3 Simple Ways To Add 10 Yards Without Changing Your Golf Swing

Most golfers think gaining distance means making a bigger swing, swinging harder or rebuilding their mechanics.

Sometimes, that is true. But not always.

There are plenty of golfers leaving 10 yards on the table without realizing it. The issue is not always their swing. It is often how they prepare, how they set up, how they use the club they already have and how much speed they allow themselves to create.

Here are three simple ways to add distance without changing your actual golf swing.

1. Tee the ball higher and move it slightly forward

This one applies mostly to the driver.

Many amateurs tee the ball too low and play it too far back. That combination tends to create a downward strike, too much spin and a launch window that costs distance.

You do not need to change your swing to improve this. You can change the conditions before the swing starts.

For most golfers, the driver should be played forward in the stance, generally off the lead heel or just inside it. The ball should be teed high enough that roughly half the ball sits above the top edge of the driver.

That gives you a better chance to catch the ball slightly on the upswing. More launch, less spin and better contact can mean immediate yards.

Quick check

Set up to your driver and ask yourself:

  • Is the ball forward enough?
  • Is the tee high enough?
  • Do I feel like I can sweep the ball instead of hit down on it?

You are not changing your swing. You are giving your swing a better chance to work.

2. Loosen your grip pressure

Tension is a distance killer.

Many golfers squeeze the club harder when they want more power. That usually has the opposite effect. Tight hands can lead to tight arms, tight shoulders and a slower clubhead.

A good swing needs speed. Speed needs freedom.

You should still have control of the club but your grip pressure should feel lighter than you think. On a scale of 1 to 10, most golfers who struggle with distance are gripping at an 8 or 9. Try getting closer to a 5 or 6.

The club should feel secure, not strangled.

Simple drill

Hit five driver shots where your only goal is to keep your hands soft.

Do not try to hit it harder. Do not try to change your backswing. Just keep the hands, wrists and forearms more relaxed.

Many golfers notice the club feels faster without adding effort.

3. Make a faster practice swing before you hit

There is a difference between swinging hard and swinging fast.

Swinging hard usually means tension. Swinging fast means allowing the club to move.

Before you hit your tee shot, make one rehearsal swing where you let the club move faster than normal. You are not trying to be perfect. You are simply waking up speed.

Then step in and make your normal swing with the same athletic freedom.

This works because many golfers are stuck in “guide it” mode. They are trying so hard to keep the ball in play that they never actually create speed.

A faster rehearsal swing can remind your body that it is allowed to move athletically.

Try this routine

Before your next drive:

  1. Make one smooth rehearsal swing.
  2. Make one faster rehearsal swing with soft hands.
  3. Step in and hit the ball without overthinking.

The goal is not violence. The goal is freedom.

The bottom line

Adding 10 yards does not always require a swing overhaul.

Tee the ball higher and farther forward. Take tension out of your hands. Rehearse speed before you hit.

Those three adjustments can help you launch it better, swing freer and use more of the speed you already have.

Sometimes, distance is not hiding in a new golf swing.

Sometimes it is hiding in a better setup, softer hands and a little more permission to let it go.

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