Golf Tips - A Good Grip on the Club Leads to Good Wrist Action
Bad wrist action accounts for 90 percent of bad shots. Why is this so common? The natural way to control the club is with the hands and any attempt to use the hands encourages breaking of the wrists.
To explain wrist action: There are two directions the wrists can move in the golf swing. That is the forward/backward or up/down. I am going to refer to the forward/backward action as the breaking of the wrists, and the up/down as the hinging of the wrists. Some teachers call the up/down movements 'cocking' the wrists.
This is one reason that the grip is so important. A faulty grip encourages breaking. One does not have to learn this up/down (hinging) if the grip is correct, and if the left arm is in the correct position the hinging will be automatic. The legs moving forward while the club is still traveling backwards forces the wrists to hinge.
In order for this 'hinging' action to happen, keep the left wrist flat in relation to the back
of the left forearm and the back of the left hand. It's as simple as that. If the left arm is
in the correct position, the wrists will hinge; if not there will be a breaking motion.
Don't try to cultivate an independent wrist motion. Let it be natural. Swinging the club back
farther than shoulder turn forces the wrists into cupping (breaking) position. Result: A throwing
motion.
Rotate around your axis and maintain the same posture throughout your swing in order to pivot properly
CHRIS TOULSON demonstrates pitching basics including set up, wrist hinge, turning of the body and finish position
Staying behind the ball is one of the most common causes of the slice, you must move through the ball to the finish
Build a solid swing by merging the three elements of the swing together: your arms, body and weight shift



