I still don't know what you mean by the right wrist being uncocked post-impact.
I have studied Hogan's swing in depth many times. Here is a series of photos showing his right wrist movements through the impact zone.
Let' see whether whether we can agree on the "reality" of what is happening to his right wrist.
Image 1 shows Hogan at impact. His right wrist is bent (dorsiflexed) and level (neither upcocked or downcocked).
Image 2 shows Hogan post-impact. His right wrist is still bent and level. I can see no evidence of palmar flexion of the right wrist or any cocking movements (either radial deviation or ulnar deviation) of the right wrist. So, in what sense do you claim that Hogan uncocked his right wrist during impact and thereby applied right hand power to the ball?
Image 3 is post-followthrough and I think that it demonstrates right hand pronation (which straightens the right wrist) and left hand supination, and I think that those movements represent the start of the finish swivel action.
Jeff.
Good photo of hogan showing all the beginners how to swing but really jeff that photo shows absolutely nothing in regard to what i stated before. Get some footage of hogan from BEHIND/ DTL i.e masters footage, hogan dvd collection etc and freeze frame when the hands exit in the follow through and come back and tell me his right wrist is in a level state and it has nothing to do with the swivel It seems obvious that my eyes see totally different things to you and sincerely i am satisfied with my eyesight .This is only my opinion though so the only way i can describe to you is the right hand is accelerated at impact in a manner like it is working under and to the left of a firm left wrist while at the same time the right wrist maintains the bend
Hogan is able to maintain his right elbow bend deeper as a result of the trajectory of his right shoulder in my opinion. He stays in his angles or posture or whatever you want to call it and his arms stay WITH and ON his body all components in rhythm.
I have the Augusta DTL footage, but I cannot produce the requisite number of freeze-frame images because the film camera frame rate was too fast to capture the necessary number of capture images.
You wrote-: "This is only my opinion though so the only way i can describe to you is the right hand is accelerated at impact in a manner like it is working under and to the left of a firm left wrist while at the same time the right wrist maintains the bend."
I think that are making a mistake when you state that the right hand is working under and to the left of a firm left wrist. That would imply that the right hand is supinating, when it its really pronating. What gives you the impression that the right hand is working under, and to the left, is the fact that Hogan turns his body/arms/hands leftwards immediately after impact and that changes the hand-viewing angle as viewed by a camera placed directly behind the golfer. It will give the "appearance" that the right hand is working under (supinating), when it is actually working over (pronating).
Secondly, this right hand pronation phenomenon does not occur during impact, and only occurs well after impact as part of the start of the finish swivel action, and I therefore think that it plays no power role during impact (when the right wrist is level and bent).
I have the Augusta DTL footage, but I cannot produce the requisite number of freeze-frame images because the film camera frame rate was too fast to capture the necessary number of capture images.
You wrote-: "This is only my opinion though so the only way i can describe to you is the right hand is accelerated at impact in a manner like it is working under and to the left of a firm left wrist while at the same time the right wrist maintains the bend."
I think that are making a mistake when you state that the right hand is working under and to the left of a firm left wrist. That would imply that the right hand is supinating, when it its really pronating. What gives you the impression that the right hand is working under, and to the left, is the fact that Hogan turns his body/arms/hands leftwards immediately after impact and that changes the hand-viewing angle as viewed by a camera placed directly behind the golfer. It will give the "appearance" that the right hand is working under (supinating), when it is actually working over (pronating).
Secondly, this right hand pronation phenomenon does not occur during impact, and only occurs well after impact as part of the start of the finish swivel action, and I therefore think that it plays no power role during impact (when the right wrist is level and bent).
Jeff.
Funny how you can't manage to capture that part of his swing which is clearly evident in a lot of his post accident swings. Why? Simply because it would destroy your theory if you put it up on the forum then you would have come up with another excuse or another lame theory. The right hand is NOT REALLY supinating is it Jeff this is just another one of your medical bs lines and you are just stating the obvious about the right hand pronating well after impact and right at this moment the right wrist is showing the uncocked state