How to Practice at a Driving Range

Driving ranges are meant for practice, and the more you use them, the better your game will become. Hitting a bucket of balls before or after  games, or even occasionally instead of a game will make your swing stronger, more controlled and more effective. Remember, in the early days of learning how to play golf, you are working on the sheer mechanics rather than the subtle nuances, those will come in time. Head out to the driving range and swing away.
For the best and safest practice, make sure that you start with some warm-ups before blasting the long shots. Tearing up your shoulders is not going to help your game, after all. Proper warm up will also assure better control so that you can hit the balls that you desire. Start with the wedge, concentrating on making that initial contact with the ball. Continue with the wedge, working on making contact and the smoothness of your swing, but do not worry about where exactly the ball is going. This is the warm-up portion, not the “look how far I can hit this ball” part.
Move to the midirons next, again making sure to keep your swing smooth and concentrating on good, solid contact with the ball. Continue with this club, trying to select spots and areas and focusing on getting the ball to those general areas. Do not worry if you are not exact, you are just aiming for the general area.
Now you should be fairly warmed up and ready to really blast away. Do not hit too many balls this way, but do go ahead and try for a bit of distance with these swings. Aim for the 50 yard mark. If you hit that with relative ease, go up to the next marker. The long drives should be no more than ten balls, twelve if you are really feeling loose.  Keep track of what distance you left off at, and aim to start there the next time.
Finally, before you leave the driving range, take a good ten minutes on the practice putting green so that you can get the feeling of it before playing a real round of golf. Make sure that you putt at different angles on the green so that you get a sense of how the balls roll and behave, as well as for the speed and rhythm that you will need in a real game situation. Do not worry about sinking balls, just work on getting the right feeling for your shots.

Related Reading:

Western Digital Caviar Blue 500 GB SATA III 7200 RPM 16 MB Cache Bulk/OEM Desktop Hard Drive - WD5000AAKXWestern Digital Caviar Blue 500 GB SATA III 7200 RPM 16 MB Cache Bulk/OEM Desktop Hard Drive - WD5000AAKXThe Western Digital WD5000AAKX Caviar Blue Hard Drive provide performance and reliability for everyday computing. It features 500GB and SATA 6Gbps interface which increases airflow and offers less clutter in the computer system compared to PATA drives.
Hit Down Dammit! (The Key to Golf)Hit Down Dammit! (The Key to Golf)Most golfers have difficulty with the concept of hitting down at the ball to make it fly. Surprisingly, a great many players surveyed did not even kno... Read More >
500 pcs - Reynolds White Paper Cupcake Cup Liners - STANDARD Size500 pcs - Reynolds White Paper Cupcake Cup Liners - STANDARD SizeReynolds white paper cupcake liners/muffin cup papers, pack of 500. Fits all standard size muffin pans. Dimensions: wall height 1.25", base diameter 2". Diameter when pressed flat 4.5".

One Response to “ How to Practice at a Driving Range ”

  1. I recently required to say that I found your site via Goolge and i also am glad Used to do. Keep in the good work and i also will make sure to bookmark you when I’ve more spare time away from the books. Thanks so much!

Discussion Area - Leave a Comment




XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>