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Golf Instruction - How to Cure Your Golf Swing Slice

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If you suffer from a golf swing slice problem off the tees or on your approach shots, you're not alone.
A slice might be the single most common problem that plagues golfers from year to year.
Fortunately, the answer isn't just to pretend you're hitting the ball somewhere else and hope it ends up on the fairway.
Here are a couple basic tips to avoiding a golf swing slice.
First, you need to be clear on the lingo.
Many golf amateurs believe that a shot is said to have slice if it veers off a straight line after the shot.
In reality, slice only occurs when it veers off in the direction of the golfer's dominant hand.
A golf swing slice for a right-handed golfer veers to the right, for a left-handed golfer to the left.
If your ball is veering the opposite direction, that is called a hook.
You have a more rare golfing disease and will need separate instruction to fix it.
If you do in fact suffer from a golf swing slice, the first step is to stay away from your driver.
Your driver will only magnify any slice problems that you may have.
Instead, use your three or four wood.
You may lose a little bit of distance, but it will more than be made up for in the embarrassment you save in having to hit in the opposite direction from a different fairway.
Once you're confident that your golf swing slice problems have been fixed go back to using your driver.
The fundamental problem with a slice is that your club face is too far open.
Many golfers attempt to remedy this problem by adjusting their grip in such a way that the club starts too far closed and becomes correct during the course of the swing.
This is an incorrect approach and amounts to simply hoping that your club will make square contact with the ball.
Instead, focus on making sure that your backswing is straight back.
The club face usually becomes too open when you are making a sort of inside-out swing on the ball.
Basically, your club head is closer to your back foot when it passes it than to your front foot when it passes it.
You want your club head to be equidistant from both as it passes them.
You might also want to try moving the ball more towards the middle of your stance, instead of closer to your front foot.
This will result in slightly less distance but also leaves less time during the course of your backswing and follow-through for you club to get into poor position.
Remember, the idea of golf is not to aim for distance and then improve your accuracy.
You should be aiming for accuracy and then improving your distance.
This is an important key when it comes to curing your golf swing slice problem.
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