How can I control my draw?

In the back swing keep your club low and think about rounding your swing. On your downswing you want your wrist to naturally close the club face along the swing path. You also want the swing path to be right of the target. If you swing down through the path and the club face is closed a bit, you will hit a great draw.

How do you hit a draw every time?

Follow these proven steps and you'll be hitting a powerful draw in no time!

  1. Step 1: Align yourself to the right. ...
  2. Step 2: Re-align your club face so it's facing your actual target. ...
  3. Step 3: Re-grip. ...
  4. Step 4: Swing along the line of your body. ...
  5. Step 5: Finish strong. ...
  6. Step 6: Swing smooth. ...
  7. Step 7: Swing shallow on drives.

Why do I always hit a draw?

The main reason why a draw is useful comes down to the technical make up of the golf shot. To hit a draw, the swing must be attacking the golf ball from the inside with the club face open to the target, and closed to the swing path.

Is it better to hit a fade or draw?

There is an endless debate over which shot shape is better, the fade or the draw. Some will argue that the fade is better because it provides more control, and can offer a softer landing. Others will say the draw is superior because the ball with travel farther, and cut through the wind more effectively.

Is it better to hit a draw or straight?

If you hit straight, you'll be safely in the center of the green, but a faded shot will land closer to the hole. If you regularly tend to spin the ball too much to the right (a slice), you may want to aim even more to the left. While drawing OR fading shots naturally is fine, you want to avoid doing both randomly.

18 related questions found

What causes a draw?

“A right-handed golfer hits a draw when their club path is out to the right and their face angle is closed relative to that club path at impact,” reveals TrackMan's Justin Padjen. “Under these conditions, the ball will launch to the right of the target with a negative spin axis that sees it curve to the left.

What causes a hook?

A true hook in golf is a shot that starts out to the right of your target (for right-handed players) or starts straight but then curves back to the left. This is caused by a combination of club path through impact and face alignment at impact.

Why can't I hit a draw?

Why can't I hit a draw? You can't hit a draw for one of several reasons: path, grip and club face. If your grip is too weak or you swing with an 'over the top' path, it is likely you will hit a slice instead of a draw. If your club face is open at impact, this will also make it very hard to draw the golf ball.

Can you hit a draw with an open stance?

Opening the stance does not limit the golfer to hit only a fade. Many golfers hit the ball with a draw from an open stance.

How do you hit a fade and a draw?

Jack said to hit a fade—his preferred shot—aim the clubface where you want the ball to come down, and align your body to the left (for right-handers). To hit a draw, do the opposite: Aim the face where you want the ball to finish and align your body to the right.

How do I stop hitting my left in golf?

While it's easy to think you are coming over the top, sometimes you might just be aimed left of the target. Instead of pulling the golf ball you're actually hitting it dead straight. To check alignment, use two alignment rods or clubs to make sure you are setting up square to the target.

How do you stop a duck hook?

To stop hitting duck hooks, you need your club path, clubface and grip to be as neutral as possible. A swing path that is under plane, a closed clubface and an overly strong grip are common contributors to duck hooks and must be corrected to straighten out your ball flight.

Why do draw shots go further?

Higher spin loft means more spin and a less efficient transfer of speed-producing energy to the ball. Higher loft and less ball speed produces less distance. And more spin means the ball will stop more quickly after it lands. The result: a draw will generally travel further than a fade.

How do you hit a fade?

To hit a fade, you want to have a slightly outside-to-in motion, meaning the club is hitting the ball and moving left (for right-handers) through impact. Again, be careful because if the clubhead comes in from too far outside and cuts across the ball, you will create a slice.

Why is a draw good?

All good golfers know to play either a fade or draw to take one side of the course out of play, you increase your percentages of hitting the target that way. Other than that a draw will go roughly a club longer than a fade, useful with a driver for extra yards.

Is a draw harder to hit than a fade?

A draw can be longer than a fade because hitting a draw will lower the loft and the spin rates. Players that hit a draw will learn that the ball will release a bit more than a fade, and when it hits the green, it can be a bit trickier to stop.

How do I stop hitting a fade?

"Take your normal stance, but instead of soling the clubhead as usual, set it in front of the ball," says Haney. "Make a slow circle with your hands, swinging the club toward the target, continuing over your head and then down and over the ball. Focus only on the loop.

Does Tiger Woods hit a draw or fade?

We saw at The Masters that under pressure, Tiger tends to favour a fade. Having a go-to shape is important and a fade is a slightly more gentle ball flight so it is a good safety option. Even when he hits a fade, Tiger still has some degree of clubface rotation through impact.

Can Bubba Watson hit a draw?

“The straight ball is the hardest to hit, so I like to curve it,” he explains. “When the pin is on the left, I want to cut it in there,” Bubba says. “When the pin is on the right, I like to draw it in.” When setting up for a draw, Bubba says to start by closing your stance to the target.

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