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Correcting Common Golf Swing Errors: Tips for Improvement

A smoother swing comes from fixing a few repeatable faults: grip pressure, poor set up, sway, early release, and a rushed tempo. Use simple checkpoints, film your swing, and practise with purpose. Ireland’s wind and firmer links turf will quickly expose weak fundamentals, so build a motion that holds up from parkland to the coast.

If you have ever striped it down the first at a great Irish venue and then watched the next tee shot leak into the breeze, you already know the truth: the swing you bring to the course must travel well. Here at Saint Patrick’s Golf Club in Downpatrick, we see the same few swing errors across every handicap, and the good news is they are very coachable.

Why Irish golf makes swing faults show up fast

Golf in Ireland is a brilliant teacher. The wind rarely asks permission, the ground can play firm and fast, and links lies demand clean contact. On a calm day at a parkland course you might get away with a flip at impact or a touch of overswing. Put that same move on a blustery afternoon and you will see the ball climb, drift, and land short.

Courses like Royal County Down, Portmarnock, Ballybunion, Lahinch, and Royal Portrush reward solid fundamentals: a predictable start line, a controlled flight, and contact that is not dependent on perfect timing. Saint Patrick’s is a fantastic place to sharpen those same skills, with holes that encourage you to shape shots and trust your routine.

Error 1: Poor set up and alignment

This is the most common issue I see in coaching, and it is also the fastest to fix. Many golfers aim their feet left, their shoulders right, and then make a swing that tries to solve the puzzle on the way down. The result is a pull, a push, or the classic Irish day two way miss when the wind gets involved.

Fix it

  • Pick a clear target, then choose a spot one to two metres in front of the ball on that line.
  • Set the clubface first, then build your stance around it.
  • Check that your shoulder line matches your foot line, especially with irons.

Quick range drill

Lay a club on the ground aimed at your intermediate target. Hit five shots without moving the alignment club. Most golfers improve instantly once the body stops fighting itself.

Error 2: Gripping too tight and losing the clubface

A tight grip is often a response to nerves, wind, or a bad miss. The trouble is it restricts the wrists and forearms, making it harder to square the face. You will see blocks, weak fades, and a sense that you have to hit at it.

Fix it

  • Grip pressure should feel like holding a tube of toothpaste without squeezing any out.
  • Check that the handle sits more in the fingers than deep in the palm.
  • Let the club swing, do not force it through.

Course cue

Before you start your takeaway, soften your forearms and breathe out. It sounds simple, but it resets the entire motion.

Error 3: Swaying off the ball in the backswing

Sway is a big one, especially for players trying to generate more power. Instead of turning around a stable centre, the hips slide away from the target. Then the downswing becomes a race to get back to the ball. Contact suffers, and the low point moves around, which is a disaster on tight links lies.

Fix it

  • Feel your trail hip turning back rather than sliding.
  • Keep pressure under the inside of your trail foot.
  • Let your chest turn, but keep your head relatively steady.

Drill

Place a range basket or headcover just outside your trail hip. Make slow backswings without bumping it. You are training rotation instead of drift.

Error 4: Coming over the top and cutting across it

The over the top move is often blamed on the arms, but it usually starts earlier: an open clubface, a rushed transition, or a set up that points you left. In Ireland’s crosswinds, that glancing strike can turn into a ball that peels away and never comes back.

Fix it

  • Start with your alignment, then check the clubface is not fanned open at halfway back.
  • In transition, feel your back stay to the target a fraction longer.
  • Let the hands drop while the body unwinds, instead of throwing the shoulders at it.

Drill

Make three practice swings where you feel the club drop behind you, then hit one ball with the same sensation. Keep the speed at seventy per cent until the shape improves.

Error 5: Early release and flipping at impact

This is the classic scoop. The body stops turning, the wrists throw, and the clubhead passes the hands too soon. You might hit the odd high soft one, but you will also hit thin shots and weak floaters that the wind eats for breakfast.

Fix it

  • Feel your chest keep turning through the strike.
  • At impact, your hands should be slightly ahead of the clubhead with irons.
  • Focus on brushing the turf after the ball, not before it.

Drill

Draw a line on the grass with a tee. Place the ball just ahead of the line. Your goal is to strike the ball and then take a divot that starts on the line or slightly ahead of it.

Error 6: Tempo that changes under pressure

Most golfers do not have a swing problem as much as they have a speed control problem. On the range the rhythm is fine. On the course it gets quick, especially after a poor shot or when you step onto a tee with trouble down one side.

Fix it

  • Count in your head: one on the backswing, two on the downswing.
  • Finish your swing and hold the pose for two seconds.
  • Commit to a predictable pre shot routine, even on casual rounds.

Irish golf tip

When the wind is up, many players try to hit it harder. Instead, swing smoother and flight it down with a shorter finish. Your tempo should slow slightly, not speed up.

How to practise so the fixes stick

Randomly bashing balls is not practice, it is exercise. Improvement comes from feedback and intention.

  • Film your swing from face on and down the line. Compare to your own best swings, not someone else’s.
  • Change one thing at a time. Pick the biggest leak, fix it, then move on.
  • Use constraints like alignment clubs, impact lines, or half swings to build new patterns.
  • Finish with targets. Once the move improves, hit to a specific flag and go through your routine.

Bring your best swing onto the course

The goal is not perfection. The goal is a motion you can trust on the first tee, the tenth, and the last, whether you are playing a calm evening at Saint Patrick’s or taking on the iconic tests at Royal County Down or Ballybunion. Correct the basics, keep the ball flight under control, and let your short game and course management do the rest.

If you want a second set of eyes on your swing, bring a clip of your current motion and your typical miss. We will pinpoint the root cause, build a simple plan, and get you playing more confident golf on Irish fairways in every season.

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