Finally, when available, Disc #2 -- Drills -- from the soon-to-be-released Blake/Trolio Series.
Today I had a good practice session....my swing has been wobbly lately...I kept in mind Yoda's checklist above and Brian's motion ( I have fortunately seen it in person) and what seems to be a minor adjustment made a big difference in the quality of my contact and the feeling of being able to HH through the ball. It was in my SETUP. First, I set the club on its natural lie (which was more upright than I had been doing) than the right forearm on the same line. This brought me closer to the ball ....I felt comfortable being more upright with my upper body & with minor knee flex & with no hunched over the ball feeling. It seemed like the rest of the swing fell into place. Can something this minor make that much difference...maybe so.....it sure seems if you start your setup incorrectly ...a chain reaction of setup issues can occur which will disrupt the entire swing.
I noted that Brian Gay has his hands higher at address (on the elbow plane) than most PGA tour players who have their hands on the hand plane. Can one cock/hinge the wrists as easily during the backswing when starting from a higher hand postion? Why do most PGA tour players hold their hands on the hand plane (extension line drawn from the butt end of the club points at the belt buckle)?
Can one cock/hinge the wrists as easily during the backswing when starting from a higher hand postion?
No. The reason is the lower the hands are at address, the more cocked the wrists are, so as it relates to getting the wrists cocked in the backswing you are ahead of the starting line. The thing you have to figure out is which is more difficult to overcome. Many would argue that lower hands creates far more compensations than having to retrain your wrists. If you don't overroll as you start your backswing your right elbow bend should cock your left wrist.
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"In my experience, if you stay with the essentials you WILL build a repeatable swing undoubtedly. If you can master the Imperatives you have a champion" (Vikram).
The reason you can't sustain the lag is because you are so eager to make the club move fast (a reaction to the intent of "hitting it far"). So on a full shot you throw it away too early, which doesn't happen for your short chip. (bts)
Here's Brian's driver sequence from a down the line view with reference lines....this may help spur some responses.
HG
I'm not getting this. Is this a double shift? I thought Brian was zero shift. Why did you draw a line on the Square Shoulder Plane? I'm just confused. It's probably just me.
No. The reason is the lower the hands are at address, the more cocked the wrists are, so as it relates to getting the wrists cocked in the backswing you are ahead of the starting line. The thing you have to figure out is which is more difficult to overcome. Many would argue that lower hands creates far more compensations than having to retrain your wrists. If you don't overroll as you start your backswing your right elbow bend should cock your left wrist.
These low hands guys are starting from a cocked right wrist position as well though so this means they need to get it to level somewhere in the swing before impact?. Brian starts from a level right wrist so this gets maintained throughout the swing which we know is correct. He demos this on the video with yoda.
This is yet another extra move for them to do along with getting their right forearm on plane before impact.
Lots of compensations as you state mrodock so what are the supposed adavantages of these low hands especially the real low hands guys ala Jodie Mudd etc?
Remember hearing an audio where Homer said low hands would help you get the club up quicker on the backswing.?
Does it affect the pulley size in the endless belt?