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I would love to see the 24 components of Yodas swing for study... Kevin |
I hear you Kev, very definitely mate.
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the Green one is teasing us here. Secrets in the sauce.
For sure RFT, extensor action etc but there is something special in that sauce.
I got a feeling Yoda is sitting there going "warm , warmer, hot , very hot, not so hot.....cold" What I am struggling to articulate is from adjusted address , lagging takeaway: -the left arm stays put -the wrists snap into their impact alignments -then there is a little turn in the left wrist a little left wrist cocking maybe. But even from fix he's got a little of it. Extensor action takeaway , using #3 pressure point to stretch the clubshaft on the line of the left arm, could do this. But it is a short shot, chipping technique from adjusted. Not so common anymore, most people chipping from fix. In this procedure the right elbow is anchored. But I dont think this is it anymore. He says he employs EA via the #1 pp. So how bout this: -from adjusted with extensor action turned off -he turns on extensor action via #1 pressure point -then sequentially, RFT but with an early break in the right elbow. Im thinking RFT being fanning and bending, an extra dash of bending early in that sauce would do what Im seeing. Fanning moving the left arm , bending less so? Bending could turn the left wrist too, I think. And give a little cock of the left wrist. How bout that? Hot , cold, warm, very very hot, "your crazy" ? Yoda, please please please please. Is it the right elbow bending early? ob |
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Or does it show something? Look at Caspers right elbow bending, steadily, constantly, from the very start. ob |
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Casper
Right forearm not on plane as Lynn's is with the driver.
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In my first lesson with Yoda we spent the better part of the morning on just this alignment. When I finally got it...it was harder for me than usual, I said something like "few, that took a while". To which Yoda responded, "and that may be all that you need to achieve your goals in golf". I mention this only to illustrate how much importance Yoda attaches to the on plane right forearm at address. My guess is Brian Gay would probably agree. It is a mechanical alignment pure and simple, the vertical wall holds a weight better than an angled wall. You must get there at impact so why not start there at address? Short shots, especially, are so much easier without the necessary changes/adjustments required to make up for an off plane right forearm over such a short swing. I came to LBG and Lynn with a knowledge, garnered over years of golf, of the necessity for a bent right wrist at impact. I hit a lot of little chips with just my right hand on the club. In my first few hours with Lynn he told me of three other necessary, mission critical components. This absolutely blew me away. I had been feeling pretty good about my one little discovery and now I had a total of four!!! Since then he has added a few more too. This guy is good! What were they? (when chipping with just the right hand or not): -bent and frozen right wrist (the other side to the flat left) -the on plane right forearm -tracing the straight plane line -the nursing of the lag pressure sensed in the #3 pressure point. If you achieve all of these, your one handed chipping and impact will be very good. One handed pitching too if you add the on plane right shoulder bringing the fully bent right arm to release. That makes it five! And counting. ob |
Right Forearm Alignment: Address vs. Impact
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A good example is Paul Casey, who today just won his semi-final match in the WGC-Accenture Match Play. The Right Forearm and Clubshaft are not quite 'In Line' at Address; nevertheless, the Right Forearm is clearly beneath the Left. If I were teaching him -- or you :smile: -- and wanted to emphasize the correctness of this alignment, I would hold a club by the head-end and place the shaft in the 'crook' of the Right Elbow and touch the mid-point of the Left Forearm with the grip-end. The Downstroke Hip Action will lower the Right Shoulder and increase the Address Position bend in the Right Elbow. This, in turn, will enable the On Plane Right Forearm and #3 Pressure Point (Right Forefinger) Tracing of the Plane Line through Impact. All this said, when the student clearly favors Hitting, I want the Right Forearm dead-on-the-money at Address. Visualize Arnold Palmer, arguably the most famous Hitter of all time, and you've got the picture. :) |
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Arnie liked his RFFW. If he lost it momentarily in the finish swivel, he really tried to get it back quickly.
Maybe not so darn pretty but pretty darn effective. ob http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/a...d=123592968 5 http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/a...d=123592968 5 |
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