In the words of possibly the next "First Man" of the United States, "It" depends on what you mean by "it". He is only returning the club, via plane shift, on a plane which is over the plane of the backstroke. If you only look at the sequence beginning with startdown, I can't see him coming over anything. He is also, from the camera angle, quite closed to his target. So is he swinging using a 10-5E?
Forget about Jones for a second . . . why do most hackers end up coming over the top? And when YOU come over it what happens to the ball?
Forget about Jones for a second . . . why do most hackers end up coming over the top? And when YOU come over it what happens to the ball?
Overswinging,not starting down with the lower body,right forearm too high,etc.
Then they don't know they are reverse rolling to stop hooking it off the planet.
So you end up with a slice ,pull or hook depending on the hinge you use.
Actually we could probably write a book on this subject.
Forget about Jones for a second . . . why do most hackers end up coming over the top? And when YOU come over it what happens to the ball?
Most hackers come over the top for many reasons, one being poor pivot and lack of any axis tilt. Their right shoulder comes out instead of down. Without any hip slide they produce no axis tilt. Many times they are trying to control the clubface and they have uneducated hands. As far as when I come over the top the ball starts left and then depends on clubface alignments after that.
They don't understand axis tilt. Everything is moving so fast (downswing blackout) that a 2 inch bump is too fine of a movement at that stage. That right shoulder is itching to do something...they are trying to hit it
"straight" so everything moves left.
The worst move I ever saw was a guy that came over the top so much so that he did indeed miss the ball...his club got stuck in the ground then rebounded straight left and hit his ankle...man down...no kidding. I would have helped him up but I was doubled over at the time Same guy...same day... super-toed one that hit a tee marker causing the rest of us to hit the dirt! Company scramble tournaments can be dangerous
How about they don't maintain a flat left wrist, have lost their clubhead lag pressure point and they fail to trace a straight plane line. Just a guess though