Entries Tagged as 'golf tips'

Golf competitions in France

Golf in France

Golf in France

Golf competitions in France are very often organised on the basis of different series or divisions grouping together players of the same sex and handicap range. Prizes are then offered for the best in each series and it is fairly standard to have a prize for best gross score(s) per series as well as best net.

There is an entry fee in addition to the green fee. Most competitions are sponsored with a good set of prizes including a free prize draw. The prize ceremony usually takes place at the end of the afternoon and is a family occasion followed by a buffet – often kir and canapés.

There are numerous team competitions in France at local, regional and national level and for all ages and categories. There are often inter-club competitions where anyone can sign up to play in a friendly match against another local club.

For good players – single figure handicaps - there are Grand Prix organised at many clubs and the results of these are used as the basis for a regional and national classification of players. There are events for juniors at regional and national level. There are many events for seniors who make up a large part of the membership of many clubs.

Pro-ams are held in many French golf clubs. For the most part, the pros are club professionals whose main job is teaching the game of golf. Usually, these are one or two day events and the entry fee of a couple of hundred euros can work out as good value if it includes green fees, a practice round with the pro, halfway house snacks, a gala dinner, a gift and a good prize fund. The host club may be able to find a professional for a team or players may enter a team plus professional.

Players entering a competition may require a medical certificate from a doctor stating that the player’s physical condition allows them to play golf safely. This is fairly easy to obtain

Useful French Vocabulary for Golf in Chamonix

Golf in France

Golf in France

English French
backswing  prise d’elan / montée
driving range terrain d’exercice / practice
Fore! Balle! (pronounce as “shall”)
golf ball balle de golf
golf course terrain / parcours de golf
green fee  droit de jeu / green fee
hole trou
iron fer
practice terrain d’entrainement/practice
score card  carte de scores
water hazard obstacle d’eau
wood  bois

Note: Many English golf terms are the same in French, for example: bunker, green, divot, handicap, fairway, putter, driver

Body Moving : Golf Swing Tips

Body Moving

How to use the body in the golf swing

By Frank O’Connell, PGA, Photography By Warren Keating
Players like Charles Howell III, Rory Sabbatini, Jonathan Byrd, even the budding superstar Anthony Kim, all have something in common. Besides obviously being PGA Tour players, they’re all relatively small guys in both size and stature who manage to hit the ball with tremendous power. How do they do it? Each of these players, as well as a handful of other professionals, understands that true power and control come from swinging the golf club with a powerful core.

Hitting the Ball Further

Tiger Woods, one of the best golfers in the world, only weighs 180 pounds but he hits the ball 20 yards longer off the tee than the average tour player. If you’re like most golfers, including those who have been playing for quite some time, you’d like to add yards to your tee shots, too.

How does Tiger do it? Watch him and you’ll see the same small, dark grass area next to his hips when he is at the top of his swing and at impact.

Many amateur golfers make the mistake of pushing their hips toward the ball when they make their downswing. Tiger rotates his hips in making his downswing but he doesn’t make the mistake of moving them toward the ball. There’s something else Tiger does that you might want to follow.

When he came for a golf break in europe a few years ago he let us into one of his secrets on the the Chamonix course.

When he begins his downswing, he starts rotating his left forearm. With that action he begins to square the face and gradually release the club head. His swing is already halfway down when the un-cocking of his wrists begins.

That’s it! try it yourself next time you’re on a golfing break in Europe.