
Bad players are a dozen a dozen. Get out to your local club and you are sure to see more than some. Heck, you can even be one of them.
In such a difficult game to become capable, there are sure that there are many ways to shoot high results. As someone who posted my right share of large numbers, I can probably testify.
However, while bad players are not uniform in their shortcomings, there are some in common that many share.
Recently, I spoke with the Golftec director of the quality of teaching Josh Troyer to discover some of the biggest flaws separated by poor players. And using Golftec’s optimism technologyHe came up with three of the most common flaws of ball hit that share bad players.
The main oscillation errors made the bad golf player
1. Shake away from target
While it is true that you have to leave the target a little while in your back, it is certainly not as much as you think. In fact, when good ball attackers reach the top of their back, they actually moved TO Target from several inches. it Movement is called “re-concentration” And it’s something that the bad players fight. Instead of starting to move back to the target, they continue to leave the target throughout the back.
“Golfists who do not hit the ball very completely tend to leave the target at the top of their backs,” Troyer says. “Instead of taking their hips to move about three inches to the target from influence, their hips and shoulders often end more than one inch behind where they started. This is a red flag for contact issues.”
2. Divide elbows
Another common shaking flaw among poor players is that their elbows go further while moving. When a good ball striker makes a rhythm, their elbows tend to start with their elbows about eight inches away and they return to that distance from the impact. Bad golfists tend to fight this action and often create more space between their elbows from the impact, which results in a “chicken arm”.
“They can start at eight inches, but with the time they hit the ball, their elbows are 10, 12, or even 14 inch away,” Troyer says. “This is a really inefficient way to try to create solid contacts. It is a common cause of thin shooting, shooting at the top and fat shooting – essentially because it changes the effective length of the club.”
3. Lack of correct slope
In Impact, good players tend to their right side (for right -wing holders) about 30 degrees to the right, and this number increases after impact. With poor ball attackers, we do not see that slope. On the contrary, they will often stay more level and use other, less efficient methods to save swinging.
“Instead of bending properly and moving their sways forward – and bend slightly back to start the ball – the fighting players often do the opposite,” Troyer says. “They shake back, sloping left and holding their head and breasts directed to the ground. Then they have to share their elbows just to avoid fragmenting it.”

