Why should I learn to hit a fade with my golf shots from the tee? Now everyone needs and everyone desires a consistent shot when they are actually on the teeing ground when they want to hit a tight fairway they are in a pressure situation or they just want to know that the ball is going to be landing in the short grass. Now it's something which a lot of the great professionals have done through out of the years a lot of the great champions is to horn and to groove a little fade when you are actually on the tee. Now to hit a little fade you just require a bit of practice and a bit of understanding of what you need to achieve with your club path and your clubface angle at impact. Now a fade is achieved when the club moves from a lightly out to in path so very much just a slight cut across the body at impact the clubface is slightly open to the path but slightly close to the target line. And what that will achieve is a very gentle fade throughout the yard, but it should give you a little bit more control. So when you are actually over the ball on the teeing ground is to just try and get that club moving slightly from out to in and just holding the clubface open ever so slightly.
Now this is often easy to achieve in a draw which requires a little bit more of a release of the club for whatever reason golfers do tend to find there are living that clubface slightly open at impact will improve consistency and a fade and it will improve accuracy as well. Now one way to ensure a little bit of a fade is you can actually move your body slightly off to the left hand side as well. Now this will encourage more movement through the air, but because of the slightly open clubface because of the slightly more loft it should give even more accuracy. But to play a normal fade just a slighter alignment off to the left down side ball position is normal just inside the left hill but then move the club slightly on the outside to slightly on the inside going through, and just open up the clubface very slightly through impact. Now hitting a little fade like I said should improve accuracy quite a lot and you will be following in the footsteps of many great players.
What a lot of people don’t quite understand is when a fade because you have more loft on the club your overall distance will be reduced, it's not quite the same as a drawl which would increase distance but tends to increase a little bit of in that — increases your off center shots as well, so you could spray a little bit more when you are hitting a drawl. So when you are hitting a fade it would be for accuracy and not for distance but if you do groove a successful one then you should be hitting a lot more fairways as a result.