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Now Summer is underway and The Open is upon us, many of us pull the clubs out of the garage and get back to the course or the range. While we are all inspired by watching the professionals on TV, we still need to work our way back into golf if we haven’t played for a while. Luckily for us golfers, MyCallaway can offer you some great tips to help you play your best rounds this spring and summer.
Check your equipment
If the weather, or a busy lifestyle, has kept you from getting out to the course, chances are your golf equipment has been stored away for several months. Will this affect your clubs in any way?
You may want to check your grips – one winter is not really enough time for your grips to go bad, but if it’s been more than a year since they’ve been changed, it’s probably a good time to get new ones. You can also wet a towel with hot water and wipe off your grips. This will remove some dirt and oil and bring back some of the tacky feeling they had when they were new.
The height of the golf season is also a good time to update your equipment with the newest technology. The best way to do this is by testing some new clubs. Find a Callaway Retailer near you that has demo clubs or attend a demo day near you to find the right equipment for your game.
Getting your body ready for golf
The golf swing requires a great deal of flexibility and proper body position. Getting your timing and rhythm back is imperative to making great swings. Stretching is very beneficial after a long lay off. Before you start to hit balls, do a few stretching exercises, especially focusing on your lower back, hips and shoulders. In anticipation of playing, begin swinging in your backyard, garage, or anywhere where you can safely practice your motion. Start with a short iron and make less than full length swings, gradually building up to a full length and full speed swing. Swinging with a weighted club can also be helpful, but again, start by making slow swings before increasing the speed.
Preparing for the new golf season
We all want to hit the ground running once the new golf season begins, but it’s important to keep the fundamentals in place as you work back into your game.
Be realistic, don’t expect to come out playing at the same level you ended playing the previous golf season. Spend the majority of your early season practice time on your short game. After a long layoff, the touch shots – the ones requiring less than a full swing – are typically the shots that take the most time to regain control of.
Also, don’t neglect your putting. And spend most of your practice putting time working on two specific areas: making putts of 10 feet and closer and hitting lag putts to develop your feel for distance control. A word of caution when practicing short putts – don’t stand in the same place and hit putt after putt. Hit putts that vary in both speed – uphill, downhill and flat – and break. Prepare yourself to make putts similar to the ones you’ll have on the course. Don’t stand in one place and repeat a stroke like a robot.
Generating power – clubhead speed
Most golfers would love to add distance off the tee and on approach shots. We want to hit the big drives that impress the rest of our foursome and turn those long par-4s and par-5s into birdie opportunities.
There are things you can do with your technique to increase clubhead speed. The two most critical factors for distance are the length of the backswing and the sequence of the downswing. To create maximum potential energy on your backswing, make sure to turn both your hips and shoulders fully and also hinge your wrists. Converting that stored-up energy into maximum speed requires swinging down in the correct sequence, which is: hips, shoulders, arms/hands and club.
Concerning your downswing, your main focus should be to start down with a lateral and turning motion of your hips. If you make this initial move in your downswing correctly, there’s no need to concentrate on the rest of the sequence as it’ll be next to impossible to mess-up.
Playing out of fairway bunkers
For the casual golfer, fairway bunkers can be a tough prospect. But with a little attention to detail on ball position and your place in the bunker, you’ll recognize how to confidently attack these shots.
Fairway bunkers and greenside bunkers require different techniques. You don’t hit down steeply in a fairway bunker like you do in a greenside bunker. In a greenside bunker you want to enter the sand before the ball, but you definitely don’t want to do that in a fairway bunker. In fact, if you hit the sand at all while playing from a fairway bunker, it should be after you’ve made contact with the ball.
The first order of business is to assess the lie and evaluate whether you can clear the lip of the bunker with the club required to cover the necessary distance. Grip down on the club slightly and take a normal stance and posture—do not dig your feet into the sand as you would on a greenside bunker shot. Play the ball an inch or two forward of your normal position to encourage a shallow, sweeping angle of attack. As you come into impact, try to sweep or pick the ball off the sand.
Improving your lag putting
Putting from 50 feet and beyond may seem tricky if you aren’t familiar with the shot. Try playing the ball forward and taking a longer backstroke. It can make a big difference and lead to more two-putts on lengthy attempts.
There are a couple things you can focus on to improve your lag putting. First, to hit a putt farther increase the length of your backstroke, don’t try to over-accelerate the putter on the down stroke. And second, play the ball an inch or so farther forward in your stance at address to help ensure a level to slightly upward strike on the ball, setting the ball off rolling and not bouncing.
Even with great technique, lag putting requires tremendous touch, which is developed through practice. So whenever you have time, take one ball and go out and hit lag putts across a green for 15-20 minutes. You’ll see that with a little practice, you can become very good at lag putting.
Related articles
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Video tips #2: Chipping basics
Callaway ambassador Pete Cowen and Callaway Chief of Design Roger Cleveland on why wrist hinge and club selection are the keys to good chipping.
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Video Tips #1: Short-game mechanics
Callaway ambassador Pete Cowen explains why understanding the basic mechanics of the short game is crucial to success from 100 yards and in.

