Have you ever looked at someone who seems to have understood them all in the rank of running? Last week, I saw this highly talented amateur player, not a student of mine, just a young man I often see in the course.
His placement seemed like something you would see from an experienced professional, his swinging was directly from a textbook, and his conclusion was perfectly balanced. Despite all this, he continued to send the ball poorly to the right or pass it along the ground.
He turned to me, clearly frustrated and said, “I just don’t get it, Mr. Elliott. Everything feels good, but nothing is working.”
So I had him to get a rhythm more, but this time I asked him to call her again in an effort about 70%. You will not believe what happened – the ball climbed straight, high, and even went twenty meters away than any of his other previous shots.
It was not a technical issue at all; It was everything for his tempo.
Hidden oscillation killer Most players’ players ignore
Poor tempo is the silent killer of good golf shakes. Golf swing tempo is important because execution contrary costs you speedPower and control. If you rush your passage from the top of the swing down, you download the club faster than it was thought and lose the momentum before the club strikes the golf ball.
Most players obsessively focus on positions and mechanics while completely ignoring the pace that holds everything together. Nick Faldo referred to it as “glue” of golf rhythm recently during a tournament on the tournament, and I can’t agree with it more.
The problem begins with a fundamental misunderstanding: players think that the most difficult swing means to swing faster everywhere. Despite this fact, most players try to make quick quickly, not just at the time of impact. Unfortunately, this is a mistake. There can only be one faster point in your swing, and if you are trying to swing quickly, that moment will not be in the influence. The whole purpose of your golf swinging should be to maximize your swing speed at the exact moment when the club contacts the ball.
3: 1 magic report that uses pro
Almost every excellent ball attacker of all time has had a shaky tempo, or just around 3: 1. This means that your back should last three times as long as your landing.
So if your back lasts .9 seconds, your landing should last .3 seconds. Studies have revealed that this is one of the things every excellent player has in common. This time creates the perfect pace to ensure that you always accelerate influence and compress the ball with power.
Here’s what this looks like in practice: count “one-two-three” during your back, then “four” as you hit the ball. Although there is no perfect formula for good golf tempo, many great players have a 3: 1 back-ul-ulje ratio. Take three charges (1, 2, 3) to swing the club back and one to swing down and through. Players with a large tempo keep it stable, regardless of the purpose of being played or the club in hand.

Both temple mistakes that killed your distance
Mistake #1: Rasten leakage
Many players grab the club away from the ball when they begin the swing, setting the scene for a pace that will be rushed from start to finish. A quick intake means that your body will not have time to enter the right position to support a powerful landing action.
Error #2: Panic Transition
The next risk point in golf swinging is the transition. This is likely the number one culprit when it comes to amateur players rushing through the swinging of golf. As soon as they end up, many players decide that they have to take the club to the ball as soon as human beings.
A super slow spine makes it easy to stimulate the landing and come to the top, producing bad traction cutting.
Simple adjustment that transforms your stroke
Pause exercise
One of the simplest exercises for improving the golf temple is to pause at the top of your golf swing. This pause is not long; Simply helps you create a transition point from lower backwardness.
Take your normal back, then break for a short moment on top before you start. This single exercise prevents the hasty transition that destroys most of the oscillations.
Counting 3: 1
During the practice, calculate aloud: “one-two-three” for your back, “four” for influence. Count I removes you from the complexities of your swing mechanics and trains you to develop an identical number with any club. There is no right or wrong number as long as it is the same for all the shooting.
Lighter, softer swinging
Tension is the greatest enemy of the rhythm. A narrow handle Or solid shoulders lead to a sharp, unbalanced rhythm. Keep the club as if wearing a small bird – strong enough not to fly away, but soft enough to hurt it.
Your tempo progress starts now
The perfect oscillation mechanics means nothing if your tempo is off. Your shaky tempo plays an important role in how hard you hit the ball. When your tempo is in synchronous, your body moves to the right sequence, allowing the best balance, clean contact and added consistency. A weak, very fast or uneven tempo can throw your way and your swing time, often resulting in fat shots, slices or poor contact.
Start with the pause training. Master Count 3: 1. Believe that swing in 80% perfect temp effort will produce better results than swinging in 100% effort with hasty time.
Your best golf is not about the strongest swing – it is about the smartest swing, with a pace that allows your natural athletic ability to shine.
office Why your swinging tempo is damaging your ball stroke (and how to fix it) first appeared in MygolfSSS.

