
My Golden Lessons
Description
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In his unprecedented run at the top of the game, Jack Nicklaus has seen the importance of constant learning and constant refinement. Your game at age sixty cannot be the same as your game at age twenty; where you were once able to overpower the golf course, with time and wisdom you discover new ways to approach the challenges of the game that depend less on physical ability and more on mental agility. Along the way, you learn which fundamentals will always put you in good stead, and you see what advice has stood the test of time.
In My Golden Lessons, the greatest golfer of them all takes the best from his many years of playing, practicing, and studying the game, and distills it into over 120 pieces of priceless instruction. Drawn from his immensely popular columns in Golf Digest and Golf Magazine, the topics cover the full spectrum of the game, from choosing the right equipment, on through the fundamentals of stance, grip, and setup, to the pursuit of power and the subtleties of the short game and putting. These techniques helped Nicklaus set the marks that future generations will strive to match, but it was his mastery of the mental side of golf that truly set him apart from his peers and his predecessors -- and he shares his advice on the mind game as well. In addition, the book presents a beautifully drawn sequence of the Nicklaus swing at its peak, alongside advice tailored to the needs of the better players who want to be better still.
My Golden Lessons is a book that took a lifetime to prepare, but one that will improve your game from the first few minutes it spends in your hands. These are the techniques that made Jack Nicklaus the golfer he is, and his clear, bite-sized pointers will show you the path to hitting better shots, shooting lower scores, and enjoying the game more every time you play.
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Persons
Ken Bowden was the editorial director of both Europe's and America's premier golf magazines, and has collaborated with Jack Nicklaus on eleven books. Since first watching Nicklaus compete in 1959, Bowden has witnessed a great many of Nicklaus's achievements first-hand.
Content
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface 2
- Fundamentals-Equipment
- Introduction
- 1. Play the Ideal Ball for You
- 2. Fit Your Grips to Your Shot Pattern
- 3. Find the Right Driver
- 4. Make a Friend of Your Sand Wedge
- 5. Youngsters with the Correct Clubs
- 6. Take Good Care of Your Tools
- Fundamentals-Before You Swing
- Introduction
- 7. Prepare Your Body Before You Begin
- 8. Stay with Fundamentals Regardless of Height
- 9. Make Your Grip Harmonize Your Hands
- 10. Find the Link that Works Best for You
- 11. Always Follow this Set-up Procedure
- 12. Keep a Steady Head
- 13. . But Position Your Head Naturally
- 14. Tilt the Triangle for Correct Shoulder Slant
- 15. Check and Recheck Your Alignment
- 16. Let Buttons Guide Your Shoulder Alignment
- 17. Line 'Em Up to Keep Your Hands Leading
- 18. Relax Shoulders to Hase Elbows
- 19. Set Up "At Ease" for Free Arm Swing
- Fundamentals-The Full Swing
- Introduction
- 20. Take a Lesson Before Restarting the Game
- 21. Always Play to Your Strengths
- 22. Forget Trying to Hit Dead Straight Shots
- 23. Know Your Impact Goal
- 24. Work with Motion Over Mechanics
- 25. First, "See" All Your Shots
- 26. Find Your Best Starting Move
- 27. Start Back Ridiculously Slowly
- 28. Paint a Picture for Perfect Tempo
- 29. Smooth Your Takeaway with this Drill
- 30. Waltz Your Way to a Better Swing
- 31. Visualize Razor Blade Wall for Inside Path
- 32. Swing Within Your Feet
- 33. Set Your Back Knee Like a Sprinter's
- 34. Use Arm Pictures for a Two-Sided Swing
- 35. Let the Elbow Go
- 36. Shove Your Butt Out for a Better Turn
- 37. Think Right Side for Correct Hip Action
- 38. Don't Force Your Torso Turn
- 39. . But Extend Those Arms Fully
- 40. Build Maximum Spring into Your Swing
- 41. Make a Smooth Transition
- 42. Move Body Around-Not Forward-at Impact
- 43. Pull the Clubhead Through
- 44. Restore the Radius for Proper "Release"
- 45. Think "Toe" for a Controlled Fade
- 46. Sweep Long-Irons with Your Driver Swing
- 47. Always "Feel" that Clubhead
- 48. Pay Attention to Your Follow-Through
- 49. Understand the "Release"
- 50. Live with Shorter But Not with Faster
- 51. Encourage Your Kids to "Whale" It
- 52. Try My Lifelong Full-Swing Basics
- Power
- Introduction
- 53. Get Your Tee Height Right
- 54. Look to Your Feet to Plug Power Leak
- 55. Open Your Back Foot for More Windup
- 56. Adjust Your Left Foot for Stronger Uncoil
- 57. Make Your Arc Wide, Wide, Wide
- 58. Wedge a Ball to Coil Your Spring Tighter
- 59. Anchor Yourself
- 60. Drive the Ball Forward, Not Down
- 61. Strike Squarely for Maximizing Distance
- 62. Swing Through, Not To, the Ball
- 63. Hit Hard with the Clubhead
- Faults and Fixes
- Introduction
- 64. Think "Deep" to Fight "Steep"
- 65. Use Mind-Pictures to Cultivate Draw
- 66. Lighten Grip Pressure to Cure a Slice
- 67. Use Clubface Images to Help "Work" Shots
- 68. Fix the "Fats"
- 69. For a Steady Head, Imagine a Wheel
- 70. Move the Ball Back to Beat Pulling
- 71. Diagnose with Divots and Ball Flight
- 72. Stop Being a "Loser"
- 73. Beware of "Flash Speed"
- 74. When a Problem Arises, Get to Its Root
- The Short Game and Special Shots
- Introduction
- 75. Choose the Correct Chip
- 76. Think of Limber Shaft tor Chipping Consistency
- 77. Use Your Left Arm to Firm Up Your Pitching
- 78. "Toss a Softball" to Beat Scooping Motion
- 79. Try the Pitch-and-Run
- 80. Work "Right Palm Under" for Soft Lobs
- 81. Try This Figure-Eight Technique
- 82. In Bunkers, Change Set-up, Use Normal Swing
- 83. Visualize Removing a Rectangle of Sand
- 84. Pitch from the Rough with Your Right Hand
- 85. Learn the Late Riser
- 86. Try the Woodcutter Shot
- 87. Skip It Up There
- 88. Get Down Low
- 89. Use Same Technique for All Loose Materials
- 90. Accept Your Punishment to Avoid Disaster
- Putting
- Introduction
- 91. Weigh Your Choice of Putters
- 92. Work Hardest on Speed
- 93. See Distances in Increments
- 94. Aim for a Six-Foot Circle
- 95. Try "Spot" Putting on Shorties
- 96. "Unweight" Your Putter for Smooth Takeaway
- 97. Match Heel and Toe for Squarest Stroking
- 98. Improve Balance to Stop Body Movement
- 99. Pretend Your Puttershaft Is Glass
- 100. Putt Like a Piston
- 101. Stroke Slightly Upward on Bumpy Greens
- 102. Quit the "Flick" to Beat the Yips
- 103. Beware of Over-Practicing Putting
- 104. Try My Putting "Musts"
- The Mind Game
- Introduction
- 105. Know Your Yardages
- 106. Make First-Tee Nerves Work for You
- 107. Prepare for Longer Courses
- 108. Don't Swing "Easy"
- 109. Club Yourself for Safety First
- 110. Use a "Funnel" to Beat Severe Cross-Slopes
- 111. Handle Doglegs with Your Head
- 112. Experiment with Clubbing Up
- 113. Beware of Over-Aggression
- 114. Learn All You Can about Backspin
- 115. Pick Your Spot on the Tees
- 116. Go For It When Conditions Are Favorable
- 117. Make Your Mind Minimize Tension
- 118. Listen Carefully to Sound Advice
- 119. Find Balance Between Focused and Friendly
- For Better Players
- Some Extra Advice for Better Players (and those who'd like to be)
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