Robert Rock, coached by Mac O’Grady, breaks down MORAD’s geometric blueprint an elite ball-striking GOLD MINE !
🔺https://www.paulgormangolf.com/store
🔺👉 Voted PGA Teacher of the Year NCPGA
….🔺OnLine Lessons Learn Alignments! 🔺
🥇Email – Paul@gormangolf.com
In this lesson you’ll learn the swing plane, right-elbow/right-shoulder/right-hip alignments, and how to compress the golf ball
with shaft lean, lag, and a stable low point. We’ll shallow the club, match hand path to pivot, improve hip rotation, and fix early extension—simple drills you can do at home or on the range.
Perfect for driver distance and iron swing control: add speed, hit straighter…
golf tips 2025, fix slice, draw the driver, pressure shift, setup and alignment, low point control, wedge distance control, chipping basics, tempo and rhythm, takeaway to transition, impact and finish, launch monitor checkpoints.
Subscribe for more MORAD-based coaching and modern training that actually sticks. Simple, powerful drills inside. Plus driver path and face control.
#GolfTips #GolfSwing #MORAD #MacOGrady #RobertRock #BallStriking #SwingPlane #ShallowTheClub #CompressTheBall #HipRotation #Lag #DriverDistance #IronSwing #LowPointControl #FixSlice
[Music] All right, we’ve got Robert Rock. Everybody that knows Robert Rock is just one of the best swingers of all time, right? I mean, it’s so smooth and terrific angles. Now, where did he get this all from? Well, there he is. The master Grady. So, here is Robert Rock working with Mac O Grady. uh and just presenting himself beautiful lag angles. So M at this point here is trying to get his players to feel the middle of the shaft at this section here to get closer to the right shoulder. So we’re just looking at getting a little bit of a a bounce into the shoulder, so to speak, you know. So this way you’ll notice uh right there. So allowing the wrist to to just a bit more by lightening the grip uh tension in the hands. That’s you want to keep them soften them up there. And you can see the gravity of the club and the weight of the mass of the club which is slightly above that arrow starts to go you could say to the tank top strap the shoulder something where it feels like it’s bouncing a little closer. Now from down this way, there’s some angles coming down now where he’s got the club and hands down there past P5 down there past uh way past left arm parallel and it’s club is still on the uh right side of the hands and that’s where the lag lives, right? You guys all knew that. Uh so M is sitting here just he’s just and Robert is just u not even hitting balls, he’s just brushing grass. So you you guys out there that have not um done much of that at all, you need to go over and over and over. He’s getting the okay right there. You can see he’s chatting with him. The audio was no good here. Was broken up, so I just took it out. U but um so yeah, he’s making sure you know that he has a setting of the wrists starting a bit early, but he’s not. If you notice, this is kind of a big thing. I’m going to zoom in on this guys, though. A big thing out there would be that uh how about like pushing your shoulder down? Okay. Or pushing your handle down, right? So, the club head up if you push it down. You can see Robert’s releasing the club back, but the the the butt end of the club is not shoving down between his feet. So, he’s just releasing the club by the right wrist, folding back a little bit, and a hinge pin there. But you don’t see an excessive cocking of the glove hand. So, that’s important to notice, guys, because I know it’s out there. Um, the shoulder, as Mr. O’Grady would say, should be um working its way down this way and a little bit of an arc like a still circle. a lot of circles in this game. And you can see that left shoulder just went from up there right down that little bit of an incline and around the corner. So, just kind of setting you guys apart from the others that might not understand really what is going on. And if you think about shoving the handle down, you’re going to be throwing your torso out of shape and lowering your head. So, now you know Robert Rock is known for his hair, you know, just like Fleetwood. Those are the English guys in their hair. All right, little Terry rolls. You don’t you know you need to grow some more. Okay, my good pal. Anyway, uh here he is again. Robert Rock lagging that club back down on his shoulder here. Um beautiful action there. Then of course the whipping coming through gives the crossover right when forearms are crossing over like u starting a flint between the wrists uh starting a fire. You know, you can see clearly the glove hand is going under there. And um that is really it, guys. I’m just going to play it in a little bit of true motion here so you guys can just see what he’s doing. And this will be a little bit bigger one here. That’s it. Then he wants the guys to come over and start watching because Robert’s got it. And uh he really does. So he practiced a lot with Mac and he got all these angles and sequencing uh ideas from Mac and his Morad system. Um it’s all geometry golf you know which uh was arranged out of the golf and machine book along with Mac’s personal journey and investigation how the body movements work efficiently and so forth and so on. So ended up with Morad Mako Grady research and development genius at work. So anyway, I just wanted you to understand a few principles here that if you are looking for lag. Uh this is kind of the master class of that. It’s a very free floating feel coming down where the wrists are hinging. And you can see although the film is not perfectly uh clear a long time ago, but you can you can sense now what is going on here. And it’s not a a real pulling of the handle uh like a pulling that way. It’s more of the leaving that right elbow in its number one position and just like serving a tray of goodies like a waiter’s tray. Let’s say it was right here. like that and then presenting the tray here. And if you did that, you’d be very passive with that right arm, which the palm would be to the sky, serving the tray. And that really helps my students understand that it is not getting thrown out. Most most of my amateurs that come in start dumping the tray right here. And you don’t want to do that. So, uh, little idea there on that. serve the trade to the little guy right there. He’s about two feet high and then let it all ravel through. All right. So, you signed up for Morad. That’s awesome. Macro Grady, one of the hardest hitting golf ball that I’ve ever heard in my 2003 school with him, Vegas. So, what you’re going to learn here is a how to set your body on the ground, how to get your uh center of balance, your center of gravity as we say, pivoting, keeping yourself organized with your head, the wrist joints, how they set to accelerate the club down with the pivot train, right side coming through, elbow, hip, shoulder, everything accelerating through with a bunch of speed and balance. Mac looked the smoothest as anybody.
6 Comments
Serving the tray!
Great to see this Paul. Thanks from the UK !
Love it, Paul. Slow and steady using balance and gravity. I have to get rid of that early shoulder rotation which results in a steep downswing
Interesting: I just noticed mack, dropping the right hip at transition ?!?!?!
Paul, would love to see you cover a WITB covering Mac’s equipment choices.
I think Robert was coaching Mac *subconsciously