Great Tips To Improve Your Golf: Section 1A - Where Should You
Put the Ball?
A very
important question in golf is Where shall we place the ball?
For the normal drive the ball is teed opposite the instep of the
left foot. The position is this far to the left because the ball
must be struck at the bottom of the arc of the swing.
The bottom of this arc occurs not at a point midway between the
feet, but about opposite the left instep or left heel. It is here
because the body's center of gravity is moved to the left at the
beginning of the downswing by a pronounced shift of weight from the
right leg to the left. The left leg is the chief supporter of
weight when the club hits the ball.
Therefore the bottom of the arc is opposite the left foot. It's
no more complicated than that.
We do not intend to make a big deal of ball placement for the
other clubs. This has been done in some systems of instruction,
with a definite and different spot prescribed for each club in the
bag. This is ridiculous. Such hair splitting gives the pupil the
uneasy feeling that if he doesn't have the ball in exactly the
right spot he cannot make the shot. Nonsense.
For the other clubs below the driver, the ball is brought back
to the right, slightly. But never farther, for a normal shot, than
the center point between the feet.
As we use the more lofted clubs they get shorter and our feet
are placed closer together. But right down to the most lofted club
we do not play the ball back farther than the midpoint for a normal
shot.
We would, therefore, advise playing all irons from the 9 to the
5, exactly midway between the heels. For the 2, 3, and 4 irons,
play the ball about halfway between this midpoint and the left
heel. We would play the fairway woods about opposite the left heel
and the driver opposite the left instep.
We realize that some of the touring pros have advised playing
the ball about opposite the left heel for all shots and merely
moving the right foot closer to the left as the clubs rise in
number. This is fine for the pros, who move into the ball so well
on all shots. But the average player doesn't move nearly that well.
It is much easier for him to get the more lofted irons through the
ball with a descending club-head arc if the ball is at the midpoint
position.
With this we complete the preparatory moves, the actions and
positions you take and avoid taking as you get ready to swing the
club.
You have found, to sum up briefly, that you take a tight, two
knuckle, overlapping grip and that this grip, so far as contact
with the club is concerned, is a combination palm-and-finger grip
with the left hand and an all-finger grip with the right. We have
also made it clear that once this grip is welded to the shaft of
the club at the address, it does not change or loosen from the time
the club leaves the ball on the backswing until the finish of the
follow-through.
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