What drill out there is there to help fix a push? Ignore the push/slice reading. I thinned it off the toe with a 3 wood. all other blue dots are from the 7!iron and a few wedges .
@Brandon Wall If you slide/sway a little too much toward target, the club will lag behind and produce a push. at least it can for me. Stay within yourself during the swing.
@Brandon Wall - If impact is clean/crispy and the shot shape is a true straight push, then the first thing I would check prior to any swing intervention is ball position. If it's too far back in your stance the face may not yet have had an opportunity to close sufficiently, and as @rich.massie suggests if the face angle at impact matches the in-to-out path then a straight push will be the result. Your ball position for a 7 iron should typically be between mid-stance and perhaps a ball or so forward of mid-stance. Use perpendicular alignments sticks to get an accurate representation of ball position. DTL video of your swing should confirm your downswing path.
If your ball position is within the appropriate range, then have a look at this diagnostic video for a downswing path that is too shallow. If video confirms that this is the case, then there are some drills specific to "Downswing Problem #2" that immediately follow. Also, the first section of Ball Flight Fixes deals with overdraws and pushes.
In any case, it's important to learn how to read and interpret ball flight so you are then able to reverse engineer the possible reasons for why the ball is behaving a particular way. Club face relative to target line is the ball's starting direction, and face relative to path determines direction and degree of curvature. Although you're not at the point yet where you should be thinking much about the finer points of shot shaping, gaining a basic knowledge of "The Grid" at this juncture can help you to better understand your ball flight.
I hope you are progressing well with the lesson plan from your V1 Analysis!
I was hitting nice draws while using a flight scope then came home and was pushing. Not making excuses but maybe it’s my launch monitor. It might come down to a grip issue.
@Brandon Wall Don't start hunting for fixes to problems that may not exist. If impact feels good, then I'd be inclined to get to a range when the weather permits and let your actual ball flight be your guide.
Could be a multiple reasons. But to start looks like your your ball is starting right which tells me face is open to target and then you swing path (bottom right arrow im guessing is your swing path) thats moving to the left. Id suggest trying to get club path more down the line and work on closing your face different degrees
Agreed, if I notice a push I may strengthen my grip to turn it into a nice draw.
@Brandon Wall If you slide/sway a little too much toward target, the club will lag behind and produce a push. at least it can for me. Stay within yourself during the swing.
@Brandon Wall - If impact is clean/crispy and the shot shape is a true straight push, then the first thing I would check prior to any swing intervention is ball position. If it's too far back in your stance the face may not yet have had an opportunity to close sufficiently, and as @rich.massie suggests if the face angle at impact matches the in-to-out path then a straight push will be the result. Your ball position for a 7 iron should typically be between mid-stance and perhaps a ball or so forward of mid-stance. Use perpendicular alignments sticks to get an accurate representation of ball position. DTL video of your swing should confirm your downswing path.
If your ball position is within the appropriate range, then have a look at this diagnostic video for a downswing path that is too shallow. If video confirms that this is the case, then there are some drills specific to "Downswing Problem #2" that immediately follow. Also, the first section of Ball Flight Fixes deals with overdraws and pushes.
In any case, it's important to learn how to read and interpret ball flight so you are then able to reverse engineer the possible reasons for why the ball is behaving a particular way. Club face relative to target line is the ball's starting direction, and face relative to path determines direction and degree of curvature. Although you're not at the point yet where you should be thinking much about the finer points of shot shaping, gaining a basic knowledge of "The Grid" at this juncture can help you to better understand your ball flight.
I hope you are progressing well with the lesson plan from your V1 Analysis!
Could be a multiple reasons. But to start looks like your your ball is starting right which tells me face is open to target and then you swing path (bottom right arrow im guessing is your swing path) thats moving to the left. Id suggest trying to get club path more down the line and work on closing your face different degrees
Thank you
Garmin r10 with awesome golf app. The r10 might be for sale soon.
I can’t help with your question but want to ask what device or app do you use to get the above information?