Page 88 - Ben Hogan's Letter Lessons Ver 2
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fairway bunker on the left of the fairway) which was left of the eventual
Landing Target (the center of the fairway). On the draw his swing it was
reversed.
Both of the references clicked in which helped me understand that this would
help tame the hook instrument that Mr. Hogan called the golf club.
Under the shaft for a fade, over the shaft for a draw. It's in the follow through!
The Sighted Line is what you see and envision where you want the ball flight
to start. You want to feel the wind. Look at the trees on both sides of the
fairway. Look up to the clouds that are out in front of you and maybe pick a
cloud formation that you want to try to use as a target. It will take the stress
out of potential problems on both sides of the fairway.
If you were going to go on a trip you would know in advance where you
wanted to end up. It is the same thing in a well planned and executed golf
swing. Letter Lesson H and Letter Lesson A together will do this for you. I see
a path, I see my one piece handless takeaway, I see movement. That would be
H and O in the Hogan acronym that we are using in the Letter Lessons.
In the Hogan letter lessons we have Letter Lesson H for steady head position,I
believe like Hogan when we look behind the ball to where we want the ball to