Balance and rhythm go hand in hand, because good rhythm leads to good balance. If you swing with a good rhythm is a good balance in general also. Let's talk a little about the importance of rhythm and how it all works you.First, good rhythm doesot automatically, slowly swinging. In fact, it is quite the opposite. Good rhythm, like so many things in golf, unique to the individual. Very often your actual swinging rhythm mirror your features, like the way you walk or the way you do other things. If a general trend in your life that you are relaxed, go smoothly, and do things on an even keel, then more than likely that you with a smooth, slow tempo swing (eg, Fred Couples or Ernie Els). But if you are a fast-paced person, things move fast, go at a brisk pace, then your swing will also work with a faster pace. The key is in both cases you which way you know best and that you swing consistently in this way. There are so many examples on tour. We both mentioned above, but let us seek some others.ick price. It's quick and fast swings. How about Tiger Pretty pace we would even say. You could probably almost every successful player and relate his pace, his way. Pay attention to them. In fact, we canot every player that goes fast and slow swings or think, and vice versa. To see yourself and your partner to play and see how you do it. We can learn a lot from us, if we learn to look at things this way.
We have seen a bit of golf last weekend and was impressed with Geoff Ogilvy's victory in match play. But we saw in the last 10 minutes of the other PGA Tour event won by Mark Wilson. When the Golf Channel interview him after his final putt, he told a remarkable story. And to me this story just verifies what we in our last post.Apparently, as he put it, the day before the event began, he didn't know how and where the ball went. But thatight, he watched a video of himself winning the Honda Classic a few years ago. So what he has by watching it, was it his alignmento. His weight at all shiftot. Oh, then it had to be tempo, set the right Sorry again.Simply wrong, he accepted the trust, to enable his game, so you have a "complete 180 *" overnight. Despite all of the time he spends practicing his short game, tuning his equipment and to improve their driving accuracy, was all it took to strengthen confidence in a missed cut in a victory.So turn, we should scrap the remainder of the work and just say we all know we can beat Tiger Woods any day of the week, the answer seems to iso - all these are important, and in Mark Wilson's case was rooted through endless hours of practice. But confidence is what waseeded all that hard work and then into success on the golf course. As we in our last post, TRUST is a major factor in major golf.
The "secret"
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