Originally Posted by acsweden
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I have a tendency to bend my left wrist during startup and backstroke (vertical left hand grip). What is it that controls this function during this period of the stroke?
What would be the cause?
- keeping my right wrist bend, extensior action, anything else...?
thanks!
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Yes, this sounds like the swingers "lagging start up". You're in fine company if it is. Hogan, Jones, Yoda etc. From standard address with the hands mid body , the right wrist flat and the left bent, with initially little or no extensor action, the right arm drags the lever assembly away with a corresponding, delightful free flowing lag feel. Yoda had me smacking impact bags on my takeaway to learn this. My takeaway! With the impact bag behind the club not in front of it. Lag going back, lag coming down. Lag, golfs secret.
In start up, by about the time your hands are over your right thigh extensor action and momentum have established the flat left wrist/bent right wrist relationship. From there the right wrist is frozen via extensor action. Im not sure if a later application of EA would necessarily be wrong either. Hmm, not sure.
I think that this is best rehearsed with the extensor action snapping the wrists into place rather than a conscious bending of the right wrist. You can do repeated mini start ups with the wrists snapping into alignment. Extensor action off, extensor action on. Do it again.
Give yourself up to CF and let it freewheel going back and coming through. "Give up control to gain control" as they say. I think this is why Hogans swing is so beautiful to watch. Its difficult to articulate what it is thats so eye catching even to a golf novice. I think its that his lag is so present, so un manipulated. His swinging action so pure.
Cheers