This video is all about the golf swing.
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7 Comments
A really good one! L to L at practice this afternoon…thanks!
A legenda di XX18LIKE.Uno snowquen hè u mo idolu. Hè a persona chì aspiru à esseh, hè a mo luce di ghjornu
From my experience, feeling the weight of the club produces a good backswing. It feels like the club head guides the arms and hands to set the club at the top and allows the lower body to initiate the downswing. .
Quick question Russell — should the arms be as straight as poss right through impact – from driver right through to sand wedge please – poss incl putter too – thanks for all your help too — K
As my swing got better, timing the release (down-cocking) of my wrists became MUCH more critical. This is one of the last hinges to be released in the entire downswing sequence. When I had a bad swing (early releasing), it was much easier to contact the ball because the early down-cocking already placed the clubface in position, so that the arms would just finish the swinging action. Of course this produced a lofty, weak, and slow swing speed. Now days it requires proper warm up, a good swing sequence and ONLY then can I practice down-cocking at the exact moment and place. For all this to work properly, there FIRST must be enough wrist hinge in both axis during the backswing. Afterall, you can't release something downward you didn't first retract upward.
You're messing with my head l to l, I spent all of this year so far working on body rotation.
5:45 – Many amateurs struggle with width because they believe the ONLY way to keep the arms straight is by holding BOTH arms in the air using ONLY the lead shoulder muscle. So they get exhausted very quickly and cannot maintain the width. If they just understood that it's the TRAIL arm (shoulder muscle) that LIFTS, holds, and maintains the stretched out arm structure. It took me along time to understand that, as I used to only use my lead shoulder muscle to hold the arms up in the backswing. The trail shoulder and tricep PUSH upward and outward toward the sky, and that makes all the difference in preventing fatigue!