Cutting the ball can be frustrating, especially because it often causes a significant loss of distance. You can see your ball start straight, just to curve into that annoying slice. The good news? You can Eliminate slice Better understanding how your hands and arms control the club throughout your swing.
1. Grip: The foundation of a square club
Your fastening checks the club directly in influence and throughout your swinging. The first step to stop the slice is Putting your hands correctly in the club. Leave your lead arm to hang naturally. Your hand should be turned off so that your palm will face the ground. You should see the same number of knuckles in your lead hand when grabbing the club as when your arm hung naturally. The thumb should not focus on the syllable, but just away to match that natural position. This provides the shakes of your arm on its natural path, holding it at Clubface Square in Impact.
2. Flash on the fingers, not the palm
Keeping the club on your fingers – not your palm – is essential for the proper release of the club. If your check is too heavy, you will surely squeeze very difficult to keep the club from the slide, which can cause a slice and loss of distance. Signs you are catching a lot with your palm include dress holes or signs on your handle or even bladder in your hands. The pillow of the bullet hand should stand on top of the syllable, with the club sitting on the wrinkles between the fingers and the palm. When you are finished properly, you will not need to catch tightly. The club will of course stay in place, allowing you to swing calm and generate more speed.
3. Weapons swing freely
Allowing your arms to shake naturally helps in the square and closing the falling club. Be ready to shake the arms in front. If your wings remain behind your body, the club is likely to remain open, causing a slice. If your wings lead the landing, you can tie the ball, but for slicers, this wing predominance can be a positive adjustment. Plus, shaking wings adds speed and power, so hug it.
4. Keep your lead arm near your body
Holding your lead arm near your chest across the back of your back and the landing stabilizes the club and promotes a proper rocking road. In the back, this prevents you from flipping the open club. In the fall, a narrow lead arm encourages a shaky road inside-out, helping you produce a draw than a slice.
5. Relax on your elbow
Once your check is accurate and the club is kept on your fingers, keep your elbows to reduce tension. Relaxed elbows allow your lead elbow to be naturally folded, preventing the club from staying open due to tension. A great drill to feel this natural release is the training of the split hand-place your hands away on the syllable and swing, which encourages your lead elbow to fold and your trail arm to be released properly. This helps you develop the feeling of a natural release of the club.

