Fix Your Slice + Master Golf Etiquette (Without Embarrassing Yourself) ⛳
Our PGA Pro shares the slice fix that doesn't require rebuilding your swing, plus the etiquette guide that makes golf less intimidating for everyone.
Hey there, golfer!
Welcome to another week of Clickit Golf. If you’re like most of us, you’ve probably spent at least part of your golf life fighting a slice—and maybe feeling a little anxious about whether you’re following all the “unwritten rules” of the game. Well, this week we’ve got you covered on both fronts.
Let’s dive in.
🎯 This Week’s Featured Articles
Article 1: How to Finally Eliminate Your Slice (Without Rebuilding Your Swing)
By: Resident PGA Pro
Let’s be honest: the slice is golf’s most common (and most frustrating) problem. You’re not alone if you’ve watched your ball start left and curve dramatically into the trees, round after round. But here’s the good news—you don’t need to tear down your entire swing to fix it.
Our PGA Pro breaks down the three high-impact fixes that address the root cause of your slice without requiring months of swing reconstruction:
1. Grip Correction - The foundation fix that makes everything else possible. Learn how to strengthen your grip to show 2-3 knuckles and naturally close the clubface through impact.
2. Alignment Check - Poor alignment creates the illusion of a slice. Discover how to set up correctly and stop aiming your body left (which only makes the slice worse).
3. Clubface Awareness - Build feel for where your clubface is pointing throughout the swing with simple feedback drills.
Plus, you’ll get The Feet-Together Drill—a simple range exercise that forces proper body rotation and natural club release. It’s one of those drills that feels weird at first but produces immediate results.
Why you should read this:
•Practical fixes you can implement today
•No complex swing theory or jargon
•Focuses on the root cause, not band-aid solutions
•Written by a teaching pro who’s helped hundreds of slicers
The best part? These fixes work whether you’re a 25 handicap or a 10. The slice doesn’t discriminate, and neither do these solutions.
👉 Read: How to Finally Eliminate Your Slice
Article 2: The Etiquette Guide Every Golfer Needs (But Nobody Teaches)
By: James Fairway
Here’s a secret: a lot of golfers—especially newer ones—feel anxious about golf etiquette. What if I do something wrong? What if I slow everyone down? What if I break some unwritten rule and everyone judges me?
If that sounds familiar, this article is for you.
James Fairway has written the friendliest, most reassuring etiquette guide you’ll ever read. No judgment. No shaming. Just a helpful playing partner quietly explaining what you need to know to feel confident on the course.
What’s covered:
•Tee Box Etiquette - Who hits first, where to stand, when to be quiet
•Fairway & Green Behavior - Ball marks, putting lines, and awareness
•Cart & Course Care - Cart path rules, divot repair, bunker raking
•Pace of Play - How to keep things moving without rushing
•The Real Secret - Why etiquette is about respect and enjoyment, not rigid rules
Why you should read this:
•Takes the anxiety out of golf etiquette
•Written for beginners and casual players
•No pretentious golf club gatekeeping
•Bookmark-worthy reference before your next round
The tone? Like a friend explaining things over a beer, not a rulebook lecturing you. That’s the Clickit Golf way.
👉 Read: The Etiquette Guide Every Golfer Needs
💬 Question for You
We want to hear from you: What’s the one part of golf that makes you most anxious or frustrated right now? Is it a specific shot? Course management? Something else?
Hit reply and let us know. We read every response, and your answers help us create content that actually helps you play better golf.
📅 What’s Coming Next Week
We’re shifting gears next week with two articles that might surprise you:
•The Best Golf Balls for Average Golfers - Our Golf Hacker cuts through the marketing BS and tells you which balls actually work for YOUR swing speed (spoiler: it’s probably not the tour ball you’re buying)
•Why You Don’t Need New Clubs to Play Better Golf - Ty Webb’s humorous take on gear obsession and what actually improves your game (hint: it’s not the shiny new driver)
One article will save you money. The other will make you laugh while questioning your life choices. Both are worth your time.
🔄 In Case You Missed It
If you’re new here or missed last week’s articles, here’s what you might have missed:
Week 1:
•The 3-Putt Killer: Master Your Speed Control
•The Ultimate Guide to Buying Used Golf Clubs
Week 2:
•How to Play in the Wind: A Hacker’s Survival Guide
•A Field Guide to the 5 Types of Golfers
Our archive is growing, and every article is designed to help you play better golf and enjoy the game more.
🏌️ Final Thought
Golf is hard enough without adding unnecessary stress. Whether it’s worrying about your slice or feeling anxious about etiquette, we’re here to help you relax, improve, and have more fun on the course.
This week’s articles tackle two of the most common sources of golf anxiety—and give you practical solutions for both. Read them before your next round. You’ll play better and feel more confident.
See you on the course,
The Clickit Golf Team
P.S. - Know someone who’s struggling with a slice or feels intimidated by golf etiquette? Forward them this email. They’ll thank you for it. And if someone forwarded this to you, subscribe here to get these articles every week.

