Tuesday, March 21, 2006

A Lighter Right Hand Putting Grip

This is just a small list of what you're getting in
this DVD

How to hit your driver long and straight

How to hold (grip) your driver so that it
virtually impossible to slice the ball!

How to really use your putter to save as many strokes as
possible

How to use your wedge to become a green-hitting, golf
course sniper

What makes you slice and how to avoid it

What makes you hit it bad and the cures!

How to line up a putt

How to stroke the putt

How to swing the wedge to hit it high, low, long or short

How to know what the ball is going to do when you have an
other than perfect lie

This DVD is equal to about 30 in-person lessons with Mark on the
driving range. That a value of $3,200! But as usual, on
Thinkandreachpar.com, you get it at the super discount
price of only $39.97

So order now and save yourself a pile of money in lesson time,
and get the down-and-dirty knowledge of these critical
fundamentals that will make you a better golfer for life!
Get your copy Now!

http://thinkandreachpar.com/3golfclubs.htm

This weeks Tip

A Lighter Right-Hand Putting Grip

I have become a steadier, more confident and an altogether
better putter since I changed my putting grip not so long ago.
Where my right hand used to be dominant, now my left hand is. I
hold the club quite tightly in my left hand, with the hand well
under the shaft. This brings firmness into the left
wrist; firmness all the way up the left arm, in fact. And
when you take the putter back, the left wrist doesn't break. It
remains firm.

Since adopting this new grip and style, I am not conscious at
all of the right hand during the stroke, but I certainly used to
be. I was so tense with the right hand on the backstroke that I
would pick the club up outside the line and would frequently hit
the ball with the heel of the putter.

Employing this new left-hand control, I find I keep the putter
blade close to the putting surface without having to make a
deliberate effort to do this. Furthermore, the blade contacts
the ball squarely. That, of course, is what makes a ball roll
true. When I putted with the right hand in control, I used to
flip the ball and it rolled so erratically that it never fell
when it caught a corner of the cup. Now it seems the cup is a
lot more receptive.

Try it and practice it, it helped me.

Until next week, good golfing!

Dr Richard Myers
www.thinkandreachpar.com
www.golfforleftys.com

New South Media, LLC
45 Doverdale Rd.
Greenville SC 29615
United States
864.675.0038

This email is protected by copyright, 2006, New South
Media, LLC All rights reserved. Reproduction of any portion
of this email is strictly prohibited without the express
written consent of Richard Myers