Be A Better Golfer, Cure The Golf Slice
March 26, 2008
One of the most common mistakes a golf player makes on the golf course is what is called a slice. By correcting it, you can improve your game and you can shave strokes off of it.
When not corrected, slices can happen for many years, leading to frustration. For a good game of golf, it is necessary to get rid of slices, first, by learning why they happen. Here are some tips for curing golf slices that involve practicing some moves and instructions.
Assume The Correct Stance
First, in order to assume the proper stance on the golf course, take care that your shoulders are aligned at the target. The right foot should point straight ahead and the left foot slightly to the left. The position as the elbows must be relaxed and natural.
Practicing your stance is a must, as even small adjustments to it can really make a change on where your ball is going to land when hit. Try different positions when playing at the driving range until you are satisfied with your results.
How To Grip Your Golf Club
Curing a golf slice involves learning to grip the golf club in a proper manner. A correct grip is made when you grab the club with your left hand and you put your thumb along the shaft.
Between your thumb and the index finger there is a line that must point toward your right eye. Then put the right hand over the left, with your left thumb resting into the right palm.
A too tight grip or a too weak grip has the same effect: a slice. Right-handed golfers tend to grip the golf club too hard with the right hand and the ball, when hit, hooks to the left. When the grip is too loose, the ball hooks to the left.
Correcting a slice caused by a bad grip involves rolling your hands back so that the back of the left hand (if you are right-handed) points to the target and the back of the right hand points in the opposite direction.
Use the driving range to practice your grip on the golf club. In the same way you are advised to do with your stance, try different grips until you feel you have found the right one. By correcting your grip, you will reduce your chance of producing a slice when hitting the ball.
Pay Attention To Your Golf Swing
Golf swing mechanics are important when you are trying to cure a golf slice. In order to make a correct backswing, you must move your hands, then your arms and shoulders in a fluid movement.
For the downswing, you move your hips, but your eyes remain on the ball and the head behind the ball as you follow your swing. By mastering the golf swing mechanics you will soon get rid of that annoying slice.
Learning how to play golf is strongly connected to how often and how much you practice. In rest, all you have to do is to correct and make small adjustments to your stance, your grip and your golf swing mechanics. It will not be long till, instead of being disappointed because of another slice, you will hear the words “great shot!”













thanks for the tips,i am right handed and those slices are happening to me,i haven’t played golf in ten or so years and even then i was never greaat,so with your tips on my mind im hitting the local driving range…wish me luck…