The main reason for the shank here could be tempo-the wood swing looks a touch quick, which can mess with timing. When timing slips, the hands can get ahead and the club head can catch the hosel. Try slowing the backswing a bit and feel a smooth, one-piece move through the ball. Cue: think “soft rhythm, steady turn,” and keep your arms and body moving together for a more on-plane contact.
my opinion. takeaway is good but you’re laying (flattening) the club off. you’re doing red when it should be somewhat more towards blue. just mirror practice.
marvinfuture
You’re already on your front foot and basically stuck behind the ball. You are then delivering the club with an open face, forcing you to come out to in, and it’s either hozel or barely clipping the face.
3 Comments
The main reason for the shank here could be tempo-the wood swing looks a touch quick, which can mess with timing. When timing slips, the hands can get ahead and the club head can catch the hosel. Try slowing the backswing a bit and feel a smooth, one-piece move through the ball. Cue: think “soft rhythm, steady turn,” and keep your arms and body moving together for a more on-plane contact.
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my opinion. takeaway is good but you’re laying (flattening) the club off. you’re doing red when it should be somewhat more towards blue. just mirror practice.
You’re already on your front foot and basically stuck behind the ball. You are then delivering the club with an open face, forcing you to come out to in, and it’s either hozel or barely clipping the face.