The ifrothgolf review
A moulded plastic attachment that clips over any standard golf grip and forces your hands into the textbook neutral position, for practice swings and range sessions.
What's great
The Scheffler connection is what sells it, and it's legitimate in spirit: Golf.com and Today's Golfer have both covered how the world number one hits shots with a moulded training grip to keep his hands honest, and this achieves the same thing for about £12. Because it attaches to your own clubs, you're training with your actual equipment rather than a separate gimmick club. The feedback is immediate; if your usual grip is strong or weak, this will feel alien at first, which tells you exactly how far you'd drifted. It's tiny, so it actually travels with you, and a few minutes of waggles before a round genuinely resets the hands. For the money it's one of the highest leverage training aids going.
Worth knowing
Right-hand only for this model, which is a genuine snub to lefties. It enforces one neutral grip, and some decent players intentionally play with stronger grips, so it's corrective rather than universal. It can slip on worn or oversized grips. And it's not conforming for competition rounds, so it stays in the bag once you're on the tee.
The verdict
A £12 fix for the most common fault in amateur golf. Cheap, simple, and backed by the best player in the world's practice habits.





