Why Ben Hogan Wanted 3 Right Hands! | This Will Blow Your Mind!

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Ben Hogan wanted three trail arms, three right arms. My trail arm is on top of my lead arm, and I can put some leverage down into this inert arm. The lead arm is a swinger. The trail arm is a pusher. The club’s weight sits in the cradle of that index finger. It has nothing to do with the fulcrum of the thumb. It’s not a turn situation. It’s just vertical and bent back. You can see when I flex my wrist from a flat condition to a bent condition, it makes a muscle pop in my forearm. If you walk down the tour range, you’re going to see a bunch of lovely grips. By and large, there’s a couple of funky ones out there, but by and large, you’re going to see some hands that go on the club pretty peacefully. I’d say pretty neutral. If anything, that lead wrist might be a fraction strong. It might be a fraction weak. Most of the students that come to the golf academy tend to have the left hand on too weak. Meaning that when they look down, the majority of their wrist is to the left of the top of the grip. Well, I’m not saying turn your hand to where the logo on the glove faces the camera. I just want you to feel like you can bend your lead wrist back a little bit so that wrist can get on top of the grip. That is an address condition that when you when your club lags into impact now the wrist is in a great spot to support impact. But that’s not necessarily the main gist of this tip about leverage. What I want you to understand is how the trail hand plays a huge role in this. We get a lot of folks that come to the golf school and they take their trail hand and they put it really under the grip in this manner. We call this holding the taco like they’re going to eat a taco at a taco shop. the right hand is really underneath the grip. And maybe that’s from learning how to do the interlock grip going webbing to webbing because we see that a lot here. But when they when you put your hands on it, we want you to feel the reason why you want to get your hands on is to get this leverage condition. And you can see if I walk up close to the camera now, my trail arm is on top of my left or my lead arm and I can put some leverage down into this inert arm. The lead arm is a swinger. The trail arm is a pusher. This is pushing. If I have my hand underneath in this super strong underneath taco hold, I like to call it, then I really don’t have a place to have leverage onto my lead arm. So, for those of you learning how to put your hands on, or maybe for those of you that have played a while and just want to put your hands on a little bit better, go ahead and set up to the golf ball. And I love the golfer’s toolbox right here because with the golfer’s toolbox, it’s easy for me to see where my target line is and where my ball location’s at. So, in this condition right here, I’ve got the club leveraged. I’ve got my hand on top of this lead arm, and I can have some push down with my trail arm. Ben Hogan wanted three trail arms, three right arms, so he could better push that inert swinging arm down through impact. So again, we’ve got this trail arm on top of the lead thumb a little bit. And then if I just kind of get my fingers on there, there’s my comfortable hand. There’s my comfortable grip. Built with leverage and impact in mind. I don’t want you to necessarily be comfortable at a dress initially. Getting your grip on properly may not be comfortable initially, but when you get enough reps in and you start to see some great results and you can understand some of these components and you hit some good shots, that’s really comfortable. So, I’ve got my trail arm on top of my lead arm. And you can go ahead and build your grip from here if you want to to really feel that relationship of that leverage condition. When I put a club in my hand, it sits kind of in the cradle at the base of my index finger. Then this heel pad folds on top. So when I put the face in view and you look down, you can see how I have a bent back hand, but my wristwatch is still pointed to my left. So that’s a situation where I have this extension in the back of my wrist that can go to flat. So a left hand, this is a vertical condition. Okay? So there’s a vertical up and down. It’s not a turn situation. It’s just vertical. and bent back. And you can see on my thumb and index finger are sort of opposing one another. So when I pop my left hand on there, this heel pad is on top of the grip. There’s a square club face over there. In this case, vertical. My left thumb print is in the top right quadrant of the grip. And if you’re going to talk about where a V points, you know, the V in golf is this just sort of connection of thumb and palm kind of points up to my right shoulder, give or take. So, there’s a uh how a left hand or a lead hand goes on a golf club. Now, a trail hand. Here’s what I want you to look at. This here’s a fist. There’s an index finger that’s an extension and even mild hyperextension of the back of a of a palm. So, I’ll do that a couple times. Like there’s an index finger that’s an extension of the back of my hand and a mild hyperextension. And then when I put my hands on here, if you look at my fingers, or what part of my hands closest to the club head down there, you could say it’s my index finger, not my thumb. So now I when I kind of toggle back and forth here, you see what’s happening. Now, I’m a fan of overlapping, not interlocking, cuz interlocking people always go too far connecting their hands together, and then it doesn’t really leave them a place to really put their thumb because they get it too far in the palm. like this is too far in the palm. There’s a grip that is in the fingers of the right hand which allows that palm to kind of fold onto the thumb. And you see the valley of my right hand kind of between the thumb pad and my heel pad how that folds and covers. So I’m a fan of an overlap grip and then that thumb rests on the target side of the grip. The club’s weight sits in the cradle of that index finger and has nothing to do with the fulcrum of the thumb. It sits into that crook. So, here’s the grip at my address position. Ball location left center for an iron strike. Okay. Handle of the club is pretty even with that skinny red stick relative to the barber pole. You know, in a back swing, you’re going to, you know, this thing’s going to work back up and in in kind of a circular manner. It’s a little dizzy for me looking at this through my phone, but you know, when you change direction, what happens is the trail wrist bends back and what was bent, the lead wrist was bent at a dress starts to flatten and flex back. And so now I’m in an impact position. I’m sorry that’s such a weird view for you, but I think you’re trying to trying to give you the look of what it’s like to build a nice grip and where a thumb rests doesn’t sit on top and nor does enough pressure here. Cuz when you change direction, the weight of the club captures in the crook of that index finger rather than sits on that thumb. So you can see when I flex my wrist from a flat condition to a bent condition, it makes a muscle pop in my forearm. Okay. Well, that condition at a dress, if you’re totally relaxed and that muscle right there isn’t flexed, your wrist is therefore flat. Now, I guess you could really tense up your arm in a flat condition, but it wouldn’t make much sense. Good players when they grip the golf club, the back of their lead hand is generally cupped backward a little bit. Now, I didn’t say turned. This would be a turned condition to where you could see the face of my watch. The face of my watch is pointing at the target. But when I cup my left wrist at a dress, what naturally happens to the muscle in my forearm? It tenses up a little bit. It’s not necessarily comfortable to do this at first. So, when I put my good hands on a club, I’ve got a little bit of tension in that forearm right there. There is a flexed back of my left hand, or I should say cupped back of my left hand. That is an address position. Now, when I take my trail hand, my right hand, and I put it on the grip, that is flat and that is relatively comfortable. So, I’ve got one condition that may be uncomfortable. It’s not uncomfortable to me now because I’ve done thousands and thousands of reps. And I’ve got my hands in a condition that once the golf club lags, in other words, once that club head resists changing direction and I deliver to impact, now my hands are in a very, very solid impact alignment to deliver a square club face, a shallow angle of attack with some forward lean for a nice powerful strike. What I want you to do is consider this. Turn the face 15° to the left. Then put your comfortable grip on it and then turn the face square because that condition right there is like a lot of players that play on tour. A Zack Johnson comes to mind who’s got a very very strong looking lead hand. And when I say strong again, I don’t mean turned. I just mean a lot of cup, a lot of bend back in that lead hand. And then once the lagging condition of the swing puts weight into the wrist, you get this condition flattening out. Now, if you come to the golf club and you just put your hands on casually, restfully, there’s a really good chance that you’re not going to get your lead wrist in the correct position to strike your best shots. I want you to flex your lead wrist back and see what it does to that forearm. And then turn it vertical. In other words, that’s a cor a bent leader wrist in a vertical condition. And then go ahead and make your golf grip. That’s going to put you in a condition in a position at a dress that really really mimics how the best players do it. This is my favorite, the five lessons of modern fundamentals of golf. There’s so much to learn in this book. It’s a great book. There’s some things I think in here that, you know, you might want to avoid, frankly, but there’s a lot of amazing nuggets, way way way more great stuff than casual things and and cautious things to be weary of. Um, you know, most notably, I love how he devotes this chapter on the grip. Like chapter one starts off with a grip. And you can see, you know, this is the engine of the golf swing. Can you get your hands on effectively? And I want to share some of the stuff today about the grip, you know, and some of these amazing Anthony Ravielli drawings about how Mr. Hogan carefully put his hands on the club because I’ll tell you what, everybody thinks they grip it nicely. But I’m going to tell you, eight out of 10 people that come see me at the golf school, they’ve got something wrong with their grip that keeps them from playing their best golf. And you are one of them out there. I guarantee I’m talking to 80% of you right now. So, let’s really pay attention to this tip. Pick up these little teeny nuances and you’re going to strike golf shots better because you’re going to have more effective control of the golf club. We’re talking about the grip of the fabulous Ben Hogan, the best tournament ball striker bar none. Now, when we talk about the grip, okay, and as it’s illustrated in his wonderful book in chapter 1, he takes a lot of great care to show a few things to people, and I want to go over those. At the golf school, we call it the hook and the heel. Meaning that we’re going to hook the index finger of the lead hand, in my case, my left hand. And then we’re going to take the heel pad. If you run your finger down your thumb to the end of your hand right there, that’s the heel pad. And if you can do this properly, Mr. Hogan shows that he can pick up a golf club, no problem in this condition right here. So, that really illustrates how the heel pad goes on top of the grip. Now, people always say, “Hey, Martin, is it two fing is it two knuckles? Is it three knuckles? How do you know how much to turn your lead hand on the grip? Well, I always coach it this way, and I hope this is uh clear for you. I want my wrist to be vertical. In other words, there’s a karate chop. I want that lead wrist to always be vertical. I don’t want to fashion my hand on there somehow where you can see the logo on my glove. I want the logo on my glove in essence to be pointing a little bit skyward, but primarily at the target. And if it’s skyward, guess what? I have a nice little bend back in my wrist. A little cupy wrist condition. Why cupy at a dress? Because the dynamics of the swing will flatten it for impact to you where you can have that nice forward lean condition. So heel pad on top and a nice short left thumb or short lead thumb. Go ahead and drag that thumb so you close the gap on the side of your hand to your thumb. Now the right hand really, really important. And Mr. Hogan was as beautiful as any. Arnold Palmer was a great grip, too. And I love looking at how they put their hands on the club. Now, whether you 10 finger it, interlock it, overlap, doesn’t matter. But I’m gonna say one thing. You overlappers, if you were taught to go webbing to, or I’m sorry, you interlockers, if you were taught to go webbing to webbing, there’s a good chance that you can’t get your right hand on properly, you can’t get the club in the fingers like Mr. Hogan illustrates in chapter one of his book. If you go and try this at home, if you go webbing to webbing, you’re going to feel like you have to put the club too much in the palm of your trail hand. So, let’s be very mindful that an interlock grip is really just midfinger to mid finger. And that will allow you to get the grip primarily in the fingers so that the lifeline of your trail hand can fold nicely onto that lead thumb of yours. And don’t be afraid of having a little bit of trigger finger there. What I’m saying is you can see the grip through there between my middle finger and my index finger. That’s trigger finger. That’ll help you have a little bit more control of that golf club because when it swings to the top, we want that club to bench to seat on that base knuckle of the right index finger. You don’t need a right thumb to play golf. If the grips on properly and you go to the top, that club is going to it’s going to rest on that knuckle. If it’s flopping around in the, you know, between your thumb and hand, you’re going to have a hard time controlling that golf club. So, get that hook and heel. Let’s get that short thumb, that left thumb on the top right quadrant. When you do that, really doesn’t matter if you want to go 10 finger interlock interlock or overlap. And when we get our right hand on nicely, and believe me, this takes practice. You guys and gals out there. Don’t short change yourself on taking time to build a correct grip. This is what most people like to do when they put their hand on the golf club. They put it under the thumb pad instead of under the heel pad. So, it’s really nice when you hold the golf club perpendicular to your forearm and then put the handle across your hand. You can really get those last three fingers perpendicular to the grip or almost perpendicular. That’s a great left-hand hold. And you also want to get that left thumb not on top of the grip. So, there’s the club face right there. You want that left thumb to be on the top right quadrant of the grip. Not completely off to the side over here and not completely on top the top right quadrant because we want to have some ability to have some force behind the shaft just a little bit as that shaft seeks to go in alignment and then go up up into a finish. When I’m in my schools and somebody’s left-hand hold isn’t effective, I’ll often take a Sharpie and I’ll find what we call the snuff box right on a vertical left hand. There’s your vertical left hand. And I’ll put a little circle right there because I want that spot right there to be on top of the grip. So, there’s that spot on top of the grip. That allows for effective hinging and unhinging as long as the club is under the heel pad like I showed you in the closeup. And those last three fingers are perpendicular to the grip, 90° to the grip. Um, some some of the RG fans out there said, you know, you’d like to you’d like me to explain how the hands work in the golf swing. Well, here’s my little bit for you. You know, so at address there’s an address hand location. The left wrist is bent, the right wrist is flat, which leads to the question, well, Martin, why don’t we just set up an impact? I’ll tell you why we don’t set up an impact. Impact is really here. This is impact. My my arms are in impact. And you’re saying, “Well, Martin, you’re you’re a ways away from the golf ball.” I know I am because to take the arms from here to impact requires rotation and secondary axis tilt which is when so my arms are pinned against my body and now I’m rotating into impact. Now my arms aren’t moving people. My body is helping me move my arms into an effective impact position. So that’s why it’s not necessarily the best to start at impact because you’re not going to arrive back at impact unless you know that the body has participation to take your arms to the correct place to hit your best golf shots. Here’s a front on view. I’ve got the snuff box, this blue dot on top. I’ve got my left the last three fingers of my left hand perpendicular to the grip. And then the question again, why don’t I just start at impact? Because at impact, if I if I was to fake this and just say, “Okay, I’m going to start here.” There’s no pressure from my arms to my body. So, this is false. What happens in an effective golf swing? When we address we get over top of the golf ball, our arms hang from our shoulders comfortably. Okay? We make our back swing. Guess what happens? Our arms compress against our body. I’m actually in an impact condition right now. So, how do I get to the golf ball? My compressed arms stay on my body and I let my hips, my tilts deliver this golf club to effective position. Looks like this. Address, arms hanging comfortably from the shoulders. Compress against the body and deliver those compressed arms through impact. So that is how and why you get to good impact. You can’t just set up there and expect to arrive there. There’s participation from the body. I hope that makes sense. Uh to finalize this tip, one of the posters said, “Uh, can you show me the hands and what the hands do?” So the hands, there’s an address hand location for the left hand, bent left wrist, straight right wrist, there’s an impact hand location. Again, I just went over why we don’t start there. I guess we I guess suppose we could if we compressed the arms against our body and let our body deliver that that those compressed arms. So, we could do that. Um I like to flow into a back swing so I can really compress my arms against my body and then go the other way. Now, at the top, I guess the question was, you know, what do the hands do at the top? Well, you know, the hands obviously the right hand could and you could get this super cupping of the left hand, but then you can see what that does to the club face. It’s wide open. That’s not my preference. My preference is that the left wrist is pretty flat with a subtle itty bitty little gentle cup right here. But from your perspective, that sure looks flat. And then the right hand just merely bends back. Because from here, all we’re going to do is let this unccock to the golf ball and it’ll naturally want to rotate. Why will it want to rotate? Because the golf club doesn’t want to stay where you it always wants to go toewe down. It’s got a built-in feature to help it rotate. So to summarize, snuff box on top. Last three fingers, left hand perpendicular. This is the crucial hand. Okay, you get the left hand on properly, the right hand’s probably going to be okay. Now, the only mistakes you’re really going to make with the right hand, yeah, you could do some crazy under, you know, reach under too much. You could put your thumb down the grip in an effort to try to guide. Again, the right thumb, we don’t need a right thumb to play golf. You could surgically remove it and at the top of the swing, that club gets to the top effectively. And what’s it resting on? Not the thumb. It’s resting on the its fulcrum is the knuckle right here. The knuckle of the right hand. That’s why I like to have a little bit of trigger finger in there. So that when it swings back, it rests on that base knuckle. Then from there, you’ve really got control. You’re not worried about your thumb, you know, getting all blistered up and having to apply force. Not to say some players don’t, but the majority, the great majority, have their thumb resting on the left side of the grip. And then you know we talked about 10finger interlock overlap. I think the best grip if you do it right is the interlock. Why? Because it takes away the ability for these two fingers sorry the indexing to come to pinch. When you take that away you free up the wrist hinge. And that wrist hinge is really the reason for great speed. And that wrist hinge is really the reason for great speed. The grip is the most important thing of a golf swing. effective hands. You know, when you watch a really good player set his hands, at least for me anyway, when I watch an effective player put his hands on the golf club, it’s it’s such a neat thing to see the care that and energy that they’ve taken to put their hands on that golf club correctly. It allows so many things in the golf swing to work properly. The hinging, the unhinging, the finish, vital to a great great swing. So, let’s talk about a couple things in the grip that I think are going to help you a lot. You know, the left hand, this is so often misunderstood. You know, you can take the golf club and if you can just hook your index finger and you set the golf club in here, if you get your heel, if you get the heel pad of your left hand, so let’s just define what that is. Here’s the thumb pad, base of the thumb. And the heel pad is, if you run your finger down your pinky, right there at the base of your wrist is the heel pad. So, if you hook your index finger, hook it under the grip. Let’s get those grooves at 12:00 on that face. So, those grooves are straight up and down. Let’s hook that index finger. Put that heel pad on top. You’ve got a pretty good position right there. If you just go ahead and take keep that wrist in a nice vertical orientation, and then you wrap those three fingers around, set that left thumb on the top right part of the grip. There is a nice neutral grip. And what that’s going to do is when you get to the top of your back swing, that nice flat condition or slightly cupped, it’s going to leave the face in a pretty simple orientation to want to unccock and get into a nice impact orientation. Okay. So, let’s get that vertical left wrist on top of the grip. So, if if I had a nickel for every one of these I saw on the range, man, I’d be a really wealthy guy. So, again, vertical. This wrist is not on top of the grip. Let’s get it vertical. Let’s get the wrist bone, the wrist joint completely on top of that grip. So when you look down, it’s if I drove a nail right through that snuff box, so to speak, on the top of my left wrist, right through my hand, right through the grip, it would come shooting right out of the camera at you. Okay? So the wrist joint is on top of the grip. That allows for that hinging and unhinging, and it supports this rolling motion that every good golf swing has. So that’s an effective left hand hold. Okay. a right hand hold. You know, there’s a few ways you can put your right hand on the golf club. You can interlock it, you can overlap it, and you can put it on 10 finger. You already know that. But what I always see, I see people make a big mistake with this interlock. They interlock far too deeply. An effective interlocking grip is where the fingers just barely interlock. They don’t interlock right to the bases of each finger. They interlock maybe halfway. And an interlock grip is fantastic because when you take when you interlock, you take away the ability for the left thumb and that and the index finger to really pinch and limit the freedom in that left wrist. So interlocking is fantastic because it it um supports mobility. It it without thinking about it, you can have more freedom in your wrists. I don’t personally interlock, but I think it’s a great way to grip the golf club. Work for Tiger, work for Nicholas, and many others. I like to overlap and I think this is a grip that I teach the most because it’s the it’s the easiest one to do well. So just taking that pinky finger and letting it ride wrap around the knuckle of that index finger is an effective way to put your hold on the club too. So the right hand orientation, how does that work? Well, you know, we don’t put the right hand across the shaft in a in a perpendicular fashion. We actually have it somewhat angled. If you take that index finger and almost point it down the shaft, that’s the orientation of how we get our right hand on the golf club. And the right hand grip is a more of a finger grip. It’s such that if this was a, you had a bow and arrow and this was a string, I would pull a string back by by hooking the two fingers, middle fingers of my right hand, pull it back and then let it go. That’s the sensation of how to get your right hand on the grip. It’s like you hook him into a little U right there and that’s the sensation with a subtle orientation of aiming that index finger down the grip and wrap that underneath. Friend of mine, Brian Manzel, taught me that. It’s a great way to teach the right hand hold. I learned a great thing from a gentleman named Craig Shankland at one of the early PGA teaching seminars. He used a yard stick. Now, this isn’t a yard stick. It’s my kid’s little hockey stick, but it’s basically in the same shape with a obviously with a blade on the end. If you have the opportunity to get a yard stick or even a ruler, you’re going to feel how hands pair. It’s pretty easy to slap these on there and know if your left hand’s underneath, your right hand’s underneath, or if they’re kind of paired up and parallel to one another. Most effective grips aim these V’s. What you’ll realize is when the thumb and hand come together, it forms kind of what we call a V. Aim these V’s somewhere up between our chin and our right shoulder. So, if we’re going to set this club down here, these V’s are going to be aiming up in this general direction, which with a square face, I like to say, grooves at 12:00 straight up and down. So, when you have this effective hold and your hands aren’t on too weak or too strong, too weak makes you sort of want to flip the face shut because you’re never going to deliver a square club face with a with a left wrist that’s in a too weak condition because it’s too hard to do. And if the left hand’s on too strong, we tend to block everything. We tend to have a chicken wing. There’s a couple ways to have a chicken wing. One, too weak over the top chicken wing. Too strong blocking chicken wing. So, there’s a couple different ways to have chicken wings. I like my chicken wings hot and with a cold pier at a bar, not on the golf course. Okay. So, let’s get our hands paired up well so that we can make an effective golf swing. When I look down, there’s one little trick I want to share with you. If you can pretend you’ve got the double double guns right here and you’re shooting the screen, go ahead and let your right fingers back a little bit. You can see I’m creating a little bit of a wrinkle in the back of my knuckles and my both index fingers. those back. And then let’s see if we can’t get in a hitchhiker thumb position. Bring those hitchhiker thumbs to the sides of her hands where the with those index fingers cocked back. Like I could hold pennies between my thumb and the sides of my hands right there. Hold some pennies. When you do that, let’s get that sensation of holding the pennies on the golf club. So, they’re holding the pennies. And I’m going to keep those pennies there as I hinge, unhinge, roll, and rehinge. Okay? So, again, the hands are going to hinge, unhinge, roll, and rehinge. And somewhere during this, you’re going to have fantastic tour striker like impact alignments. Slightly forward leaning shaft downward strike that’s going to roll up into a nice finish. But if your grip isn’t on properly, you’re going to do all kinds of funky movements that that are going to take away from your potential best golf swing. So really pay attention to having great hands, organized hands that are effective that allow the club to hinge, unhinge, strike properly. Before you do, let me mess with this a bit. Heel pad, right? Thumb pad. Heel pad folds over the glove. that folds over the grip rather thumb print top right it’s quadrant and notice you stay there I’ll be the left hand over here notice how my thumb isn’t really long there’s a mild see how my index finger my left index finger is underneath my thumb pad a little bit okay cool now I know you want to interlock which is fine I just want to make sure it’s a good interlock okay so I’m going to take this now and I’m going to take this fold in your index finger and I’m going to put it at 6:00 on the grip. The top’s 12. You with me? 9:00, 3:00. Now, as you fold these fingers on here and then I’m going to do this. Okay? So, this right there, that’s Tiger Woods hands. Okay? That’s Roy Moy hands. You with me? That’s not Thumbs McGee down the shaft. Okay? And then I’m going to take this arm. I’m going to get it a bit more up on top of you and soften the right a little bit. And there. That’s beautiful. Like that’s on a Christmas card. Put that on your Christmas card and send that to your friends. Okay? And say, “What the hell? What the hell’s that?” Say, “Just enjoy it. Get a new card next year.” Okay. Okay. It’ll be my full swing next year. Okay. So, now put that behind a golf ball and show me some flurry feet. Wonderful. Okay. So, now I’m going to just put this golf ball a little bit more left center in that stance. I’m going to take this pelvis and I’m going to move it over here and I’m going to ask you to take that belt line, tuck the buns up under you a little. Yes. Okay. So, I took your belt line and I flattened it a sliver. You with me? Now, this club should never be resting here. It should always be in your hands like tap tap tap tap. You with me? Never resting. So, now do me a favor. Hit one out there 60 yards for me and hold your finish. And if you miss, it’s okay. Hold your finish. You look amazing. Okay, wonderful. Okay, so you mis hit it way the hell too far, right? Which was fine. And then could you get here and just kind of chill and hold your finish? All right, so your big challenge like make me happy coach cuz I think you can. I think you can. Okay, happy coach is going to want to see this heel pad on top of grip. Nice vertical face. You with me? Yeah. mildly opposing thumb and index finger because you’re about to interlock, right? So, you want room for that guy. When you go to interlock, think about the six o’lock first. Okay. 6:00. Good. There you go. See how this index finger I’m going to mimic you. See my index finger slightly closer to the club head than my thumb. Yes. Good. That’s a bit much. There you go. Perfect. And this left arm a little bit more up on top of you. And that guy a little softer. And then we’re gonna go tap tap tap to the grass behind the ball. And that ball is going to be left center. My old coach used to joke and say left nut. Okay. So there you go. And the belt line a little flatter. Yes. Take a sneaky peak to your target. Back to the ball and hit one or miss one, but hold your finish. Okay. really good.

1 Comment

  1. We all have a perfect grip training club – the putter. Practice the normal golf swing with the putter and you will notice what is right or wrong with your grip. Almost nobody takes a bad grip, when you have flat sides. Like the grip of an icehockey stick, a badminton racket, a knife, a pistol, an axe, a hammer and so on.

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