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Hitting The
Driver

Golfers have had an ongoing debate for
years, “Which is the most important club in the bag?” The putter
usually wins out in the discussion simply because more strokes are
attempted with the putter throughout the course of an eighteen hole
round than the driver.
However, those that favor
the driver in the discussion do have a compelling point – if you are
able to get off the tee box long and accurately, it makes it all the
more possible to shoot a low score on a given hole.
When setting up to hit the
driver, the feet should be slightly wider apart than normal. They
should actually be outside of the tips of your shoulders.
Also, in the setup for a
normal golf swing, the back foot is set perpendicular to the swing
line.
When hitting the driver,
because the feet are wider, you may want to turn the back to outward
slightly, to take some of the stress off the back knee.
From this point, the back
swing should be similar to any other club. Don’t be tempted to take
the club back faster just because you want to hit the ball far.
Increasing the tempo of
your back swing can throw of many other elements of the golf swing.
Club head speed should be generated on the downswing.

It is also important to
stay “on” or “over the ball when you take back the club on your back
swing. Do not allow your hips to slide backwards with the club.
The hips should turn, not
slide, and that front foot should stay on the ground during the back
swing.
The club should be taken
back straight and away at to cause a wide arc, but you must stay
over the ball. The weight should be shifted to the back foot without
sliding the body. It cannot be said enough, “turn the hips, don’t
slide them”.
The setup and back swing
are really the only elements that should be changed between using
the driver and other shots.
There are slight
differences that will occur throughout the swing based on a wider
stance, driver length and a heavier club head – shoulders turn
further, chin tucks into chin deeper, down swing is faster – but
these are naturally occurring events, and the golfer should not give
thought to giving assistance for any of them.
The only caveat to that
statement would be to make sure that your arms and shoulders are
working in conjunction, and that one is not getting ahead of the
other.
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