Are You Playing Golf Or Fighting Your Shot Shape
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You can have a great swing and still aim yourself into disaster. That’s the uncomfortable truth behind a lot of penalty strokes, “random” big numbers, and the feeling that your driver is either a weapon or a liability depending on the day.
We unpack a concept that sounds obvious until you really test it: your aim line is not your target line. When those two lines become the same, you end up trying to hit statistical unicorns like zero-curvature shots, or you force the ball to start away from where you’re aimed and “work back” to a line that was never the real target. We explain how launch monitor training, fixed alignment, and the famous white center line can quietly teach amateurs to play the wrong game. Then we rebuild the right one: start the ball on your aim line and let it fall toward the target based on your normal shot shape.
From there, we get practical. We use percent curve math to estimate how far the ball will finish offline at your carry distance, how to build a safe window that includes the occasional double cross, and why “good drives” still splash when your line is wrong. We also share a lesson story where fixing aim instantly changes club path behavior, plus a simple alignment stick practice routine that helps your TrackMan work transfer to the course.
If you’ve ever said “I aimed at the fairway and it still went OB,” this one will hit home. Subscribe, share it with a golf buddy who fights their start line, and leave a review if the aim line versus target line idea changes how you play.
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