Sam Snead reveals the ‘secret’ to distance in this rare 1960s video
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Welcome to Play Smart, a new game-improvement column that drops at noon (ET) every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from Director of Game Improvement content Luke Kerr-Dineen to help you play smarter, better golf.
I’m not exactly sure how or why I came across this video, but I noticed on YouTube recently that some blessed golf scholar uploaded a rare old video featuring Sam Snead. It’s from the 1960s, and it’s a nine-minute short film as the golf legend makes his way around Boca Raton, Florida. It’s a delightful jaunt through the ’60s, in a style that Don Draper would’ve been proud of, and better yet, it’s packed with a series of helpful tips about how to play better golf.
Here are my favorites — including what Snead says is the “secret” to power. The full video for your to enjoyment is at the bottom of the page.
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Shop Now1. Push the club with your lead arm
Snead’s secret to power comes is one tip with three parts.
First, the narrator explains that Snead’s secret to hitting the ball far is to feel a “relaxed” and free-turning backswing where golfers feel like they push the club away using their lead arm on the takeaway. Stay loose, and push with your lead arm.
2. Pull the club down
Then, as it’s time to begin the downswing, Snead feels like he pulls the club down towards the ball. You used your left arm to push the club away, now he wants you to use it to pull the club down.
3. Turn your body for the final “punch”
It’s only around impact, Snead says, that he feels like he stops making an arm swing and starts using his body to rotate. As you can see, that’s not what’s actually happening — his body is constantly rotating — but nevertheless, that’s his feeling. That the first half of his downswing is a pull with his arms, and the final part of his downswing is a rotation with his body. It’s the “final punch,” as the narrator describes it.
But the video was full of other clues to Snead’s distance keys. And, indeed, many of them relate to the three-step move above. These are a few of the other tips he shared…
4. Grip is the “most important” thing in golf
I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: The biggest difference between amateur golfers and professionals is that pros care far more about their fundamentals, because they understand how important they are. The same was true in the 1960s, apparently, because right on cue the first tip Snead shares is about the grip. He says it’s the “most important” thing in golf, and endorses an overlapping grip where the hands fit snugly together (If you want to give your own grip a quick check, here’s a helpful tip).
5. Lead arm controls the clubface
The reason why Snead thinks the grip is so important is because he says it’s a golfer’s lead arm which controls the clubface — but an incorrect grip can disrupt that lead arm and clubface relationship. Snead demonstrates this via a cameo with former world heavyweight champion Rocky Marciano. In a schtick-turned-golf-tip, he puts boxing gloves on Marciano and has him hit a ball as a way of illustrating the lead arm’s relationship with the clubface. But in order to make sure it all works properly, you need a good grip, Snead says.
6. Always keep your head still
A more controversial tip nowadays among many teachers, but Snead swore by it: Keep your head still! That’s not the same as keeping your head down (which teachers agree is terrible advice), but Snead says that golfers should always keep their head still on the backswing to help them hit the ball.
7. Left heel with driver
At one point in the video Snead quickly ran through some fundamentals for ball position. It’s simple enough and you’ve probably heard them before, but remember what I said earlier: Pros really care about the fundamentals, so let’s review what Snead says.
With the driver, Snead wants your toes flared slightly with the ball lined-up with your left heel.
8. “Near” left heel with longer irons
With your longer irons, he says the ball should line up “towards” your lead heel but not in line with it. Interestingly, he also suggests closing your stance slightly, which will help you swing more in-to-out and sweep the ball off the turf.
9. Smaller stance with smaller clubs
With shorter clubs, it’s the opposite. Narrow your stance, stand closer, play the ball towards the middle and open your stance slightly. It’s a tip that was more common in the past than it is now, but it’s a good one: It helps you hit down onto the ball more, and generate more spin.
10. Hit the sand with the club
And when you’re in the bunker, Snead says to keep it simple: Dig your feet into the sand to test the texture of the sand, open your clubface, and then focus on hitting the sand directly behind your golf ball. Remember that it’s the sand that your club will come into contact with, Snead says, not the golf ball.
Watch the full video below:
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Luke Kerr-Dineen
Golf.com Contributor
Luke Kerr-Dineen is the Game Improvement Editor at GOLF Magazine and GOLF.com. In his role he oversees the brand’s game improvement content spanning instruction, equipment, health and fitness, across all of GOLF’s multimedia platforms.
An alumni of the International Junior Golf Academy and the University of South Carolina–Beaufort golf team, where he helped them to No. 1 in the national NAIA rankings, Luke moved to New York in 2012 to pursue his Masters degree in Journalism from Columbia University. His work has also appeared in USA Today, Golf Digest, Newsweek and The Daily Beast.