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How a chair can help you perfect your swing rotation

How a chair can help you perfect your swing rotation

**Chair Swing Drills Improve Golf Rotation**

Golfers are always looking for new ways to improve their swing, and a simple chair can be a valuable tool. Here’s how:

1. **Posture check:** Sit upright in a chair with feet flat on the floor. Ensure your spine is straight and shoulders relaxed.

2. **Shoulder turn:** Rotate your upper body back, then forward, keeping your head still. Maintain the spine’s posture.

3. **Hip turn:** Rotate your hips back, then forward, to practice the correct hip rotation in your golf swing.

By practicing these drills regularly, golfers can improve their swing rotation, resulting in greater distance and accuracy on the course.

Meechai leads U.S. Women’s Open; Korda cut

Meechai leads U.S. Women’s Open; Korda cut

**Meechai Emerges as Superstitious Front-Runner in U.S. Women’s Open, While Korda Falters**

Wichanee Meechai has taken an early lead in the 2022 U.S. Women’s Open, defying superstitions with her unconventional ball-tapping ritual. In contrast, defending champion Jessica Korda was eliminated after missing the cut.

Meechai’s unusual routine, including touching her golf ball to her caddie’s head, has sparked discussions about the role of superstitions in professional golf. Meechai credits her success to her beliefs, while others attribute it to her strong mental game.

Despite the varying opinions, the camaraderie among golfers remains evident. Meechai’s playing partners praised her determination and superstitious practices, regardless of their own beliefs.

‘Really immature’: Xander Schauffele gets candid about major that got away

‘Really immature’: Xander Schauffele gets candid about major that got away

A brutal start sparked Xander Schauffele’s U.S. Open collapse. The four-time PGA Tour winner admitted to some “really immature” behavior and an inability to gather himself after a disastrous triple-bogey on the opening hole at The Country Club. Schauffele was inches away from carding a snowman, hitting four consecutive tee shots into the left rough. Despite holing out from 103 yards for birdie at the next, he made another bogey at the third and just couldn’t recover, missing the cut by one shot at 9 over.

Schauffele’s candid assessment of his performance laid bare his frustration, and the mental challenge he faced after such a poor start.