By John Pallot
Director of Instruction
The
2005 Doral Open now the Ford Championship at Doral hit the jackpot.
Entries included 11 of the top 12 players on the current world-ranking
list. This made for an exciting week of great golf around the Blue
Monster. I paid my annual visit during Tuesday's practice round.
Not only did I watch but videoed Tiger Woods, Vijay Singh and others.
It was a thrill getting so close to the action. The booming drives,
accurate iron shots, delicate pitching, and precision putting reconfirmed
how talented and skilled PGA Tour players are today. With calm conditions
prevailing the pros ate up the Monster. This year, I paid close
attention to Tiger Woods. His last appearance at Doral was in 2002,
so it was a real treat watching him after a 3-year hiatus. This
month's tip stems from ten
holes
of Tiger stalking and deals with one of the serious, fixable problems
amateur golfers encounter, the breakdown of the left wrist somewhere
in their swing, meaning the left wrist doesn't stay in line with
the left forearm. Look at the pictures below. At the top of the
backswing notice the left wrist is in line with the forearm. Look
at impact. Look at the finish. Same relationship shot after shot.
This is a critical element in consistent, powerful, ball striking.
Breaking or cupping the left wrist adds loft to the club-face, encourages
poor contact, and makes it impossible to hit the ball squarely.
Check your left wrist the next time you practice. Work to maintain
left wrist and forearm alignment throughout the swing. It works
for Tiger and it'll work for you.

