Everyone is worried about hitting a baby draw into a tucked left pin, and you are still standing there wishing you could hit just one (or maybe two) straight shots in a row. Hitting it straight sounds simple enough, but it is one of the hardest things to do in golf. A straight shot requires multiple things to line up: impact point, path, face angle, transition, and weight, and if even one of them is off, so is your shot. Here are five reasons your golf shots aren’t straight and how to fix them.
You’re catching the ball at the wrong spot in the swing arc
Golf is played on a circular arc, not a straight line. If you strike the ball too early or late in that arc, the club path relative to your target is no longer neutral, and your face-to-path relationship gets distorted.
Depending on your swing, an early strike might come with an open or a closed face.
Check your ball position. For irons, play the ball in the center or just ahead of center and focus on hitting the ball before the ground. For the driver, line it up with your lead heel. If you’re still curving shots, adjust your ball position slightly until your strike point matches your natural arc and the ball starts straighter.
Your clubface is open or closed at impact
Clubface angle at impact is one of the most important and often misunderstood factors in golf. It accounts for roughly 75–85% of the ball’s starting direction. That means even if your swing path is spot-on, an open or closed face will still send the ball in another direction.
Start by checking your grip. An open face at impact often points to a weak lead-hand grip, while a closed face can mean your trail hand is dominating. To build better face control, try working with an impact bag or taking slow-motion swings, both help groove a square face through the ball and lead to more consistent results.
Your transition is out of sequence
The downswing doesn’t need to be fast. However, it has to follow a specific sequence. Most amateur golfers spin their shoulders or throw their arms from the top. That move pulls the club across the line, leaves the face wide open, or forces a flip to catch up.
Here’s how it should work:
The lower body initiates the downswing by shifting pressure to the lead side and beginning rotation. As the lower body starts to rotate, the arms begin to drop back down in front of the chest. This movement allows the club to shallow naturally and get into a more efficient delivery position at impact.Try the Pause and Fall Drill. Make a full backswing, pause for a second, then let the arms fall while keeping your back to the target. Once the arms fall, rotate through. Think “drop, then turn”. Use slow reps at first.
You’re not completing your turn (especially on the backswing)
If your upper body stops turning halfway back, your arms tend to lift to finish the swing. This leads to a steep path, poor sequencing, and inconsistent contact.
Focus on turning your torso, not just lifting your arms. Make sure your lead shoulder moves under your chin. If you struggle with flexibility, add a dynamic warm-up before practice and work on mobility drills to increase your range of motion.
You don’t know where your weight is at setup
Where your pressure starts influences your ability to rotate, strike the ball at the right point in the arc, and return the club to square.
Make sure you have your pressure set up correctly from the start, depending on the club you have in your hands:
For partial wedges, you should feel 85–90% of your pressure on your lead foot at setup. With irons, shift back to around 60% lead-side pressure. With the driver, aim for 50/50, with the lead hip slightly higher.Spend some time on the range working on pressure awareness. Stand on one foot to feel full pressure on the right side, then switch to feel full pressure on the left. This builds awareness and helps you make these adjustments throughout your round.
Final thoughts
There are more than five reasons your golf shots are not straight. Start with these and then see what it does for your golf game. Take some videos of your golf swing and watch in slow motion to see if anything stands out. Once you get these straight shots you can start working on fades and draws.
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