
Turn that weak, leaking slice into a consistent power draw in just five days — one focused drill at a time.
or buy nowThis is a short, no-padding action plan that takes you from slicer to drawer of the ball in five days. Instead of vague theory, it gives you one simple thing to work on each day — your setup on Day 1, then a single targeted drill on Days 2, 3 and 4, and an hour-long practice session on Day 5 that ties it all together.
It works by exaggerating the exact opposite of what a slicer naturally does — a stronger grip, good athletic posture, body aligned right of target, and the ball back in your stance — so you reprogramme your swing path and clubface in the quickest possible time.
Work through the five days and you stop fighting the slice and start hitting a longer, straighter, more consistent draw. You'll carry and roll further, reach holes you've never reached before, hit fewer clubs into greens — and feel the genuine excitement of watching the ball curve the other way for the first time.
The author opens with a number that, in his own words, made him 'really mad': 85% of golfers slice the ball. His point isn't that slicing is hard to fix — it's that almost nobody has ever been properly shown how. As he puts it, hitting a consistent draw is NOT difficult or hard to do; it's only hard if you've never been shown how, just like anything else.
Most of the slice cure comes down to one idea: a slicer must exaggerate the exact opposite of what they're currently doing. So Day 1 rebuilds the setup — a stronger grip, a repeatable athletic posture you can rehearse in front of a mirror, alignment to the right of the target (not the left, which only makes the slice worse), and the ball positioned back in the stance to start it out to the right.
From there it's three days of simple drills that train the two things that truly matter — the path the clubhead travels on and the clubface angle at impact. A horizontal-plane release drill, feet-together half-swing hooks, and a sloping-lie swing all groove an in-to-out path and a releasing clubface, with the constant reminder that exaggeration speeds up the progress. Day 5 then folds everything into a structured hour of practice, hitting balls with a different club each time and starting every shot to the right of target, no matter what.
It's honest about what it is: a focused primer drawn from a larger 'How To Fix Your Slice' programme the author spent months building and which he says has helped over 10,000 golfers across 21 countries. Five days, one job at a time — that's all it asks of you.
Download it now, start with Day 1 today, and put the drills into action — your power draw is closer than you think.
or buy now