jeffy
Banned
Since this thread is going to stay up for a day or so, I thought I may as well make a "what I really teach" about the ground and force.
In the already shot and edited video, "Ideas about The Release," I stated that I thought that the golfer should make a little step to the right at the beginning of the backswing (small if they make a centered-type pivot, larger if they don't) and then they should never try to shift any weight anywhere.
Let me repeat:
After a step on the right foot, I believe the golfer should not try to shift—or not shift—their weight anywhere.
But every good golfer has a targetwards move of the sacrum during transition or at the start of the downswing. Snead's was smallish, Hogan's much more notiecable. Not a big fan of a lot of lateral movement but if this happens won't there be a weight shift towards the target?
But, after the golfer applies force-about-the-coupling-point mid downswing, and there is enough energy in the clubhead, and if the radius is 'in the ground enough" the golfer should recruit everything they can to pull the club toward them ("go normal").
No way to do this without using the ground to push of.
No way.
I'd rephrase: no way to do this effectively without standing on firm ground. If you were standing on a cloud, quick-sand or a lily pad, it probably wouldn't work so well. Instead of some half-baked psuedo-science notion of "using the ground", I just think of these body motions as what they are biomechanically: going from externally rotated and bent hips and knees to internally rotated and straightened hips and knees. If you're not playing in a swamp or one of your bayous, the ground will take care of itself.
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