Why have you clicked on this link? My guess is that you want to improve your golf. You’re putting in time and effort, but you’re not improving as much as you would like. If you are or aren’t having golf lessons, you should still become your own golf coach.

I’m not suggesting you don’t have golf lessons. I’m curious who is coaching you the 98% of the time that your golf coach isn’t present?

Why become your own golf coach?

In most other sports we have our coach there to oversee all of our practice. However, in golf you see a coach once a month, get some advice, then head off to practice in solitude. This can make practicing well, and improving tough.

For that reason you need to become your own golf coach. It doesn’t mean you have to stop having golf lessons. I would advise you find a great coach and stick with them, build a plan. But you must also be able to manage your own development and become the master of your own golf swing.

In the next 10 minutes I aim to teach you the fundamentals you need to become your own golf coach. This is exactly what every PGA pro uses to coach. I hope you enjoy.

The secrets of golf coaching

The best way for you to become your own golf coach is to master the basics that every PGA pro is taught worldwide. That is PGA pros in the US, the UK (where I trained) and the rest of the world. We are all taught the same basics to analyse a golf swing and make improvements.

From that point onwards, we go off on different journeys. Develop our preferences for how we want our players to swing the golf club. However, we all start with what I outline below. It stems from two-world renowned coaches who have had an incredible impact on the game – John Jacobs and Gary Wiren.

Here is how you can become your own golf coach in 4 steps.

#1 Your Golfing Dreams

The first aim is decide what you want to improve in your golf game. If you have a coach then this will be a joint effort. If not choose one of the following:

What is your golfing aim?

In my experience golfers love to say “I want to be more consistent”, but you still have to choose one of the above. Most consistent in accuracy? Contact? If you feel all could be improved, I’d suggest starting with ‘improve contact’. It is amazing how many of the other issues vanish when you get a golfer making good contact with the golf ball.

Most golfers strike the ball reasonably, but struggle with accuracy. For that reason the examples I will use in this post will mainly focus on improving accuracy. I will write a separate post for you guys wanting more info on improved strike, just comment below. Also check out the impact bag in this post if you struggle with strike.

#2 Ball flight is golf performance

Your aim is to get the dam ball in the hole. From point A (where you are standing) to point B (your target). Once you have an aim from the list above your number one goal is to understand your ball flight. What are you trying to achieved, and what is going wrong?

First off, what is the ball flight you want to achieve? Options below show a fade (left), a straight shot (middle) and a draw (right). Pick one – knowing what you’re trying to achieve is key.

What is your natural good ball flight?

Next, select your bad shot(s) from the images below.

What is your natural golf ball flight?

Here are the 6 ball flights that finish off line. These may look similar, but understanding which one exactly fits you golf game is very important. From left to right across this image we have the following:

Left Image

Pull – starts left of target, straight flight, finishes left. (Red)

Pull Hook – starts left, curves left in air, finishes left. (Yellow)

Hook – starts right, curves left in air, finishes left. (Blue)

Right Image

Push – starts right of target, straight flight, finishes right (Red)

Push slice – starts right, curves right in air, finishes right. (Yellow)

Slice – starts left curves right in air, finishes right. (Blue)

Ignore how far your shots finish left or right, focus on how they get there from the descriptions in list above.

#3 Impact Factors

Okay, here is where most golfers go wrong. Every single ball flight in golf can be explained by five variables, that happen at impact. I do mean every shot. From a missed 3 foot putt, to a shank, all the way to a 320 yard draw. These are the most important things we learn as coaching professionals. They are called impact factors and are as follows:

The 5 impact factors

Centeredness of strike – Contact point on the club face: centre, heel, toe, high/low on the face, or miss it completely.

Swing path – The direction that your club head travels through impact.

Club face angle – The direction your club face is pointing at impact.

Club head velocity – The speed of your club head at impact.

Angle of approach – How steeply down or up your club head is traveling at impact.

All of the 9 shots listed above (3 accurate, 6 non-accurate) are separated by only two of these that change at impact. These are responsible for every bad shot you hit.

As stated above, this holds true as long as you are hitting somewhere near the centre of the club face.

Here is how all of the 9 shots are caused. Take a while to digest your bad shot you wish to improve, and your ideal flight.

This shows all 9 common ball flights in golf

Left image

Pull – Out to in swing path, club face is square to the path (Red)

Pull Hook – Out to in swing path, club face is closed to the path. (Yellow)

Hook – In to out swing path, club face is closed to both path and target. ( Blue)

Middle image

Fade – Out to in swing path, club face angle points between path and target.

Straight – Square swing path, square club face (sooo simple…if only)

Draw – In to out swing path, club face angle points between path and target.

Right image

Push – In to out swing path, club face is square to the path. (Red)

Push slice – In to out swing path, club face is open to the swing path (Yellow)

Slice – Out to in swing path, club face is open to both path and target. (Blue)

Once you have picked out the difference between your bad shot, and how you want to hit it improving your golf becomes very simple. Just fix the difference in one or both of these impact factors and your golf will improve.

For example, a slicer who wants to consistently hit a fade only needs to work on their club face at impact, not their swing path. I had a big rant about this in a golf magazine. If your bad shot is a pull on the golf course, but you normally hit it straight, this is simply caused by your swing path.

This diagnosis procedure is the biggest lesson in becoming your own golf coach.

#4 Design your golf swing

Here comes the fun bit. Once you decide which impact factors you wish to improve, you get to choose how to improve your golf swing. Here is where coaching becomes an art and a science. As I mentioned at the beginning of this post. We, as golf coaches, develop our own preferences on how to build and develop players’ swings.

This shows the principles that affect each impact factor

This really valuable sheet tells you every single swing change that you could make to improve each impact factor. Really study this, it is brilliant, and came from John Jacobs, Gary Wiren’s work and a great research project in the 1960s called search for the perfect golf swing.

I’ve created an explanation of each principle for you here. These golf swing principles and the sheet above are so important for your progress. I email a free pdf download of both to everyone who signs up to my Golf Insiders email. I suggest they print both and pin them up.

Just from a glance you can tell the importance of aim, grip and set up. That is why we frequently improve these aspects as coaches. The benefits for each are far-reaching.

To carry on with the examples above. If you are a slicer, you now know it is your club face you need to work on. You need to change it from very open to the swing path, to slightly open. Your options – check your aim and then improve your grip. However you could happily keep your grip the same and work on wrist position, release or your dynamic balance (weight transfer). See the image above (face).

Our golfer with a pull needs to work on their swing path to hit more straight shots. They can again check their aim and set up. However, they may wish to instead focus on their connection and swing plane (see path list above). These will all improve their shot outcome .

Becoming your own golf coach – parting advice

I sure hope you’ve found this of use. It isn’t sexy, but these impact factors and swing principles are what drive your game and performance (pun intended).

My parting words are for you to consider this: What is the difference between an annoying playing partner who points out every single flaw in a golf swing and a great teaching pro?

My approach when improving technique is this – what is the biggest improvement I can make in ball flight, for the smallest change in technique?

Golf should be made simpler when taught correctly.

Many thanks and happy golfing – Will @ Golf Insider UK

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