Can a swinger use the right arm to help with the finish swivel of should the only thought be to use the left arm? The Centrifugal Force is not doing it so I need some help for now.
Can a swinger use the right arm to help with the finish swivel of should the only thought be to use the left arm? The Centrifugal Force is not doing it so I need some help for now.
You need help with Centrifugal Force. But for now, use both Wrists. Keep the Left Wrist Flat.
Here is what the green man said a few years ago:
Quote:
10. Finish Swivel (4-D-0). Go to the end of the Follow-Through (Both Arms Straight position) with the Left Wrist vertical to one of the three Basic Planes (Horizontal, Vertical or Angled). Slowly rotate the Wrists into their "parallel to the Plane" position for the Finish. The Finish Swivel is a key element of the Total Motion and is indispensable as a bridge from Follow-Through to the Finish. Sadly, it is completely missing from the Stroke of most players, and they are left only with a bending Left Wrist to enable the Club to 'pass the Hands.' You 'prepare' for the correct Finish Swivel (by making a compatible and correct motion earlier in the Stroke). Similarly, you also 'prepare' for the dreaded Chicken Wing (by making a compatible but incorrect motion).
you also want your "swivel" to comply with your hinge action . . . . there are going to be different rates of overtaking for different hinge actions and plane angles. Another piece that can impact your rate of overtaking is moving your head around. If you move off the ball and hang back their . . . . gonna be much harder to control the clubface.
check the book on clubhead travel with the different hinge motions. Swinging is generally associated with horizontal hinging. But keep in mind that Mr. Kelley said that it doesn't take much to override the CF (or whatever some egg head wants to call the force acting on the face) and be a manipulated hands swinger. I'm no Homer Kelley, but bucket does not recommend turning the control of the face over to CF. Control face, control ball, control ball, control game.
Another piece with your swivel is WHEN you do it . . . . See the point in Hogan's swing where swivel occurs vs. Lee Buck vs. Fat Jack . . . consider the different trajectories and the implications on the angle of attack . . . I imagine you'd see a considerable difference in the disruption of the turf if them three cats were practicing next to each other.
If CF acted on the Clubhead and shaft, at 100 MPH Clubhead Speed, your Hands would finish High and you would feel that your feet were being Lifted off the Ground.
Why is your Club slowing down so soon after Impact that your Club can't get to shoulder high on it's own residual speed?
Whatever is Driving your Club, abruptly stops after Impact. CF doesn't work that way.