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1. Fix Your Slice 2. Fix Your Hook 3. Hit More Fairways 4. Fix Your Setup 5. Fix Your Impact Area 6. Fix Your Fat Shots 7. Fix Your Thin Shots 8. Build a Repeating Swing Table of Contents Fix Your Swing Series

Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

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Page 1: Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

1. Fix Your Slice2. Fix Your Hook3. Hit More Fairways4. Fix Your Setup5. Fix Your Impact Area6. Fix Your Fat Shots7. Fix Your Thin Shots8. Build a Repeating Swing

Table of Contents

Fix Your Swing Series

Page 2: Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

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>> Click Here to Discover How to Build a Repeating << Swing that Holds up Under Pressure.

Fix Your Slice

Back of the Left HandAs you turn back, make sure the back of the left hand is flat. Slicers often cup their left hand at the top of the swing, opening the clubface. To get a straighter ball flight, avoid cupping your hand at the top. This will help square the clubface at impact.

Don’t Get Too SteepHaving a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too steep is by working on creating a more rounded swing. Round out your swing by swinging the club like a baseball club. This squares clubface as it works around and through.

Page 3: Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

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>> Click Here to Discover How to Build a Repeating << Swing that Holds up Under Pressure.

Fix Your Hook

Why it happensPlayers who work the club too much from the inside are the ones who hook the golf club. The club comes too much off their right hip, and they are unable to square the clubface at impact.

“The Fix” Step 1: Hold the shouldersOn the backswing, turn back and feel like you are holding your shoulders at the top of your swing.

“The Fix” Step 2: Club ParallelOn the downswing, the club will fall in front of your body, parallel to the feet, ground, and target line. Notice how the club is no longer behind your body. Now, you can easily square up your clubface at impact without hooking the ball.

Page 4: Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

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>> Click Here to Discover How to Build a Repeating << Swing that Holds up Under Pressure.

Hit More Fairways

Incorrect: Option 1You may have been told to tee the ball as high as you possibly can. If you do this, however, the clubface needs to move upward to impact at the center of the face. If the clubface doesn’t move upward, you will hit the ball at the high part of the face. This causes the ball to travel high in the air, making it very difficult to manage the direction of your ball flight.

Incorrect: Option 2The next ball height is halfway above the clubface. This is a bit lower than the first option, but it still allows you to hit the ball on the high part of the clubface. Just like with option 1, if you hit the ball too high, it will be difficult to control the direction of your ball flight.

Correct: Option 3The lower you tee the ball, the more likely you are to hit the ball on the bottom of the face. This will produce less spin so that your ball flight is straighter, allowing you to hit more fairways. The tour players with the most success always tee the ball about an inch and a quarter above the ground.

Page 5: Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

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>> Click Here to Discover How to Build a Repeating << Swing that Holds up Under Pressure.

Fix Your Setup

Too Far AwayStanding too far away from the ball means that your arms are overextended. This gives you too much bend in your upper body, forcing the club to come to the inside on the backswing.

Too Close To ItWhen players stand too close to the ball, the body is vertically too upright. This setup position makes you stand up too straight and doesn’t allow for enough knee flex.

The Perfect DistanceMake a fist with your left hand. Slide your fist back and forth between the club and your body. You should have just enough space to do this without touching the end of your club.

Page 6: Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

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>> Click Here to Discover How to Build a Repeating << Swing that Holds up Under Pressure.

Fix Your Impact Area

Tour Player’s ImpactWhen it comes to how far tour players hit the ball, the impact position is more important than clubhead speed. As a tour player reaches impact, they deloft the golf club by using their hands in a forward shaft lean. In fact, the average tour player delofts the club 4 degrees at impact.

Single-Digit HandicapperAt impact, the recreational golfer releases the club too early. Single-digit handicappers do not deloft the club like tour players do. Instead, they simply square the clubface with a slight forward shaft lean.

Double-Digit HandicapperHigher handicappers do not deloft the club at impact and are unable to square the clubface. These players typically add loft to the club because they release too soon.

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>> Click Here to Discover How to Build a Repeating << Swing that Holds up Under Pressure.

Fix Your Fat Shots

Step 1: Move closer to the ball!There is a good chance you are standing too far away from golf ball forcing the club to work too much in on the backswing. If the club works in on the backswing, it will stick into the ground at impact. Check to see if you are the proper distance from the ball by placing a fist between the end of your club and your body.

Step 2: Work on your takeaway!On your takeaway, try to keep the club out and in front of your body. If the club works too much to the inside on the takeaway, you will have trouble coming from the inside on the downswing.

Step 3: Round out your swing!Bring the club above the ground to shallow out your golf swing. The goal is to get the club going around your body. Take a few practice swings 15 inches above the ground. Then practice at 10 inches above the ground. Repeat this drill at 5 inches above the ground, and then practice hitting the ball off a tee.

Page 8: Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

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>> Click Here to Discover How to Build a Repeating << Swing that Holds up Under Pressure.

Fix Your Thin Shots

The Problem:If your ball position is too far forward in your stance, you will catch it thin. When the ball is too far forward in your stance, your weight shifts back as you turn back, and the club bottoms out before it reaches the golf ball. After it bottoms out, the club moves up and through impact.

The Solution:Move your ball position back to the center, just right of your belt buckle. Try out this new ball position and look where the club reaches impact. If you start taking too much turf, move the ball up one position to your middle of the stance.

Page 9: Fix Your Swing Series Table of Contents...Having a golf swing that is too steep means you are off plane and probably are slicing the ball. The best way to avoid a swing that is too

8Are You Sick and Tired of Stacking Errors On Top of One Another… And Wondering If The Next Shot You Hit Is Going Left or Right… or Even in the Air?

In this DVD, Shawn breaks down every segment of the swing and provides insights and checkpoints you can use to improve every position.

The guide is simple. Adding just a few new wrinkles will pay huge dividends. There are no quick fixes or gimmicks. Instead you get a solid foundation of building a repeatable swing that holds up under pressure.

What you will discover in this power-packed DVD…

• The Preswing – The majority of your swing errors are the need to make compensations for mistakes in your setup.

• The Takeaway – Your takeaway exists of milliseconds and consists of just a few inches… but what a critical few inches! If your takeaway is solid, you will easily generate two features of a repeating swing.

• To the Top – It’s not important how far back the club is at the top… it’s how you get there! This key will get you established in the takeaway and ratchet up your power.

• Transition – The top of your swing is the moment when you seamlessly transition from backward movement to forward movement.

• Downswing – This stage is typically the cause for why your swing is off plane. Find out how to get your body on track and loaded for speed.

• Impact – If you follow the plan to this point, quality impact will happen by itself. But knowing where you should be when you strike the ball is an important step in improving the other elements of your swing.

• Release – Your release is an extension of your downswing and impact positions… but don’t take it for granted!

You Need a Swing You Can Replicate Every Time You Take Your Stance Over the Ball...

But Where Do You Start?

Introducing Golf Magazine Top 100 Teacher Shawn Humphries’“How to Build a Repeating Swing” DVD.

>> Click Here to Discover How to Build a Repeating << Swing that Holds up Under Pressure.