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Add 25 Yards to Your Drives by Letting Go of Tension (Try the Famous Potato Chip Exercise)

Add 25 Yards to Your Drives by Letting Go of Tension (Try the Famous Potato Chip Exercise)
By Eric M Jones

Faster is Better The best thing you can do to improve your distance off the tee is to increase your clubhead speed - in other words, swing faster. The worst thing you can do to sabotage your clubhead speed is to try to swing HARDER. Why? If you try to swing harder you will introduce tension in your swing, and tension kills swing speed.

For every mile-per-hour of swing speed you can expect to drive the golf ball about 2.4 yards. That means a 100 mph swing speed will produce a drive of about 240 yards. Adding just 4 mph to your swing speed will get you 10 yards. Add 8 mph and you\'ve got another 20 yards.

Sounds like it should be easy, right?

The problem is that when most golfers try to add a little distance the almost universal instinct is to \"muscle up\" on the ball. The instinct is to \"swing harder\" in an attempt to get more \"power\" into the swing.

The Paradox of Speed - Think Free, not Hard The paradox is that you don\'t need more power, you need more speed. And to get more speed in your golf swing you have to lighten up.

Consider the different image that forms in your mind when you think about \"swinging hard\" vs. \"swinging freely.\" \"Hard\" evokes an image of tight muscles and considerable effort, while \"free\" brings an association of light and fast.

Tension Kills Swing Speed The truth is that tense muscles do not operate as smoothly nor as quickly as tension-free muscles. The typical result of muscling up is an actual loss of distance as well as a high probability of an errant shot. You will get exactly the opposite of what you are trying to achieve.

So how much tension do you have in your swing?

Try the Potato Chip exercise

The Potato Chip exercise came about while I was working with a student who was trying to add distance to his drives. On his backswing I noticed that his jaw muscles were clamped so tightly I could literally see the cords in his neck stand out. He was really \"trying hard\" to hit it far. The tension from his jaw radiated down his neck, into his shoulders, out his arms and down his back. Yet he could not feel the tension in his swing.

I made a quick trip to the snack shop and picked up a bag of potato chips. I then asked him to put a chip between his teeth and swing without crunching the chip. The results were so funny that we were both practically in hysterics by the 6th attempt.

Great Feedback Mechanism for Improving Awareness On his first swing the student crunched the chip as soon as he started his take-away. Talk about an eye-opener!

After two more tries he was able to get to the top of his backswing without crunching. After a couple more chips he was able to start the downswing without crunching. But it took about half the bag to make it all the way through impact with an intact chip.

By the end of the chips my student was able to swing freely through the ball to the target. He wound up adding 10 mph to his swing speed, and about 25 yards to his drives. Plus his drives were much more consistent and accurate. He was much happier (and not as hungry).

Improving Awareness Will Improve Your Golf Swing The lesson for my student was that in learning to let go he was far more likely to get the results he wanted. The potato chip exercise, while a fun drill, was really just a feedback mechanism to help him understand how much tension he had in his golf swing, where the tension was coming from, and how to let his tension go so he could let his club go. By working on his awareness of tension rather than mechanics he was able to generate a more naturally powerful, faster swing and consistently longer drives.

Eric Jones is a Class \"A\" PGA Professional with a Masters Degree in Sport Psychology who is dedicated to helping golfers learn, play better golf, and have more fun. He is a World Long Drive Champion and author of the best-selling eBook on distance \"The 5 Keys to Distance.\" Eric teaches golf at the Pleasanton Golf Center in Pleasanton, CA.

Eric\'s professional Long Drive accomplishments include winning the 2003 Re/Max World Long Drive Championship, Senior Division, 6 consecutive appearances in the World Championship Finals with 5 top-10 finishes, the 2004 LDA Long Drive Tour Senior Rookie of the Year, and winner of the 2006 Players Tour Championship, where he became the only long driver to win both the senior and the open division titles in the same event. Eric played college golf at Stanford University. He began his teaching career in the early 90\'s as the Stanford Men\'s JV/Assistant Coach and as lead golf instructor at the junior summer camps. He has also taught at the Golf Lab facilities in Palo Alto, and was Director of Golf Instruction at Poppy Ridge Golf Course in Livermore, CA. Prior to turning pro Eric spent more than 20 years in a variety of executive leadership positions in high tech software companies, biotech, apparel, banking, and running his own management consulting firm. Eric is the grandson of Charlie Seaver, a top amateur player during the Bobby Jones era.

In addition to his teaching, Eric is an accomplished speaker and mentor on maximizing the profitability of your golf business through the use of internet and social media marketing.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Eric_M_Jones
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The Swingyde is great!
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* Medicus Golf Learning System is dedicated to assisting golfers of all ages. "Master the Basics" of golf through a consistent process of education, training and practice.

Actual Customer Feedback

** I have used one before and I think it really helps with tempo, especially the transfer at the top of your swing. It will definately help your swing, if you have a traditional type swing. If you tend to swing a little flat, you will have trouble with the Medicus. It "forces" you to swing upright and on a single plane.

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** I am a PGA teaching Professional. I encourage my students to get the Medicus and practice with it. I use it at the driving range for the first ten minutes or so to get my muscles loose and get my swing on line.

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