How Far Away From the Ball Should You Be
Anne Rollo has three easy steps for making sure that you are the right distance away from the ball for all your clubs.
Instructional articles, golf tips, and video lessons from our expert team of qualified LPGA and PGA instructors.
Anne Rollo has three easy steps for making sure that you are the right distance away from the ball for all your clubs.
Here’s a great quick tip from PGA Instructor Gianna Augustine. Always keep your eyes open and watch what the ball does if your long putt or chip is going past the hole. It will help you make the next one!
Maria Palozola’s Wide to Narrow Drill creates lag in your downswing creating more power and preventing casting or releasing early.
Too much wrist hinge in your chips is a recipe for disaster. Megan Johnston demonstrates the left hand low (for right handers) chipping drill to improve your contact and get up and down more often.
Michele Low shows you three reasons why you are topping the ball with three matching drills you can do to start hitting solid shots.
Erika Larkin shows how to get two critical setup elements right. Having your ball position and clubshaft lean correct at address will help you hit the perfect shot.
Rising up instead of winding up in your swing can take you out of your posture and create too much elevation change causing inconsistent ball contact. Christina Ricci shows you how to wind up for more distance and accuracy.
In this golf psychology tip, Dr. Alison Curdt describes the importance of picturing your shot and outcome in your mind.
Off the fairway? LPGA Instructor Meredith Kirk shares 3 easy steps for hitting good shots off pine straw.
If you struggle with chunked or topped shots LPGA Class A Instructor Christina Ricci’s lesson will help you strike the ball first and then the turf for solid shots and more distance.
Erika Larkin demonstrates the five different types of shot you can play with your wedges to get the ball close to the hole including low, medium, and high trajectory options to suit every situation.
The ball slices (curves to the right for right handers) when the clubface is open at impact. Here’s an easy drill from Sue Shapcott to close your clubface and control your ball flight.