Hank Haney’s Essentials of the Swing: A 7-Point Plan for Building a Better Swing and Shaping Your Shots Reviews
Hank Haney’s Essentials of the Swing: A 7-Point Plan for Building a Better Swing and Shaping Your Shots
“Hank knows more about ball flight and what controls it than anyone in the game.” —Masters and British Open champion Mark O’MearaGet back to basics and build your best possible golf swingLots of golf instructors can show you tricks to correct a hook or to stop hitting the ball fat, but these are just quick fixes that leave you with a swing built on mistakes. In Hank Haney’s Essentials of the Swing, the world’s premier expert on the golf swing takes you back to step one to master the essentials
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How Short Hitting, Bad Golfers Break 90 All the Time
How Short Hitting, Bad Golfers Break 90 All the Time is the basic handbook for beginning golfers, and those golfers who can’t break 100. This book explains in light easy to read language, what your pro doesn’t tell you:
1) A simpler, natural way to hit the ball
2) Any why it works
It tells you not only how to hit the ball, but hot to play the game, with easy to learn strategies to help you shoot lower scores.
When you know what to do, how to do it, and why y
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February 18, 2012 











Great swing model; not just a set of golf tips,
Hank Haney’s “Essentials of the Swing” is a great full swing golf instructional book. That fact his golf swing plan is based on a a-z set of golf principles, rather than a set of tips and tricks to temporarily cure golf swing defects, puts this book heads and shoulders over just about any other golf insturction book you would find at your nearest Barnes and Noble or Borders.
I have read over 40 golf instruction books over the past couples years and this book easily makes it into my top 5 books that I would recommend if you are serious about improving your golf swing and not just looking for a few miracle cures for your slice or hook. Ben Hogan’s “Five Lessons,” David Leadbetter’s “The Fundamentals of Hogan,” (Hogan’s book dissected with suggestions for improvements), Nick Faldo’s “A Swing For Life,” (very much influenced by Leadbetter), Jim Hardy’s “The Plane Truth for Golfer’s Master Class,” and Jack Nicklaus’s “Golf My Way” are all books worth reading 5 times or more. Although I believe Jack’s swing thoughts are a little less relevant to today’s golf swing, it is still a classic and great read. I find myself gravitating towards Faldo’s book most often. With this said, I would lump Hank Haney’s “Essentials of the Swing” in with these as a favorite.
Where Hank makes a contribution is the discussion of the swing arc and swing plane. I thought I had a great understanding of the swing plane until I read Hank’s book. The idea of keeping the shaft parallel to the swing plane established at address, but at times above the orginal angle throughout the swing, seemed simple yet a new thought not presented (or presented clearly) by other instructors. His swing model is one built without any compensations and built on sheer neutral and sound fundamentals.
Hank’s next best contribution to golf swing literature is the chapter on shaping shots from left to right, right to left, high, and low. I think anyone with a moderate amount of skill can replicate these swings arcs to bring their game to the next level. I favor a fade but it is necessary to learn how to hit draws, low, and high shots to become a complete golfer.
All in all, it is great book and a must read. Once you get it in your hands, I am sure you will read it many times over, I am on my 4th reading!
-John
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|Hank does what he does best, but not the Publisher,
Just read Hank’s latest book and found it highly informative and excellent overall. His instruction is straight-forward and easy to follow…he obviously knows his subject and conveys it like you would expect “Tiger’s Coach” to do. I believe it is a book that I will reference over and over like Hank states he did with Hogan’s “Five Lessons…” and John Jacob’s “Practical Golf.” Both of which I have read and reference often also. I’ve also read Nicklaus’ “Golf My Way” and of course Tiger’s “How I Play Golf,” two books that are also well written and highly informative. This leads me to the reason I have rated Hank’s book with only 4 stars when I would rank the others I’ve mentioned with 5 stars. The editing and photographs in Hank’s book are average at best (2-3 stars) and certainly not what I would expect from a hardcover 1st Edition. Hank and the reader deserve better from the publisher that he praises, John Wiley & Sons. While I’m not a professional writer myself, I do know how to run spell check on a document and proofread it. One example of several typos and grammatical errors occurs on page xii of the Acknowledgments. The editors didn’t catch, “…when I first stared teaching Tiger Woods…” instead of “…started teaching Tiger Woods…” Furthermore, while the pictures of Hank are well done and convey what he is writing, they are all black and white and I don’t see one drawing in the book that Hank alludes to in the acknowledgments: “…Scott Addison, thanks for your great work on transforming the pictures that Dom took into the great drawings in this book.” I was expecting to see some high quality drawings like Jim McQueen’s in “Golf My Way” or Anthony Ravielli’s in “Five Lessons…” and “Practical Golf.” Instead, it looks like the publisher just inserted the black and white photographs that would’ve been used for the drawings, into the book itself. I really hope that Hank takes the publisher to task and forces them to put out a 2nd edition with color photographs and/or color drawings, along with better editing. Finally, while Tiger is mentioned multiple times in the book (but not gratuitously), I find it odd that he didn’t write the foreward or afterword…it’s not like he didn’t have the time last fall or winter. From what I’ve seen and heard of Hank on TV and in Golf Digest, he probably didn’t want to ask, but someone else could have and should have, like his agent or publisher maybe? Well, perhaps Tiger will write something for the 2nd edition that I’ll be looking for, and that the publishers should send to buyers of the 1st edition “gratis.” Again, Hank does a great job, but others have let him down in my opinion. If the content wasn’t so good, I would send the book back to Amazon for a refund.
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|“Get a Plan to Improve” Help,
What I appreciate about Hank is his admiration and thanks for John Jacobs, whom is the teacher that inspired my pro. They are all about essentials: grip, stance, alignment, plane, ball flight. Everytime my swing is way off, it is usually one or more of these.
Hank has so many good points every golfer can achieve much with, e.g. “The club you want to look at the closest in determining your ball-flight curvature mistake is your driver.” From this one develops a plan of improvement, with looking at tendencies and paths for corrections with these essentials. More gleanings: “If you are going to get any part of your body alignment correct at address, make it your eyes and shoulders.” “If you start your downswing with your upper body, the club will likely come down on too steep a plane.” “Don’t go out on the range with your favorite club or clubs. …. Instead, work on the clubs you are struggling with.” “During Tiger’s warm-up, he practices all the shots that he feels will be critical to his round that day.”
Good photos throughout. For many this could be the essential book for making our golf better.
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|Exceptional!,
For those of us who have chased a swing – taken lessons, did the practices, played frequently, read and watched various materials, went on the pilgrimage to gain more distance and … bought a ton of equipment (me for sure), all to lower our handicaps … well, each of us knows deep down inside whether or not our goal has been attained; mine certainly hadn’t.
I read this rather short book, swallowed my ever-growing ego about distance, did a little dry swing work around the yard and went out and shot a five-under cap 79 from the blue tees. I ‘was’ a 12 (dropped one after yesterday’s round) having gone up a few strokes due to chasing the wrong stuff.
Now, I see myself as a totally boring golfer, always in play, always getting it on or near the green in regulation or on in one-over for the longer holes; I totally believe I will get it down in two putts. That’s all this guy teaches – smart playing, how to find and keep your rhythm, the essentials of every swing (from the putt, chip, pitch and full swing) and I guess a ‘teeny’ bit about course management …
I had nothing to lose by giving his concepts a whirl. I’m 66 and am/will-be-from-now-on, playing the best golf of my life. Take a look at the distances this guy used to hit in his prime – not long at all; he just happened to score amazingly well.
Small bucks, big lessons; I’d be surprised if you don’t improve quickly. Just do the work, swallow the distance ego and make your game really, really boring.
Enjoy,t
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|Fantastic! A++++,
This book, although plain in cover is beautifully illustrated and offers a very informative and common sense approach to a game that that most feel is out of their athletic or mental reach. Highly recommended for the golfer in your life. It makes a fantastic gift and I personally plan to give several to fellow golfers, friends and family members over the holidays.
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|After 40 years an easier way to manager your game,
I have been playing for 40 years and always had trouble playing within my ability. This book sets out guide lines that gets you to think and manager your game in order to score better and avoid the big numbers. Most of us do not have the time to play and practice like a pro. This book will show you how to enjoy the game and not get fustrated by thinking your way around the course.
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