Golf Guide

Golf Section


Welcome to Golf Guide

Golf Article

Golf — Getting Started: Learn, But Enjoy! — Part II

  Since a game of golf can cost anywhere from $5 to $100 dollars, sooner or later you're going to get the urge to do more than whack a ball around a hundred times. Good!

  But before you rush out and spend hundreds on your own clubs, invest $50 on a lesson or two. That investment, if made with the right instructor, will get you started on correct grip, stance, posture (the essentials!), swing mechanics and exercises, as well as proper equipment selection. Start with putting practice, and a few weekends on the driving range. Move up to nine holes, then onto 18 after a few weeks. During the week, do some of the basic exercises, while you learn the rules and etiquette.

So what are some of the basics?

CLUBS

  There are three basic categories: irons, woods, and putters. Woods are used to hit farthest, irons intermediate distances, and putters for up close. The lower the number club used, the farther (we hope!) the ball travels. On average, a 1 wood used correctly whacks a ball about 170 yards or more, a 5 iron about 100 yards, a 9 iron about 60. Putters are used to push the ball a few feet to a few yards across a much smoother grass area called the green. Pitching and sand wedges are special, sharply angled clubs for chipping up steep hills or out of sand traps. Get clubs with grips that are neither so small the club twists in your hands on impact, nor so large you can't wrap your fingers easily around it.

STARTING GRIP

  To get started, remember the grip is vital. There are a dozen different kinds, but the most common is the one in which the index finger of the left hand hooks the pinky of the right. (For right handed individuals.) Then for proper alignment, "check the V's": The V's are the angle between your thumb and forefinger on each hand. These should point between your chin and back shoulder. Make sure that when looking down, you can see the first two knuckles of your left hand and a "V" formed between the thumb and forefinger pointing toward your right shoulder. With the right hand, have the "V" pointing toward your chin or slightly to the right shoulder.

SWING

  Start at address with a Nine iron. (A term for standing near, and ready to hit, the ball. Who knows where these words come from!) With your heels about shoulder width apart, take a few practice swings. You want to hit the ball squarely in the middle of the club left to right, but slightly up from the bottom. Take a firm grip and balance stance, but don't crush the club nor dance on your toes. Try to keep the swing in one plane. (A plane is a flat surface; think of swinging alongside the top of a round table tilted on end. Curve with the table edge.) Follow through after making contact with the ball. Keep the ball in the center of your field of vision.

RULES & ETIQUETTE

RULES

  Like any game, the official rules are many and complex. But the simple version is this: Tee up, hit the ball toward the flag. Try to get the ball in the hole the flag is in. (When you get close, take the flag out!) The fewest strokes over the course of all holes wins. Hit your own ball and count every stroke.

ETIQUETTE

  Don't endanger another player by standing too close them when you or (s)he swings. And don't make excessive noise when someone is hitting. Avoid holding up players behind or with you. If you lose your ball, let them 'play through'. Replace 'divots' (chunks of earth and grass you dug up by using the golf club — accidentally — as a shovel.) Fix other damage made. In short, be courteous to those around you. Golf is one of the few games where civilized behavior is actually enforced!

WRAPPING IT UP

  For the novice, golf can be enjoyed from the start. For those interested and motivated, there's an inexhaustible supply of information about the physics and physiology of swing mechanics, grip, stance, and other arcana. Tiger Woods has been practicing and playing from a young age and he still takes lessons. For the beginner, there's a large amount of knowledge to absorb and physical movement to practice right at the outset. But don't get so overwhelmed that you forget the primary purpose: to have fun!

  This article was written with the intention of providing information on golf to my readers in an entertaining and easy to read manner. I hope this objective has been fulfilled. Read more golf articles by refreshing this page.


Golf Best products


Golf News

Australia's Sheehan takes lead in Dunlop Phoenix golf (AFP via Yahoo! News)

Australia's Paul Sheehan birdied the 18th hole for a bogey-free four-under-par 67 to take a one-stroke lead after the first round of the Dunlop Phoenix men's golf tournament.

Read more...


Golf club recognized for protecting wildlife (The Desert Sun)

Shadow Ridge Golf Club in Palm Desert has become the 18th Marriott property to become certified through the Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary Program for Golf Courses.

Read more...


Sun's rays keep golf cart going and going and going (The News-Press)

Cathy Holmes uses her golf cart to get around Citrus Park — a Bonita Springs mobile home park.

Read more...


Get Into Golf: Teeing off in the rain can be fun (The Union)

Last week, Get Into Golf began prepping you for winter. Cold feet may keep us from doing some things that we ought to do, but they shouldn't keep us from playing golf while the weather is less than perfect.

Read more...


Barwood and Novack Claim Junior Golf ‘Challenge’ Title (Khaleej Times)

ABU DHABI - With Abu Dhabi all-set to host the Daily Telegraph Junior Golf Championship in association with The Royal Bank of Scotland and Abu Dhabi Tourism Authority (ADTA) this weekend, youngsters Hannah Barwood and Jack Novack have claimed victory in the three-day event’s ceremonial ‘Challenge’ warm-up match, a Press release said.

Read more...


Colorado Golf Club selected as site of 2010 Senior PGA Championship (PGA)

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. -- Colorado Golf Club, which opened for play in 2007 as one of the premier new courses in America, has been selected as the site of the 71st Senior PGA Championship, the most historic and prestigious event in senior golf. The Championship will be contested May 24-30, 2010, at the course in Parker, Colo., approximately 25 minutes southeast of Denver.

Read more...