain has stored the sequence as you learned the other sport and tapping into this is invaluable. If you are involved with juniors or have a kid who plays golf, keep them involved in other sports as they will gain more strength and learn the sequence there as well.  I have seen Michelle Wie hitting golf balls with a baseball bat as her Dad pitched them in to her about waist high. Her tall strong frame coupled with the correct sequence is a great recipe for power. A good drill to learn the proper sequence is to start with your feet together, take the club half way back, then step towards the target as you complete the backswing and swing through.

We all laugh at Happy Gilmore hitting a golf ball but running up and hitting a golf ball is the correct sequence not to mention a great way to train hand eye coordination. I’m not saying do this on the first tee next time you play, but it would be really cool if you did and pulled it off. If you hit it solidly, you will see distance you never saw before. -jz





Josh Zander on golfchannel.com

9 11 2009

Josh shot three bunker videos for the Golf Channel which you can view at the following link:

http://su.pr/8WIOfK

There is also a Q&A page. Enjoy.








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