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The 9 o’clock swing.

In pitching, all the basics apply: the grip, aim, setup, impact, swing plane, clubface all apply. Assuming that those are all sound, it’s time to work on distance control. One of the big factors is to develop a length of swing that controls the speed of swing and the distance. Instead of having a bunch of different lengths of swings, not to mention a bunch of different clubs, what most of us need to do is to perfect one swing length with one club.

When you catch a bad lie in the rough, the first thing you have to understand is where the center of your stroke is. The center of the stroke is the left shoulder socket. Also understand that the swing is a circle or an arc, and the low point — or the divot — is going to be directly under that left shoulder. When the ball is sitting down in the rough, you want to position your center more forward, either by leaning on your left foot, or by positioning the ball back in your stance.

Here’s an effective technique to help you hit your putts without cutting across the ball or hitting it from the inside.
It starts by painting a ball half-black and half-white. Once that's done, you need to hit your putts so that you can watch the black and white going end over end without blurring. That means you’ve struck the ball cleanly.

Swoosh for more distance.

Take the driver, turn it over, hold it by the clubhead end and start making swings. You’ll be able to hear the “whipping” sound without a whole lot of effort. This is the key.

When you’re in a bunker, you’re trying to hit the sand in the right way so that the sand pops the ball out of the bunker. But we’re programmed to hit the ball, and nobody told us how deep a divot we should take, so we have a lot of difficulty executing what the pros call the easiest shot in golf.

GOLF NEWS / POWERED BY ATHLON SPORTS

Continuing a trend of singular success in the Lone Star State, Adam Scott won his third Texas Swing event in the last four years, breaking a 37-tournament winless drought with a one-shot win over Frederik Jacobson in the Valero Texas Open.

After withdrawing from THE PLAYERS Championship with neck pain, Tiger Woods now has a long list of injuries, a broken swing and a shattered personal life.

South Africa’s Tim Clark won THE PLAYERS Championship to claim his first PGA Tour victory, while Lee Westwood struggled down the stretch and Tiger Woods withdrew from a tournament for only the second time in 15 years.

Lee Westwood leads by one stroke heading into the final round at THE PLAYERS Championship — the “fifth major” — but Phil Mickelson is within striking distance of the both the win and the world’s No. 1 ranking.

Tiger Woods’ golf game and Tour schedule are still under construction. But Tiger is the main attraction at the Quail Hollow Championship in Charlotte, where Michael Jordan stole the show earlier this week.

Jim Furyk triumphed in a playoff for his second Tour win of 2010. It was a strange finish to an excellent week for Furyk, who missed the cut at the Masters last week but has nevertheless played some of the best golf of his career this season.

Following his debut at the Masters last week, Tiger Woods has signed on to play at both the Quail Hollow Championship in Charlotte later this month and the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach in June.

What a Masters Sunday. Compelling storylines were all over Augusta this weekend, but in the end, Phil Mickelson’s emotional win, with cancer-stricken wife Amy standing greenside, was enough to melt the heart of the most hardened Phil hater.

Once a mythical media creation seen only scripted in television commercials and pixelated in video games, Tiger Woods became a newsprint-stained soap opera character. Now, the four-time Masters champion hopes to find middle ground on the bent grass at Augusta National.

The 2010 Masters tees off tomorrow, but who will be in contention for the title? We've made a list and selected our favorite to don the Green Jacket.