Virginia Golfer July / August 2014 | Page 17

YOUR GAME How to practice, play and improve by MIKE LABAUVE with JAMES A. FRANK Plane Truth Principles for Straighter Shots Golfers are convinced swinging too upright or too flat is bad for their game. They’re only half right T J.D. CUBAN Your swing path affects the flight of the ball. w w w. v s g a . o r g here’s a misconception among golfers that their swings are either too upright or too flat. Let me clear that up right now: Unless you are a very good player, at or near a tour professional level, your swing is too upright. Almost no one—I repeat, no one—has a swing that is too flat. I’ve been teaching golf for 33 years and I see an amateur with a flat swing (never mind one that is too flat) maybe once a year. If that. By too upright and too flat I mean through the impact zone; this is not about your backswing. I often see golfers who claim they have a flat swing. In reality, they have a flat takeaway. Some sure signs of this position are they lay the club off at the top, their arms swing flat while the shaft sticks straight up in the air or the club comes into the ball too far from the inside. Truth be told, those are not flat swings where it matters—at impact. The key is the angle of the shaft coming into and through impact: If it’s too vertical, it won’t want to release and the golfer will come out of his or her posture, which explains the resulting weak, short slices. Let’s fix those too upright swings, and see what we can do for those of you who think you are swinging flat. J U LY / A U G U S T 2 0 1 4 | V I R G I N I A G O L F E R 14 15