Sounds like you’re rising up a bit through impact, which can push the club out and make the ball start right. A simple fix could be to keep your spine angle steady and stay down through impact, as if you’re brushing the grass before the ball. Your tempo reads a bit quick for a wedge, which could mess with timing and path. Try slowing the swing to a smoother, even rhythm to help the release stay on line. If you can combine those two changes, the rightward push should lessen.
*Camera angle, steadiness, and recording speed directly affect swing-analysis accuracy.*
Anything-Gold
Too hunched over and your tempo needs work. But has the basis of a good swing
JtassleJohnny
Why are you choking down on the club so much? Try giving yourself some room.
SmokinHotNot
Hard to slow it down to see, but it looks like your right hand rolls under after impact. Looks like it’s blocked with the palm up. Start the downswing with the hips. They slide forward, the arms drop down, and it should seem like you’re trying to jam the butt end of the club onto the back of the ball. Now engage the shoulders to pull the arms down the line, using the hands to deliver clubhead to the ball. At contact, the shaft should be leaning slightly forward towards the target. Make sure you swing thru to the target with full extension, allowing the right hand to roll over in extension. Find swings you like. Copy them. Film and examine your efforts. And get a lesson or two.
WreckNTexan48
C posture at set up, closes your ability to rotate through your pivot.
kyledavid12
Three things that I notice and can relate to as a personal challenge:
1) your tempo is sooooo fast. Of course, everyone’s temp varies. It feels out of control though. It should be deliberate, intentional and structured. You aren’t just whipping the club back; you are drawing it into a specific position so you can attack the ball.
2) it looks to me that one of your first moves on the takeaway is to break/roll your wrists. You’re already putting yourself in a tough position as it pertains to getting back to square.
3) lastly, if you slow it down, freeze the video when your club is parallel to the ground on your downswing and notice your hands. Your glove is pointing the same direction as your belt buckle. I’d like to see the logo of the glove pointed more towards the ball. Dustin Johnson does this incredibly well, albeit a bit exaggerated for most golfers. The key to doing this is not rolling your wrists but rather using them more as a hinge and bowing them.
XxMathematicxX
How much money does that ball owe you?
Watched again and feel bad making a joke and not adding to help. Your setup is already open. You start the entire swing with your club face open. It’s debatable whether this is even a push because you’re actually just aimed off to the right as far as your club face is concerned. Close that sucker up and then swing and see what happens.
itzjung
your are casting. Release your club too early at impact it looks like the club head is front of your hands.
8 Comments
Sounds like you’re rising up a bit through impact, which can push the club out and make the ball start right. A simple fix could be to keep your spine angle steady and stay down through impact, as if you’re brushing the grass before the ball. Your tempo reads a bit quick for a wedge, which could mess with timing and path. Try slowing the swing to a smoother, even rhythm to help the release stay on line. If you can combine those two changes, the rightward push should lessen.
find out more at [nugget.golf](https://nugget.golf/session/77070674-8efc-4bf1-938f-43bb2adb47dc?ref=golftips)
*Camera angle, steadiness, and recording speed directly affect swing-analysis accuracy.*
Too hunched over and your tempo needs work. But has the basis of a good swing
Why are you choking down on the club so much? Try giving yourself some room.
Hard to slow it down to see, but it looks like your right hand rolls under after impact. Looks like it’s blocked with the palm up. Start the downswing with the hips. They slide forward, the arms drop down, and it should seem like you’re trying to jam the butt end of the club onto the back of the ball. Now engage the shoulders to pull the arms down the line, using the hands to deliver clubhead to the ball. At contact, the shaft should be leaning slightly forward towards the target. Make sure you swing thru to the target with full extension, allowing the right hand to roll over in extension.
Find swings you like. Copy them. Film and examine your efforts. And get a lesson or two.
C posture at set up, closes your ability to rotate through your pivot.
Three things that I notice and can relate to as a personal challenge:
1) your tempo is sooooo fast. Of course, everyone’s temp varies. It feels out of control though. It should be deliberate, intentional and structured. You aren’t just whipping the club back; you are drawing it into a specific position so you can attack the ball.
2) it looks to me that one of your first moves on the takeaway is to break/roll your wrists. You’re already putting yourself in a tough position as it pertains to getting back to square.
3) lastly, if you slow it down, freeze the video when your club is parallel to the ground on your downswing and notice your hands. Your glove is pointing the same direction as your belt buckle. I’d like to see the logo of the glove pointed more towards the ball. Dustin Johnson does this incredibly well, albeit a bit exaggerated for most golfers. The key to doing this is not rolling your wrists but rather using them more as a hinge and bowing them.
How much money does that ball owe you?
Watched again and feel bad making a joke and not adding to help. Your setup is already open. You start the entire swing with your club face open. It’s debatable whether this is even a push because you’re actually just aimed off to the right as far as your club face is concerned. Close that sucker up and then swing and see what happens.
your are casting. Release your club too early at impact it looks like the club head is front of your hands.