Finally a membership that pays for itself.

InsideGOLF Premium
Instruction

This mistake is killing your ball-striking consistency, says top teacher

golfer swings

According to GOLF Teacher to Watch James Hong, if you want to improve your ball-striking consistency, you must learn to stop over-swinging.

Getty Images

Everyone wants to be a consistent ball striker. When you can reliably hit every club in your bag on command, it makes the game a lot easier. And who doesn’t want that?

Unfortunately, becoming a great ball striker isn’t easy. It takes hours and hours of work on the range, and even more time to make the swing habits unconscious. Great ball strikers aren’t born, they’re made.

The good news is, there is a way to become a more consistent ball striker, and you don’t even need to change your swing to get there. All you need to do is slow down and focus on solid contact.

“Biggest mistake recreational golfers make is they all try to overswing,” says GOLF Teacher to Watch James Hong. “A lot of times when I see them overswing, they’re hitting the ball thinking they have to crush it and swing out of their shoes to make it go far. But instead, they mishit it and it goes nowhere.”

While swinging faster does help you get more distance, it’s all for naught if you don’t find the center of the clubface. The distance gains you see from swinging harder are wiped out when you consistently mishit the ball.

Instead of swinging out of your shoes, try slowing things down and focusing on center-face contact. Start with shorter clubs and work your way through the bag, emphasizing hitting the center of the clubface every time. As you get more consistent at finding the center of the face, start swinging a bit harder.

“You should be utilizing tempo and letting the club do the work,” Hong says. “If you find the center of the clubface, it goes straighter and further. It lets them know that they don’t have to swing that hard to get distance.”

Related Articles

Instruction
Why poor setup may be causing one of the most common golf-swing faults
By: Zephyr Melton
Short Game
Insiders Only 5 mistakes with wedges that cost golfers the most shots
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Instruction
The key to better ball striking? Fix this part of your swing
By: Mark Durland, with Zephyr Melton
Instruction
To shoot lower scores, you need to understand these 2 types of practice
By: Jim Murphy, with Zephyr Melton
Instruction
How this golfer went from struggling to break 90 to shooting in the 70s
By: Tony Ruggiero, with Zephyr Melton
Instruction
Lower your handicap fast by practicing these 3 key skills
By: Jason Baile, Top 100 Teacher
Approach Shots
Keep your club on plane and hit better irons with this simple trick
By: Dr. Alison Curdt, with Zephyr Melton
Travel
Insiders Only 5 reasons you should consider a golf vacation
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Instruction
This overlooked swing mistake can kill your ball striking — here's how to fix it
By: Zephyr Melton
was:
Exit mobile version