How to Hit a Draw With a Driver
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How to Hit a Draw With a Driver

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How to Hit a Draw With a Driver

The draw (right to left for right-handers) is not a natural ball flight for most golfers but if you want added distance and extra roll, we will show you how to achieve that. Learning how to hit a draw with a driver takes practice, good fundamentals and confidence. 

Checklist for hitting a draw with a driver

The easiest way to hit a draw with a driver is to attack the process step by step. You’ll make most of the adjustments necessary to hit a draw before you swing the club back.

Step 1: Check your driver settings 

If you have an adjustable driver, you may consider making it a bit more draw-biased. The draw-bias setting will close the clubface slightly and make hitting a draw a bit easier. If you aren’t comfortable changing it to a draw bias, at least ensure the driver head is set at neutral. 

Step 2: Setup adjustments 

You can make some tweaks to your setup that make it much easier to hit a draw. These adjustments include: 

  • Dropping your trail foot back slightly at address, even just an inch, allows you to create a more inside-outside swing path. 
  • Ensure your hips and shoulders are square or just slightly closed to your target line. Some players like to feel their trail shoulder drop back an inch or two.
  • Place the ball forward in your stance, inside the lead heel. 
  • Your grip should be neutral to slightly strong. Too weak a grip can leave the clubface open, making it harder to hit a draw. 

Step 3: Clubface angle 

Image Source: Titleist

Get your clubface set up in the correct position. Align the clubface a little left of your swing path. Your body line and swing path are still going to be right of your target. Getting set up with the clubface in this position will help eliminate additional manipulation of the face during the swing. 

Step 4: Inside-to-outside swing path 

To hit a draw, the club must travel on an inside-to-outside path relative to the target line. This path allows the clubhead to approach the ball from the inside, creating the sidespin necessary for the ball to curve left (for a right-handed golfer).  

Step 5: Trust the swing path 

The majority of the work required to hit a draw happens in the setup. Once you are set up properly, you have to visualize and trust the swing path. 

The path will be a little inside with a shallow swing plane, then it moves outward. Many golfers are afraid to swing out to the right of the target for fear of a slice. However, if you make the necessary setup adjustments and your clubface is square or slightly closed to the path, you’ll turn the ball over with a nice draw. 

Drills to practice hitting a draw 

One of the best drills for hitting a draw is to set up with some alignment lines. One alignment stick is your target line and another is slightly right to match your swing path. Set these up in front of your tee so you have the proper visual as you practice hitting a draw. 

Common mistakes and how to avoid them

If you have adjusted your setup and swing path but are still struggling to hit a draw, it could be due to these reasons. 

Overdoing the inside path 

The swing path to hit a draw is slightly inside to out. If you take the club inside too quickly or too severely, it can lead to a block or a hook. When making any adjustments in your swing, keep them minimal. Keep your takeaway slow, low and extended so the club doesn’t go inside too quickly. 

Clubface is open at impact 

An open clubface at impact will keep you from hitting the draw. The first thing to check here is your grip. If your grip is weak, you may not be able to rotate the face through impact. Strengthen your grip slightly by turning your hands to the right (for a right handed player) and use it to help you square the club through impact.Ā 

Ball too far back in the stance 

If the ball position is too far back, you may strike the ball while the clubface is still too open. This creates a slightly steeper angle of attack, which can cause a slice or a fade. Keep the ball position forward when hitting a driver with a draw. 

Final thoughts

You don’t have to change your swing to hit a draw. All you need to change is your setup. Once you make these necessary adjustments, you can tweak them to create the ideal degree of draw you’re seeking. Practice hitting a draw on the range with alignment sticks and you’ll have an easier time understanding what it takes to get your driver to draw.

For You

For You

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      Mark R

      2 years ago

      It’s a huge advantage if you can draw the driver on command.

      The dogleg left 9th hole at my local course requires draw starting the ball over water on the right side for position A.

      Nothing better than starting a high draw over the water and landing it in gap-wedge range. Puts pressure on opponents. Great finishing hole when playing 9 after work.

      Reply

      pineneedlespro

      2 years ago

      Yes drop the trail foot back an inch or two. Aim down the right side of your (fairway) target. Picture the right wrist (for right handed golfers) higher on the club than the left wrist after impact. A smaller grip on the driver will help to rotate the club face to slightly closed at impact. Make sure to shift your weight to front foot and rotate hips (belt buckle facing target) and do not hang back.

      Reply

      Patrick Patterson

      2 years ago

      Number one thing to hitting a draw is coming into the ball shallow you can never hit a draw swinging steep only a smother hook try to hit the under inside of the golf ball

      Reply

      Yaaqob

      2 years ago

      FEEL like you are hitting the ball to right field. Trust me, it may FEEL like you are hitting it really far right…but you are not. That one feeling will help tremendously whether you are trying to hit a draw or just hit the ball more straight.

      Reply

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