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-   -   Hitting Low Trajectory Tee Shots (http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=5184)

comdpa 10-27-2007 10:45 PM

Hitting Low Trajectory Tee Shots
 
Can someone please help explain what the paragraph below means with regards to hitting low trajectory tee shots (esp those in bold)...

The neat thing is that the flatter ball flight is a matter of technique and not ball position or strength. The key to the shot: I break momentum on the follow-through by softening my arms and elbows to get extension of the club with my release (above). That leads to a lower ball flight. The club often recoils into an abbreviated finish. I don't try to muscle it. The more I soften my arms and relax into it, the easier the shot becomes.

12 piece bucket 10-27-2007 10:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by comdpa (Post 46227)
Can someone please help explain what the paragraph below means with regards to hitting low trajectory tee shots (esp those in bold)...

The neat thing is that the flatter ball flight is a matter of technique and not ball position or strength. The key to the shot: I break momentum on the follow-through by softening my arms and elbows to get extension of the club with my release (above). That leads to a lower ball flight. The club often recoils into an abbreviated finish. I don't try to muscle it. The more I soften my arms and relax into it, the easier the shot becomes.

Who said it?

I'd say "breaking momentum" and having "soft arms" is basically not delivering full compression and full lever extension . . . so a ball that is compressed will spin more and thus fly relatively higher . . . . this is just taking a "little off" and knocking it down???

Heck if I know.

Bigwill 10-27-2007 11:40 PM

Tiger said it.

BCGolf 10-28-2007 12:30 AM

Swinging or hitting?
 
The player seems to be describing the “Law of The Flail”. By softening the arms and elbow presumably at Address the player can swing down plane creating more Clubshaft lean and lower ball flight. Is “recoil” simply feeling the “Flail” after the ball is gone?

The last sentence, (I don't try to muscle it. The more I soften my arms and relax into it, the easier the shot becomes.), sounds like centrifugal force to me. True swinging - no hit.

EdZ 10-28-2007 10:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BCGolf (Post 46237)
The player seems to be describing the “Law of The Flail”. By softening the arms and elbow presumably at Address the player can swing down plane creating more Clubshaft lean and lower ball flight. Is “recoil” simply feeling the “Flail” after the ball is gone?

The last sentence, (I don't try to muscle it. The more I soften my arms and relax into it, the easier the shot becomes.), sounds like centrifugal force to me. True swinging - no hit.

I wouldn't think anyone could really do it, but if anyone can, it would be Tiger.

Perhaps - controlled quitting. Same concept as a soft lob shot, applied to a full swing.

12 piece bucket 10-28-2007 01:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EdZ (Post 46240)
I wouldn't think anyone could really do it, but if anyone can, it would be Tiger.

Perhaps - controlled quitting. Same concept as a soft lob shot, applied to a full swing.

I think you nailed it . . . more of Circle Delivery Non-Pivot Delivery deal . . . Homer said don't move anything more than necessary right . . . including the pivot. Arms shot.

Hennybogan 10-28-2007 05:19 PM

Context
 
I'd like to see a little context around that statement of Tiger's. The low tee shots I have seen him hit (standing a few feet away) look and sound like they were fired out of a cannon. Not exactly soft. He may be talking about some other type of shot. His normal full out motion tends to hoist the ball.

Yoda 10-28-2007 10:59 PM

Man With a Mission -- To Quit!
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by EdZ (Post 46240)

...controlled quitting. Same concept as a soft lob shot, applied to a full swing.

[Bold by Yoda]


Great, Ed. This could be a whole new thread!

:)


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