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Fat Shots

Fix Your Fat Shots…

If you’re hitting the ball fat, you are stalling your rotation at impact.

(Fat shots happen most often when you have less than a full swing because you’re trying not to over swing…)

There’s nothing worse than running into the ground before the ball… But the fix is simple.

Fat shots happen when your hips stall during your swing, usually because you are trying to control your distance and hit the ball instead of swing through the ball.

To fix your Fat Shots… Open up your stance and swing to an intermediate target to help encourage your hips to rotate all the way through impact.

Want More Distance?

Discover effortless power in your swing with The Full Body Swing.

Click Here to Learn more about The Full Body Swing »


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Ground Forces

Ground Forces…

Swinging on a Swing Set Prepared You For This…

As a child, you used to swing on a swing set… pumping your legs at just the right time to go higher and higher.

Using ground forces in a golf swing works the same way.

You have to unweight (go down) and push (lift up) at just the right time to increase the speed of your club and still make contact with the ball.

This is a Black Tees concept, meaning it’s an advanced concept that takes a significant amount of practice. But even if you’re not looking to compete in the World Long Drive… the concepts behind how the club is accelerated around your body are important to understand.

You can start to play with feeling the pendulum of your swing and how you can affect the speed of the clubhead with relatively small movements in you knees and body.

Hit Longer, Straighter Drives…

Click Here to Learn more about the Keys to Driver Distance »


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How High Should You Tee the Ball

How High Should You Tee the Ball?

Practice the Different Height Tee Drill for Better Radius Control & Improved Ball Striking…

One of the most common questions… How high should I tee the ball?

Answer: It depends… Different heights make different shots a little easier, but tee height shouldn’t matter.

On the course… it’s really about preference.

Tiger Woods (and many Tour Pros) tees his ball lower than most amateur players.

On the range… you should practice hitting balls off of different height tees with driver and with every other club in your bag.

The range is almost perfectly flat… the course is variable. The ball is going to be above your feet or below your feet on almost every shot.

Practice hitting balls off of different height tees to help control your radius and improve your ball striking.

The best tee height for you is the one you feel you can control the ball flight the best. Forcing yourself to practice different tee heights will help you discover your personal preference while improving your ability to adapt to the demands of the course.

*If you use a Tornado Tee, the club glides through the flexible, woven top and it feels like hitting a ball out of thin air.

Want More Distance?

Exclusive Limited Time Offer on Tornado Tees … Click Here »

Add 12 Yards to Your Average Drive. Previously created almost exclusively for World Long Drive competitors, the Tornado Tee is now available.


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Your Body Is A Whip

Your Body Is A Whip

When you crack a whip, a relatively slow movement at the handle, a simple flick of the wrist, creates a wave of motion that accelerates as it travels down the whip and causes a “crack” because the tip of the whip breaks the sound barrier (767+ MPH).

If you try to grab a whip in the middle of the whip… it is incredibly hard to get the same “crack.” What was a simple, easy move… is now an extreme amount of effort.

There are two types of players… Arm-Swingers and Body-Swingers

Swinging with your arms is like grabbing the middle of the whip instead of the handle.

Most golfers who took up the game as an adult are Arm-Swingers. With adult arm-strength, adult comprehension, and adult motor skills, we use our arms to push the club and hit the ball.

Young kids, under the age of 12, usually start out as Body-Swingers. They don’t have the strength in their arms to hit the ball very far, so they sling the club back with their body rotation, then sling the club forward with rotation again. Those who find success and are good at hitting a ball in this manner grow into adult strength, comprehension, and motor skills and become very, very good players. (Only a handful of PGA Tour Professionals learned golf after the age of 12.)

Arm-Swingers struggle with consistency and have to spend hours at the range to “groove” their swing… because the arms are infinitely adjustable, an Arm-Swing requires lots of practice and fine motor skills. For most, an Arm-Swing results in a lot of tension, neck pain, and back pain.

Body-Swingers have an easy looking swing that is annoyingly consistent, even when they never visit the range and haven’t played in 3 months… because a Body-Swing uses the rotation of the body and passive arms. The only real variable in the swing is how fast you rotate.

Professionals and Professional-Level players use their Full Body. They have a Body led swing for consistency with the fine motor skills in their arms to control and manipulate the club to their will.

The Full Body Swing shows you how to use your body AND your arms efficiently. It starts by learning how to use your body… THEN add the arms.

Discover effortless power in your swing with The Full Body Swing.

Click Here to Learn more about The Full Body Swing »


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Over The Top Test

Over The Top Test

Do you come over the top? …

If you slice the ball, your clubface is open relative to your club path… but that doesn’t mean you come over the top.

You can slice the ball from the inside or with a neutral club path as well.

It’s important to know WHY you slice…

IF… you come over the top, you’ll want to work on your club path

IF… you come from the inside or have a neutral path and you still slice… you’ll want to work on your clubface control.

(Two very different fixes for the same poor ball flight.)

Take the Over The Top Test and let us know if you pass.

Fix your club path and discover effortless power in your swing with The Full Body Swing.

Click Here to Learn more about The Full Body Swing »


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Narrow Stance Drill

Narrow Stance Drill

Try this drill for Increased Balance and to Reduce Low Back Pain…

Nothing ruins a round faster than pain in your lower back.

Lower back pain can be caused by many reasons, from the wrong shoes… to over use… to serious chronic issues… But if you’re midway through the back 9 sitting on a low score, the only question is how you can finish the round without blowing up.

Try the Narrow Stance Drill. When you use a narrow stance, you take the hips out of the swing, which reduces tension and torque in your lumbar spine. As you build up to a full swing, you should be able to generate nearly the same speed as your wider stance. This drill improves your sequencing and balance.

Discover effortless power in your swing with The Full Body Swing.

Click Here to Learn more about The Full Body Swing »


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Best Tip for Distance

Best Tip for More Distance

It’s so simple… It’s almost too simple…

The moment you start trying to go for more distance, you’re body is going to tense up.

Tension causes all sorts of issues in your swing…

  • Tension slows you down…
  • Tension changes your swing radius…
  • Tension causes poor contact…
  • Tension causes spastic and pulled muscles (Neck, Shoulder, Low Back, Hip, Knee, & Leg Pain)

If you want more distance… RELAX.

It seems so simple… but it’s actually really hard to do.

Knowing how to swing without tension… And practicing your swing without tension will increase your distance and reduce injury.

Discover effortless power in your swing with The Full Body Swing.

Click Here to Learn more about The Full Body Swing »


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Hit Up on Your Driver

Hit Up On the Ball For More Distance…

Coaches love to tell you to ‘Hit up on the ball for more distance.’

For most people, particularly those with less speed, a higher launch does produce a longer ball… But it can also mean more variability in your ball flight.

If you already struggle with directional control on your drives, you probably shouldn’t try to hit up on the ball. (Most Tour Pros actually hit down, an average of -1.5° down, for more control.)

For those wanting to hit up for more distance, use this drill to make sure you stay behind the ball.

  • Mark the center of your stance with an alignment stick.
  • Start with the ball in the center of your stance (like a wedge).
  • Gradually move the ball forward in your stance with each shot while keeping the same swing with your low point just in front of the alignment stick.
  • Don’t Try to Help The Ball! The more the ball moves forward in your stance, the more likely you are to try to change your swing to hit the ball. DON’T!

A swing has up and a swing has down. When you try to hit the ball… or help the ball… you move your swing circle instead of letting your natural swing circle run into the ball.

Discover effortless power in your swing with The Full Body Swing.

Click Here to Learn more about The Full Body Swing »


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Common Mistakes When Swinging Hard

Common Mistakes Most People Make When Swinging Hard

Watch out for these mistakes when you’re driving for distance…

The harder you swing, the more your swing falls apart… If this is you, you need to watch this video.

There are 4 common mistakes that almost everyone makes when they start trying to swing hard.

  • Swinging With Your Arms
  • Forward or Reverse Hip Slide
  • Driving Over Your Front Leg
  • Too Much Tension In Your Body

Discover effortless power in your swing with The Full Body Swing.

Click Here to Learn more about The Full Body Swing »


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Intro to Shot Shaping

Intro to Shot Shaping

Turn Your Slice into a Draw…

When you try to play your slice, you line up to the left and let the big dog hunt. More often then not, your ball still manages to end up OB on the right. So you aim MORE left…

Golf is a game of opposites. If you want to go left, you need to swing more right.

Too many people make BIG changes to their alignment hoping to fix a slice… Big changes mess with your head and you’re making the problem worse by going the wrong way.

6 degrees is a BIG change when we’re talking about ball flight and the effects on spin rates. But in the real world, 6 degrees is a very small change. 6 degrees is just one minute on a clock.

I actually recommend you only make changes 3 degrees at a time (half a minute). This is a move of only about 2 inches when we’re talking about your front foot.

If you aim down the right side of the fairway (alignment, stance, and swing), but aim the face of your club toward the center of the fairway, you have created a 3 degree adjustment.

Want More Distance?

Exclusive Limited Time Offer on Tornado Tees … Click Here »

Add 12 Yards to Your Average Drive. Previously created almost exclusively for World Long Drive competitors, the Tornado Tee is now available.