Improve Your Strike And Stop Scooping - (Video) Lesson by PGA Pros Pete Styles and Matt Fryer
Improve Your Strike And Stop Scooping - (Video) Lesson by PGA Pros Pete Styles and Matt Fryer

In this video tip PGA golf professionals Pete Styles and Matt Fryer help you to understand the reasons why scooping can be an issue for a lot of golfers. Utilizing a ball back, hands ahead, pitching action should create a lower ball flight. This can allow the golfer to feel the concept of not scooping the golf ball. Noting how the golfer's hands win the race to hit the golf ball before the club head reaches the ball is a great way of understanding the maintenance of lag during the golf downswing.

Now one of my favorite things when I go to a live golfing event is wandering over to the practice ground plunk myself down behind some of the best players in the world and just listening to how they strike the golf ball. It is sensational real nice feeling and ball turn crisp and then that little fizzing sound it is fantastic and I've never gone to the range there and heard it different. It always sounds the same they're always get in this consistent strike it's out the middle it's compressed it's crisp as you say.

It's got a lot of things and that fizziness if I went to the range on a Saturday just before the local metal I would imagine I'm hearing a little bit different and seeing a few different things. So what are the 2 differences that we would see Pete? It's all about strike isn't it yeah that word strike it doesn't matter what your swing looks like.

2019-07-19

In this video tip PGA golf professionals Pete Styles and Matt Fryer help you to understand the reasons why scooping can be an issue for a lot of golfers. Utilizing a ball back, hands ahead, pitching action should create a lower ball flight. This can allow the golfer to feel the concept of not scooping the golf ball. Noting how the golfer's hands win the race to hit the golf ball before the club head reaches the ball is a great way of understanding the maintenance of lag during the golf downswing.

Now one of my favorite things when I go to a live golfing event is wandering over to the practice ground plunk myself down behind some of the best players in the world and just listening to how they strike the golf ball. It is sensational real nice feeling and ball turn crisp and then that little fizzing sound it is fantastic and I've never gone to the range there and heard it different. It always sounds the same they're always get in this consistent strike it's out the middle it's compressed it's crisp as you say.

It's got a lot of things and that fizziness if I went to the range on a Saturday just before the local metal I would imagine I'm hearing a little bit different and seeing a few different things. So what are the 2 differences that we would see Pete? It's all about strike isn't it yeah that word strike it doesn't matter what your swing looks like.