Kevin Shields
Super Moderator
"Yeah, I know all the pros do that but that doesn't mean amateurs should do it......."
?????
"Yeah, I know all the pros do that but that doesn't mean amateurs should do it......."
I don't prescribe to some ridiculous "list" of moves or whatever as something that is "optimal".
Imagine that you've been working with an amateur and y'all have figured out certain changes that have resulted in better ballstriking for him than ever. His TrackMan numbers are excellent. He continues on with those changes and successfully ingrained them.
Eventually, the amateur comes to you and says that he's extremely happy with the progress you've made so far but he wants to take his ballstriking to the next level. He wants to hit his drives even farther and even straighter.
How do you figure out what changes are needed for this student (who is already hitting it great) to reach the next level? If you're not consulting your personal list of moves that might work for this student, then what else is your strategy?
Most students that are hitting it great dont tend to be immediately looking for some next level. But if they wanted to hit it longer and straighter, of course there would be things to try based on things that have worked for others or may work for this person based on an educated guess.
There's a difference between a list of supposed optimal list that everyone should follow and multiple solutions that may or may not work and being able to sift through and pick the right ones. Semantics perhaps, but I see a big difference in the approach I believe you are currently in favor of.
Sounds like a "list" of moves to me!![]()
Telling students to actively MOVE their right shoulder down plane, down at the ball, or just down, has been scratched off the list for a really good reason.
We know better.
It's the wrong shoulder for power.
Look here
And have you read my Sergio article yet?
The right shoulder CAN GO TOO LOW for some.
I think the same point was brought up by the guy who wrote 5L. "All right shoulder is all wrong" (or something to that effect.)
Too many golfers think they get to a Kevin Shields level via the swing. I'm pretty sure Kevin will agree there is a LOT more to it than that.
Oh, I'm all in favor of "sifting" and "picking." Remember, I described my personal process here http://www.brianmanzella.com/golfing-discussions/17951-john-jacobs-process.html and you largely agreed with it.
I'm actually having a lengthy argument right now with someone who thinks there's an even more effective process available than "sifting" and "picking." I'm skeptical, though.
Does the student in this case put any effort into trying to figure out what he might do to take it to the next level? Or....does he simply act like a total robot doing only what his instructor tells him?
I have a hard time believing a 15 could go to a 2 and still be looking to an instructor for swing mechanics that will allow him to get to the "next level". At some point you have to get off all the forums and start learning how to play. Too many golfers think they get to a Kevin Shields level via the swing. I'm pretty sure Kevin will agree there is a LOT more to it than that.
But if he goes out and plays the same course, with the same mindset and strategy, the same fears, and worse of all, pulls 7 iron the first time he has 135, what was the lesson worth?
One of my biggest fears of a golf lesson is something like this. You think you have the perfect lesson. Golfer hits 7 iron 135 with a bloop fade, you catch lightning and get him hitting it 155 with a slight draw. So now he has, say 4 handicap skills instead of 20 handicap. But if he goes out and plays the same course, with the same mindset and strategy, the same fears, and worse of all, pulls 7 iron the first time he has 135, what was the lesson worth?
Lifter, with all due respect, you talk as if you've been teaching golf for twenty years. How do you know about swing changes apart from your own experiences? Believe me, they don't all feel uncomfortable.