Stop Your Hooked Tee Shots - (Video) Lesson by PGA Pros Pete Styles and Matt Fryer
Stop Your Hooked Tee Shots - (Video) Lesson by PGA Pros Pete Styles and Matt Fryer

In this video tip PGA golf professionals Pete Styles and Matt Fryer lead you through an examination of how your hooked tee shots could be happening and the best way to reduce them and stop you to stop hooking golf shot for good. Matt and Pete understand that a grip that is too strong will produce a club face that is too closed at the point of impact. If the club face is too closed in relation to the path and to the target, the golf ball could have too much hooking spin imparted on it which in turn potentially creates a hook rather than the desired drawing golf shot.

Now if we were sat in a room with a 100 golfers and we asked the people to raise a hand for a hook or a slice tee shot I guarantee the amount of people who raise their hands for the hook tee shots is going to be a lot less than the guy who slices. So luckily Pete is here today to help us for that guy indeed and give us a tip this going to help us stop hooking our tee shots. It is a less common tee shot would you agree? I think it's I think for a lot of golf as they struggle with the slice when the starting the game but I think that for these golfers that get better.

It's quite a concept of trying between trying to draw the golf balls a lot yes that's what I would ambition trying to draw to golf ball and unfortunately some of those golfers slipped in the concept accidently hooking the golf ball which is you know hook is just an aggressive draw. Eventually, that hook can become a problem for a lot of golfers they see too much of the left side of the course and they loose the balls. OK so if you give us a couple of points key points why we are hooking it would it be face something like that path maybe body what would you go to. This probably 4 areas I want to look at it 1st thing would be what's the what's the cause you mentioned the face and the path it's a misrepresentation or a poor relationship between the face and the path so the path is probably to the right of the intended target with a club face is aggressively left of the path.

2019-07-18

In this video tip PGA golf professionals Pete Styles and Matt Fryer lead you through an examination of how your hooked tee shots could be happening and the best way to reduce them and stop you to stop hooking golf shot for good. Matt and Pete understand that a grip that is too strong will produce a club face that is too closed at the point of impact. If the club face is too closed in relation to the path and to the target, the golf ball could have too much hooking spin imparted on it which in turn potentially creates a hook rather than the desired drawing golf shot.

Now if we were sat in a room with a 100 golfers and we asked the people to raise a hand for a hook or a slice tee shot I guarantee the amount of people who raise their hands for the hook tee shots is going to be a lot less than the guy who slices. So luckily Pete is here today to help us for that guy indeed and give us a tip this going to help us stop hooking our tee shots. It is a less common tee shot would you agree? I think it's I think for a lot of golf as they struggle with the slice when the starting the game but I think that for these golfers that get better.

It's quite a concept of trying between trying to draw the golf balls a lot yes that's what I would ambition trying to draw to golf ball and unfortunately some of those golfers slipped in the concept accidently hooking the golf ball which is you know hook is just an aggressive draw. Eventually, that hook can become a problem for a lot of golfers they see too much of the left side of the course and they loose the balls. OK so if you give us a couple of points key points why we are hooking it would it be face something like that path maybe body what would you go to. This probably 4 areas I want to look at it 1st thing would be what's the what's the cause you mentioned the face and the path it's a misrepresentation or a poor relationship between the face and the path so the path is probably to the right of the intended target with a club face is aggressively left of the path.