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GOLF
TEACHING PRO MAGAZINE®
SLICE SOLUTIONS
Part 1
By Bob Wyatt, Jr.
USGTF Course Director, Port St. Lucie, Florida
According to a
conversation I had with the late great USGTF teacher Babe Bellagamba,
there are two foolproof ways to cure an over-the-top swing fault and
a resulting pull slice shot. In this article, the first in a two
part series, I talk about how swinging like legendary golfers Tommy
Armour and Seve Ballesteros did during their heydays can put your
student’s faulty swing back on track.
Over the years, I’ve
had the opportunity to observe the golf swings of thousands of
amateur golfers. Wherever I am, without fail, I’ve noticed that the
majority of high handicap players hit a pull-slice shot off the tee.
I’ve spoken to
numerous USGTF/WGTF members about this common problem and most of
you agree that the over-the-top move, along with the faulty
cut-across-the-ball action occurring in the impact zone are the
culprits. As for cures, two of the most original were explained to
me by Babe Bellagamba, a great student of the game.
At Kissimmee Golf
Club, in Florida, where Babe was based, he had a main teaching room
with mirrors everywhere to “reflect” a student’s problem – even on
the ceiling – and sequence photographs of great golfers on the walls
of an adjacent room.
When it was a pull
slice shot Babe needed to fix, he pointed to the techniques of three
great players: Tommy Armour, Seve Ballesteros, and Ben Hogan.
“If you swing back
like Seve and down and through like Armour, I guarantee the club
will move correctly along an inside-square-inside path and the shot
you hit will draw slightly from right to left,” Babe used to tell
struggling students. “You will never hit a pull-slice,” Babe added.
It was Babe’s belief
that common or traditional left-sided triggers, such as “Guide the
club back in one piece with your left arm and shoulder,” together
with the tip, “Pull the golf club down and through with your left
hand,” actually did more harm than good. In fact, Babe believed
these well meaning left-sided tips to be root causes of swinging the
club outside the target line on the backswing then directing it
across the target line in the hit-zone.
Babe was a big
believer in right-sided golf over left-sided golf for right-handed
players; feeling that the right-sided way is more natural,
player-friendly, and better suited to golfers lacking the time to
devote a few hours per week to practice. The next time you interview
a new student and determine that his or her pull slice is likely
being caused by left-sided triggers, follow this right-sided recipe
in the style of the late Babe Bellagamba.
TIP 1: THE BACKSWING
Like Seve did during his heyday, when he won three British Open
championships (1979, 1984, 1988) and three Masters (1980, 1983),
instruct the student to pull the club away from the ball gently with
the right hand while, practically simultaneously, turning the right
hip clockwise. This tip of Babe’s makes perfect sense when you
consider that until Seve started visiting left-sided instructors in
America he was a natural, powerfully accurate right-sided golfer who
said this in his book Natural Golf.
“Using my strongest
hand to start the swing enables me to more naturally and fluidly
control the pace of the takeaway and keep the club traveling along
the proper plane and arc all the way to the top of the backswing.”
TIP 2: THE DOWNSWING
Drum home the following points made by legendary golfer Tommy Armour
in his much overlooked book, How To Play Your Best Golf All The
Time, an instructional text that was in Babe’s office library and
one that stresses right-sided swingcontrol. Armour, known for
hitting a high percentage of fairways and greens, won the 1927 U.S.
Open, 1930 PGA, and 1931 British Open. So, as Babe used to suggest,
have your problematic student listen to Armour’s words of wisdom.
“A swift moving right
hand is the source of dynamic power,” said Armour.
“And with Hogan,
Snead, and every other star, it is the right sided smash that
accounts for masterly execution of the shots. Don’t let anyone tell
you otherwise.
“The more you can get
your hands ahead of the clubface in the downswing, the more power
you can apply with the right hand.
“The late un-cocking
of the wrists, or the delayed hit, causes a decided acceleration of
right-hand action at the most effective period.”
“You don’t have to
think about the right hand not coming in time to whip the ball
terrifically; it will get there spontaneously.
This golf swing, and
the varying opinions of what is the best method, and what cures work
best for which faults, is fascinating. In fact, as if it were
yesterday, I remember vividly the stimulating conversation I had
with Babe Bellagamba, after telling him that from my observations of
golfers around the world I determined that the majority of high
handicap golfers swing over the top at the start of the downswing,
cut across the ball in the impact zone, and hit a pull-slice shot.
“Bob, I confront this
problem every day, and the first thing I and every other teacher
should do is get the student to start swinging the club back along
an inside path,” said Babe.
“And one of the best
ways to do that is to have him copy the closed stance setup position
of Ben Hogan.”
Babe pointed out that
when looking at the drawings in Ben Hogan’s classic instructional
book, Five Lessons: The Modern Fundamentals of Golf, you can
clearly see that Hogan’s right foot is dropped back, slightly
farther away from the target line than the left foot. Look at the
book and you’ll see Babe’s statement about Hogan’s closed stance is
correct. This is even more profound when you consider that Babe told
me he had read in a book or magazine that the drawings done by
illustrator Anthony Ravielli were rendered from photographs of Hogan
setting up and swinging. In short, each and every drawing,
particularly the one clearly showing the closed stance setup on page
78 of the hardcover version of this superbly written instructional
text, mirror or reflect Hogan’s actual positions. What’s even more
profound, other that Hogan depending on what is commonly called a
“hooker’s stance” to hit a controlled fade, is that Hogan and the
book’s collaborator Herbert Warren Wind never addressed this feature
of Hogan’s setup.
All this made sense
to me when I recently re-read John Andrisani’s book, The Hogan Way.
In this easy-to-follow instruction book, Andrisani says the
following:
“This address
position (closed) offsets the tendency Hogan had to swing the club
back outside the target line during the backswing, owing to his very
weak grip. The slightly closed stance position allowed Hogan to
swing the club back along the target line, at the earliest stage of
the takeaway, then slightly inside as he swung further back.”
So Babe was right.
Although Hogan’s biggest fear was hitting a duck-hook, he also did
likely fear swinging the club back on an outside path and likely,
too, swinging across the target line on the downswing and hitting a
pull slice. The closed stance obviously provided Hogan the comfort
of knowing the club would not move outside the target line
dramatically on the backswing and, instead, would be directed to the
inside. This is precisely why Babe recommended pull-slice players
set up closed.
“Bob, if there is one
good thing the closed stance guarantees, it’s that the club will
move to the inside on the backswing,” said Babe before adding this.
“Therefore, a teacher who recommends this stance to a pull-slice
hitter is halfway home in curing the student’s problem.”
According to Babe,
the other shortcut to providing a remedy for the over-the-top
pull-slice player involves the lower body. Again, Babe used Hogan as
the model.
After reaching the
top, Hogan actually moved his hips laterally initially then cleared
them. Because he set up closed and swung the club back inside the
target line, the lateral shift actually ensured that he start
swinging out at the start of the downswing. In fact, I bet Hogan
knew that if he felt blocked early in the downswing he was on the
right track and could never hit across the ball.
Surely, Hogan also
accepted that if, after making a lateral shift action, he failed to
clear his hips, he would, indeed, hit a block. But, if he cleared
his hips and kept his left wrist bowed, he would likely come into
impact with the face ever so slightly open and hit a controlled
power-fade. This is the shot Babe hit the best and the shot he
successfully got former pull-slice hitters to hit.
All of this came
together, and Babe was proved right, when I re-read two key lines in
Hogan’s book.
“When the golfer is
on this correct (less steeply inclined) downswing plane, he has to
hit from the inside out.” When he hits from he inside out, he can
get maximumstrength into the swing and obtain maximum club-head
speed.”
CONCLUSION: Only if you have a
pull-slice hitting student set up
closed, can he or she swing the club back inside the target line,
and only if you have them trigger the downswing with a lateral move,
can you be ensured of the student swinging out at the ball instead
of across the target line and, too, hitting a supercontrolled
power-fade – Hogan style – rather than a horrible pull-slice.
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