Same problem here. Your hands are ahead of the club face at impact and the face hasn't had time to square up. I've found that just slowing down my normal swing will straighten the ball flight out a lot. The pro's I've seen giving clinics on the Golf Channel usually recommend setting the club face square with the fairway, then closing your stance so your feet are aimed to the right side of the target, with the back foot turned to the outside of the stance about 30 degrees. Then, you swing along the line of the feet, not the club face. This effectively closes the club face. If I had a sure-fire cure, I'd be giving those clinics on TV instead of in here anwsering questions. :-) Good luck with the swing.
To cut a golf shot, or fade the golf ball, (for a right handed golfer) aim your body where you want the ball to start, and aim the club face where you want the ball to finish. You should then swing out to in, and the ball should start left and turnover to the right.
Ben Hogan was a fader of the ball. He started out as a hooker due to his strong grip but later weakened his grip to fade the ball and go on to win many golf tournaments.
A Golf Ball
Golf Ball
It is a golf ball that has the logo of a resort/golf course printed on the ball.
You can hit a golf ball with a golf club.
A golf ball.
That would be a golf ball.
Stand with your feet/body and shoulders aiming left (where you want the ball to start) point the club face to the right (where you want the ball to finish) and swing along you body line with an out to in swing path.
A golf ball weighs more.
There are 366 dips in a golf ball
its a golf ball