Tom Stickney – A Top 100 Golf Teacher
So whenever we get the club going this way clubs kind of go and cross-line out to in blades kind of turning down we tend to get that low dive and snap hook that doesn't go very far and becomes a very very hard ball to control. So a great way to control the snap hook is to feel the club coming in a little bit more down the line maybe a little more from the inside as opposed to chopping down on it this way. That way you can feel more the right shoulder coming down just a little bit and when you do that the last thing you want to feel is the heel of the club kind of lead the toe on the way through just that he'll just leave the toe just gently.
What's going to happen is that will stop that clubface shutting down quite so much because any time you snap hook it the club tends to move from the outside of the inside any tend to nose it down and when you get that type of move through impact you're going to hit that low dart and snap hook. So remember you want to feel like the club coming a little bit more down the line and you want to feel like the heels lead to toe just a little bit more through impact and when you do that the ball's going to tend to go a little bit straighter it might still draw on you but it's not going to be that God awful snap hook. So remember a little bit more down the line heel lead the toe just a split second to impact and a snap hook will be a thing of the past.