Friday, January 28, 2011

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Golf Improvements: Improve Your Golf Swing!!!!

Golf Improvements: Improve Your Golf Swing!!!!: " Improve Your Golf Swing The exact origin of golf is unknown. Some historians believe the earliest form of golf may have emerged in G..."

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Hints To Help Improve Your Golf Game!!!

 Hints To Help Improve Your Golf Game

Golf hints are what millions of us hackers have thought about at least every other day of our lives. If you're like me then when you have a few spare moments you ask yourself how to improve your golf and you still can't seem to answer it.
How do I fix that slice? Why can't I seem to sink those putts? Why is it after every round I play I am so sore and tired? Are they some of the questions that roll around your head in those spare moments?
Keep your head down, eyes on the ball, cock the wrist at the top of the swing, get your hips through the swing, keep you head and shoulders still when putting, aim for the top of the cup. Holy smokes there is so much to remember! It is like you need a personal coach with you every time you play.
Ok so I'm not a coach but I thought I'd share 3 golf hints that have helped me to become a slightly better player and I hope that you can find some value in these also.
1. Get yourself fitted for a proper set of clubs. Now this of course is assuming that you can afford to do so but the benefits of a proper set of clubs is huge because your main weapon is your swing and if your clubs aren't right for your size then all your body alignment throughout your swing will be incorrect. The best way to do this is go to a registered club fitter at your local golf club or store and try out their clubs by taking a few swings. If they won't let you just walk out the door and spend your hard earned money elsewhere.
2. Join a golf club. I say this because there is no better way to improve your golf game than to get out on the course and to play with other members who can also provide you with some golf hints that have helped them. If possible, find a club that also has a driving range because this will allow you to practice when you don't have time to play a full round.
3. Find a qualified coach. This is pretty important if you are really serious about improving you golf game because you then have someone watching every facet of your game and they are trained on every aspect of the golf swing. Yes, each coach is different and they have their own ideas but having one can be a motivating experience because they give you ideas to take away and work on.
Hopefully these golf hints have inspired you to want improve your golf game and make you a better player. I know that these may seem quite obvious tips but in essence they are fundamental to help you become a more consistent player. You can find more information here with the golf guru, click here!

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Golf Hypnosis for Golf Improvement!!!

Who is using Golf Hypnosis for Golf Improvement - apart from Tiger Woods

So who’s using hypnosis to improve their golf performance – apart from Tiger Woods and maybe Phil Mickelson? Well, taking first things first, it’s difficult to be sure who’s using hypnosis because most people who do don’t want to let on. Why’s that? Well firstly, they want to keep the competitive edge that golf hypnosis gives them to themselves. Secondly, although it’s becoming acceptable for a top golfer to admit to using a mind coach, their marketing people are still wary of saying they use golf psychology or, worse still, hypnosis – that’s all to “new age.”  You only have to look at the comments of Angel Cabrera, a real man’s man, after he won the Masters, “Now I don’t have a sports psychologist and I don’t smoke.”
If a golfer won’t tell you he’s using hypnosis, then what are the signs to look for to know he or she is? Well let’s take Tiger Woods as our first example. I’ve not heard him say that he uses hypnosis or read anything that confirms that he’s admitted it. However, just watch the controlled and methodical series of blinks he makes just before stepping into every shot. If that’s not a hypnotic trigger or anchor, I had better hand back my Hypnotherapy Diploma and my NLP certificates. It’s clear to me that he’s using that trigger to enter self hypnosis once he’s decided on the shot he’s going to make. The self-hypnosis quiets his conscious self-talk and leave his unconscious golf programming to execute the shot.
Now Tiger must have learned this from Jay Brunza, his mind coach from the age of 13.  From what I’ve read, Dr Brunza followed up his Ph.D. in Psychology with a long career as a psychologist with the US Navy including a period as a combat stress psychologist, before working as a sports psychologist. This brief extract from Golf Digest, in December 2002, appears to confirm Tiger’s training included hypnosis
"Woods' ability to produce peak performance by 'willing myself into the zone' is unprecedented. And at age 13, Tiger began mental training with Dr. Jay Brunza, a family friend and psychologist. Among the techniques Brunza used were subliminal tapes and hypnosis. 'The first time Jay hypnotized Tiger, he had him stick his arm straight out and told him that it couldn't be moved, 'Earl [Tiger's father] says. 'I tried, but I couldn't pull it down. [Tiger says hypnosis is]  'inherent in what I do now.'"
Thinking about all this, I just wish a few other top golfers would admit to using hypnosis for golf improvement then I wouldn’t have to keep talking about Tiger Woods.
Come on Phil Mickelson, it’s obvious you’re using self-hypnosis; you couldn’t just keep smiling through adversity like that without hypnosis, now could you. Why not sit down, relax a bit more and tell us all about it. Now!

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Improve Your Golf Swing!!!!

 Improve Your Golf Swing

The exact origin of golf is unknown. Some historians believe the earliest form of golf may have emerged in Greece, where ancient shepherds hit stones with their staffs. However, the game as we know it today had its origins in St. Andrews, Scotland, around 1744. In 1888 the first officially recorded golf club was established in Yonkers, New York, by three Scotsmen. This first course had six holes scattered through cow pastures and an apple grove and was named in honor of their Scottish homeland course, St. Andrews. Today a regulation course has 18 holes and may cover as many as 250 acres of beautifully groomed countryside. Golf is enjoyed today as a popular recreational activity. It can lead to various levels of competition. Golf is also a growing spectator sport, with professional and amateur tournaments becoming very popular.
Playing the Game
The object of the game of golf is to hit a small, hard ball (the golf ball) as few times as is necessary for it to travel from its starting point, on the tee, into the hole located on each green. The golf ball is struck with clubs designated as woods or irons. Each player must hit his or her own stationary ball in the desired direction and for the desired distance, using one of a variety of clubs of assorted lengths and shapes. Each attempt to strike the ball, whether successful or unsuccessful, is called a stroke.
You may play a game of golf alone or in a group with one to three other players. Golf is played on golf courses with 9 or 18 holes. The holes vary in length from 85 to 600 yards and are generally referred to as short holes (85245 yards), medium holes (245445 yards), or long holes (445600 yards). The total yardage of a regulation 18-hole golf course varies from 5,600 to 7,200 yards.
In addition to the lengths of the holes, golf courses have other characteristics that provide challenges to players. Each hole begins from a teeing area (tee box) from which the first ball must be hit. Each hole ends on a green, which has a 4 1/4-inch diameter hole, or cup, cut down into the grass on the green. Between the tee and the green is the fairway. The course is designed with specific boundaries that are marked by out-of-bounds stakes. A player who hits a ball outside the boundary or into water is penalized by having one stroke added to the score.
All golf holes have the five components described: teeing area, fairway, rough, putting green, and cup (hole). The central path from tee to green is the fairway, and it is the preferred location for your ball's landing. These areas may be wide or narrow, smooth or rough, and may have trees and shrubs located within them. Unfortunately, sometimes shots land in the taller grass left alongside the fairway, called the rough, which may also have natural obstacles such as trees and wooded areas. The ball may also land in sand or water hazards. Such challenges on the golf course are called hazards or trouble.

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