Brian Manzella
Administrator
As we continue to research Project 1.68, we will be spending some more time with 3D and the whole of Biomechanics.
Mike Finney and Jon Hardesty spent some time with Chris Welch this year in Louisville, we had Rob Neal at the ANTI-SUMMIT and plan to spend more time with him, and Damon Lucas is geared up and ready to go at his new Institute with 3D technology.
The field of 3D measurement of the movements of the body in space, and the "Kinetic Chain" is a rapidly expanding, multi-faceted world of data that is so far, quite new to many in my business.
Mike Finney, Tom Bartlett and I though about getting a machine way back in the Mike McTiegue days, when we demoed his product at the show.
This was after he published some numbers from his data that rocked the golf instruction world (at the highest level) at the time.
My pal James Leitz got his AMM 6° 3D machine about four years ago, and he has been very generous in having me over to do all sorts of experiments that I have talked about here.
A lot of credit for getting folks to talk in terms of "right-side bend" and "flexion" should go to Bennet & Plummer. Although the first I heard of the terminology was back before the McTiegue days, they have made the terms more mainstream.
At the Anti-Summit, we talked a lot about ground reaction forces, shear forces, and many other things that are often not discussed on instruction sites on the web.
One thing is sure:
There is no text anywhere explaining the movements of the body segments in the swing that is in a form regular golfers can use and apply.
We intend to change that.
Where is Bio-Mechanics going in golf instruction in the next few years?
Mike Finney and Jon Hardesty spent some time with Chris Welch this year in Louisville, we had Rob Neal at the ANTI-SUMMIT and plan to spend more time with him, and Damon Lucas is geared up and ready to go at his new Institute with 3D technology.
The field of 3D measurement of the movements of the body in space, and the "Kinetic Chain" is a rapidly expanding, multi-faceted world of data that is so far, quite new to many in my business.
Mike Finney, Tom Bartlett and I though about getting a machine way back in the Mike McTiegue days, when we demoed his product at the show.
This was after he published some numbers from his data that rocked the golf instruction world (at the highest level) at the time.
My pal James Leitz got his AMM 6° 3D machine about four years ago, and he has been very generous in having me over to do all sorts of experiments that I have talked about here.
A lot of credit for getting folks to talk in terms of "right-side bend" and "flexion" should go to Bennet & Plummer. Although the first I heard of the terminology was back before the McTiegue days, they have made the terms more mainstream.
At the Anti-Summit, we talked a lot about ground reaction forces, shear forces, and many other things that are often not discussed on instruction sites on the web.
One thing is sure:
There is no text anywhere explaining the movements of the body segments in the swing that is in a form regular golfers can use and apply.
We intend to change that.
Where is Bio-Mechanics going in golf instruction in the next few years?