(logo swishing) – Now over the years,
I've learned a few tricks that are gonna allow
you to make golf easy. It's gonna make it easy
to hit that nice draw. It's gonna make it easy to get that ball that feels really solid on the face. And it's gonna make it easy to look up and see your ball going down
the fairway a lot faster than you thought you could before. Now, let me share with you some of these tricks that are
gonna make it the best and most easy way for
you to play great golf, no matter how flexible you are, no matter how strong you are. Any of that. Now piece number one, I wanna line up a little bit to the right now, here if I'm going down the fairway, if I line up straight, most of the time, you're probably going to find yourself getting a little
steep in the down swing and your tendency is going to
swing a little to the left. Now, when you do that,
when you get a little steep and getting that club coming right to left across the golf ball, it adds spin and it gets that ball to
wanna cut on your mishits.

That kills the distance. What I want you to do is to actually line up to the right when you set up here. So think about if this is square and not a still alignment stick down here let's say that this is squared
on the middle of the fairway. I'm gonna line up about 10 or 15 yards to the right of that kind of down the right edge of the fairway. Now what that's gonna do, is
that's going to preset you in a position to where now, you know you need to go ahead and release that club to get the face to turn on over and get that draw because you can just see that I'm lined up down the
right side of the fairway.

I wanna get that draw tight shot shape, and that's gonna help the
ball to decrease the spin turnover from right to left and get an easy amount of distance. Now number two, to make this a lot easier, instead of having the
normal kind of stock grip where you can see a couple
of knuckles on the left hand, I want you to get you to go ahead and make your left hand stronger or more turn to the right.

Let's go ahead and see
about three knuckles there. Now you say, Oh, clay, that's
not the right way to grip it. Well, let me tell you something. There's been a lot of Majors won with players that have a strong grip. Dustin Johnson just won a
Major, not too long ago, The Masters with a strong grip, number one player in the world. You know, I don't, I think you'll be okay if you have a little bit of this kind of look when
you're setting up to it. Now you also wanna get the right hand I don't want to turn the right hand where the palm is on top of the grip That's gonna get my right shoulder high and that's gonna get me
again, wanting to slice it. I wanna feel like my
right shoulder is under promoting more of a
draw, and I'm gonna feel like the palm of my right hand is more under the grip there too.

Again, getting under this club
and lining up to the right is gonna help me to swing from the inside release that golf club
and get it turning over a lot of easy speed get that ball rolling along the way, all those good things that we want. So I've got my setup to the right. I've got my grip on my left
hand and my right hand better, I've got my shoulder kind
of tucked under and back so it's kind of behind
me here a little bit It's lower than my left shoulder.

That's really gotten me in a position to where
I'm gonna hit this big swinging power draw that's
gonna go a lot farther than it should to be honest with you. And let's go ahead and try it out here (hitting a golf ball) Ha ha all right I mean that
one, that ball took off. It was nice and solid. It feels like no matter
what I do that ball is gonna turn over from right to left. I'm just set up in a way that's
automatically gonna happen. Now, one thing that I see
when a lot of players do this and basically all players do this and I bet, I guarantee you,
this is happening in your swing.

As you find yourself
getting a little too narrow, meaning that this left arm breaks down, it bends a little bit. These hands get close to your body and you find yourself kind of
throwing the hands and arms at the golf ball and it
just kills your swing speed. So even if you get this ball turning over from right to
left and you hit it solid and all the spins off of
it, so it's going to roll. It just doesn't have as
much pop as it should on it. Now there's a great video
that I have for you. It's gonna help you to
get that extra pop back. I call it the Pirate Ship Drill. And what I do in that video is I go over the structure of
those amusement park rides.

So you have this kind of
big structure in the middle and it's got an arm that sticks out and then there's a pirate
ship with the people on them And it kind of swings
back and forth like that. And once you start to think of your body has that pirate ship ride, It's amazing how much better
your arm structure will get. And I'll go over it to
over in great detail for you here in just one second. I'm gonna play a preview that video and all you need to do
to see the full video is go ahead and click the card
that pops up in your screen.

Now, if you can get that ball turning over right to left and you can get your arm structure nice and wide so you can get tons of lag and
tons of speed through there. Like you're seeing all the top pros doing. It's pretty, dag-gone fun to play golf. I'm not going to lie. You're gonna hit the ball
really well when you do that. So check out that power ship drill that I'm gonna play here in a second. Click the cards in the top right If you don't see the cards,
don't worry about that. All you need to do is go down to the description below
and click the link there. And I got some awesome secrets with you to get this arm
structure looking really good. So you get tons of effortless speed.

This is the best way to get
the most out of your swing with the least amount of effort. Let's go and get started. All right, so let's jump right in to one of my favorite videos
I've ever done on a lag. One of the ones I've seen
the best results with and we'll talk in a minute
while this is called Pirate Ship but it's really a play on
a wide narrow wide drill or a wide narrow throw drill
that I've done in the past and I have tons of success with. So if in the back swing, my club head kind of parallel to the ground let's say a good five, six
maybe even seven feet away from the center of my body and the downswing it's
much closer to my body. That's the narrowing part because I had this big angle of lag.

And then I throw all that out in front. Really let those arms extend. And I go wide again. Now a lot of times I'll see
players misinterpret this drill and they take a really good
drill at seven tons of success. And they do it the wrong way. And they really struggle with it. Feel like a lot of hands and arms. So if you've done this drill in the past and you feel a little bit out of sequence, you feel like your hands and arms just aren't working, right? I bet this is exactly what you did. So when you're going wide in the back swing, that's all good. Most people get that correct. You really got to rotate the body. But when they narrow,
the misrepresentation that a lot of players will have is they'll narrow up the arms not the club head that we want to narrow. But they'll misinterpret this
drill as narrowing the arms they'll do something like this. I want you to think of
your arms as a pirate ship. Here's what I mean by that. You've probably been to
amusement park before where they have one of
these big giant pirate ships everybody's packed on there on the seats and then the pirate ship
is down at the bottom.

There's a big arm. And then that arm starts
swinging back and forth just like a pendulum right in
the ship goes back and forth. Well, the cool thing about this so you can relate to your golf swing..