Core Concepts for Your Long Game Clubs

5 min
Added on November 03, 2022
With the longest clubs in your bag – driver, fairway metals and hybrids – it's important to have good control of contact and direction. This is because the longer the club, the faster the golf ball is traveling. The faster the ball is traveling off-line, the further the ball is traveling off-line. And the further the ball travels off-line, the more strokes it's going to cost you.

So, what can you do to deal with such narrow margins for error? You seek help from an expert and we were
... lucky enough to hear from Titleist staff member Cameron McCormick. In this video, Cameron reveals an important core concept that applies to all long game clubs – extension through impact. He also details some foundational elements in setup that differ between the driver (where the ball is teed up) and fairway metals and hybrids (where the ball is struck from off the turf). These adjustments to ball position (relative to both your stance and your center of mass) are critical to solid strikes and square impact with the longer clubs.

Follow Cam's setup keys and practice his post-impact extension drill to get the most out of your long game:

• Use alignment sticks or club shafts whenever you practice. Set one stick up parallel to your target line and another perpendicular to the target line, in line with the ball. Over time, this visual reference will help you build consistency into your setup.

• For tee shots with the driver, position the golf ball forward in your stance (off the instep of your left foot for a right-handed golfer). You also need your center off mass to be behind the ball. Test this by holding the handle of your driver loosely against your sternum. Let the clubhead hang down. It should fall in the middle of your stance or even slightly to the right of the center of your stance. Setting up this way promotes an upward (positive) angle of attack into the ball, a key to longer driver distance.

• For shots struck off the turf with fairway metals or hybrids, position the the golf ball in the middle or just ahead of the middle of your stance (closer to your left foot for a right-handed golfer). For these shots, your center of mass will ideally be even with the ball at impact. Test this by holding the handle of your fairway or hybrid loosely against your sternum. Let the clubhead hang down. It should fall over the middle of your stance, even with the golf ball. Setting up this way promotes a level or slightly downward (negative) angle of attack into the ball, a key to crisp, ball-first-then-turf strikes.

• Extension through the ball is a great in-swing concept that produces excellent results with all long game clubs. To practice it, position your clubhead on the ground where your golf ball would ultimately rest. Extend your arms, grip and clubhead out towards the target, brushing the grass beyond the ball's position as you do so. Progress to making short backswings and brush the grass where the golf ball would be sitting, recreating that extension post-impact to the target. Through impact, you should feel like your arms have more extension than they did at address. This drill will improve your radius control, ensuring that your arms don't shorten up through impact, a key culprit in many thin and topped shots withe the longer clubs.
With the longest clubs in your bag – driver, fairway metals and hybrids – it's important to have good control of contact and direction. This is because the longer the club, the faster the ... golf ball is traveling. The faster the ball is traveling off-line, the further the ball is traveling off-line. And the further the ball travels off-line, the more strokes it's going to cost you.

So, what can you do to deal with such narrow margins for error? You seek help from an expert and we were lucky enough to hear from Titleist staff member Cameron McCormick. In this video, Cameron reveals an important core concept that applies to all long game clubs – extension through impact. He also details some foundational elements in setup that differ between the driver (where the ball is teed up) and fairway metals and hybrids (where the ball is struck from off the turf). These adjustments to ball position (relative to both your stance and your center of mass) are critical to solid strikes and square impact with the longer clubs.

Follow Cam's setup keys and practice his post-impact extension drill to get the most out of your long game:

• Use alignment sticks or club shafts whenever you practice. Set one stick up parallel to your target line and another perpendicular to the target line, in line with the ball. Over time, this visual reference will help you build consistency into your setup.

• For tee shots with the driver, position the golf ball forward in your stance (off the instep of your left foot for a right-handed golfer). You also need your center off mass to be behind the ball. Test this by holding the handle of your driver loosely against your sternum. Let the clubhead hang down. It should fall in the middle of your stance or even slightly to the right of the center of your stance. Setting up this way promotes an upward (positive) angle of attack into the ball, a key to longer driver distance.

• For shots struck off the turf with fairway metals or hybrids, position the the golf ball in the middle or just ahead of the middle of your stance (closer to your left foot for a right-handed golfer). For these shots, your center of mass will ideally be even with the ball at impact. Test this by holding the handle of your fairway or hybrid loosely against your sternum. Let the clubhead hang down. It should fall over the middle of your stance, even with the golf ball. Setting up this way promotes a level or slightly downward (negative) angle of attack into the ball, a key to crisp, ball-first-then-turf strikes.

• Extension through the ball is a great in-swing concept that produces excellent results with all long game clubs. To practice it, position your clubhead on the ground where your golf ball would ultimately rest. Extend your arms, grip and clubhead out towards the target, brushing the grass beyond the ball's position as you do so. Progress to making short backswings and brush the grass where the golf ball would be sitting, recreating that extension post-impact to the target. Through impact, you should feel like your arms have more extension than they did at address. This drill will improve your radius control, ensuring that your arms don't shorten up through impact, a key culprit in many thin and topped shots withe the longer clubs.

Instruction

416 Videos

  1. Categories
  2. Long Game
  3. Iron Game
  4. Wedge Game
  5. Putting
  6. Course Strategy
  7. Golf Fitness
  8. At Home
  1. Instructor
  2. Brad Faxon
  3. Dr. Mo Pickens
  4. Me and My Golf
  5. Peter Finch
  6. Cameron McCormick
  7. James Sieckmann
  8. Mark Blackburn
  9. Michael Breed
  10. Trillium Rose
  11. Jonathan Yarwood
  12. Dave Phillips
  13. Brandon Stooksbury
  14. Justin Parsons
  15. Layne Savoie
  16. Dr. Rob Neal
  17. Dr. Greg Rose
  18. Skip Guss
  19. Jason Baile
  20. John Kostis
  21. Jennifer Hudson
  22. Ryan Hager
  23. Corey Lundberg
  24. Tom Patri
  1. Drill
  2. Fundamentals
  3. Shot Shaping
  4. Anti-hook
  5. Anti-slice
  6. Alignment
  7. Tight Lie
  8. Long Rough
  9. Bunker Play
  10. Consistency
  11. Distance Control
  12. Trajectory
Clear All Filters
Power Stretch for Driver Speed
user icon
3 min

Power Stretch for Driver Speed

Everyone could use a few more yards off the tee, but as Titleist staff member Ryan Hager shares in this video, many...

Improve Your Ball Striking with Low Point Laneway Drill
user icon
3 min

Improve Your Ball Striking with Low Point Laneway Drill

Titleist Staff Member Cameron McCormick is here with one of his favorite drills that will help you dial in your...

Playing Golf in WIndy Conditions
user icon
4 min

Playing Golf in WIndy Conditions

Do you struggle to play good golf in windy conditions? If so, Titleist staff member Justin Parsons is here to help....

Me and My Golf - How Far Should You Stand From The Golf Ball?
New
user icon
6 min

Me and My Golf - How Far Should You Stand From The Golf Ball?

Andy and Piers demonstrate the correct way to address the ball at setup and share a great process that you can use...

Great Players Create S.P.A.C.E.
user icon
3 min

Great Players Create S.P.A.C.E.

The best players in the world create SPACE in their swings so that they can generate S.P.A.C.E. (an acronym for...

Titleist Tips: Five Drills for a World Class Short Game
user icon
3 min

Titleist Tips: Five Drills for a World Class Short Game

To improve your short game, Titleist staff member James Sieckmann stresses that you have to practice with a...

Lay Up or Go For It?
user icon
3 min

Lay Up or Go For It?

Advanced data and statistics are playing an increasingly important role in modern golf. Statistics can help...

How to Hit Your Fairway Metal from a Tight Lie
user icon
2 min

How to Hit Your Fairway Metal from a Tight Lie

For many of us, no shot is more intimidating than a fairway metal from a tight fairway lie. Having a fairway metal...

Dial in Your Distance Wedges
user icon
7 min

Dial in Your Distance Wedges

Distance wedge shots (shots inside 120 yards or so) require three ingredients. First, you need to know how far away...

How to Establish a Game Plan for Your Golf Game
user icon
3 min

How to Establish a Game Plan for Your Golf Game

Dr. Mo Pickens shares his perspective on establishing a game plan in golf. It's not simply course management. In...

To Improve Green Reading, Find the Straight Putt
user icon
1 min

To Improve Green Reading, Find the Straight Putt

Reading greens can be a very difficult skill to master. Greens surfaces are imperfect and are purposely designed...

How to Improve Your Shot-Shaping Strategy
user icon
9 min

How to Improve Your Shot-Shaping Strategy

In this video, Titleist staff member Justin Parsons shares his advice on how to improve your shot-shaping strategy....

Results loading...
No results