tourdeep said:
Top of backswing.
This static postion I've been working to attain. What I find fun to train is the right elbow to maintain its (near) perpindicluar position. From a front view, I can see my right elbow peeking below my left arm.
left arm and shoulders appear to be in line, club is laid off.
The cupping of his left hand appears to be minimal. For me to get the Hogan lag coming into release, my left wrist has to be cupped slightly more. The fun part is the unwinding action into release from a cupped wrist to the arched wrist at impact, not exactly ez for me. When this position is reached at impact (what I think), the shot produced is low boring, the best ball striking feel, and a thing of beauty. Oh yes, gotta think and do #3 accumulator. If I do not get #3, my shot comes up short, to the right, and with more of a fade tendency.
I believe his knee action would be considered to be right anchor, where both knees are bent until past the "sit down" position, and somehwere just past follow thru, Ben's left side is straight. Brian has debated the straightening action of Ben's knee, and in certain clips/pictures it does appear to straighten more than this particular image. I think there's a bit of straightening here, although slight.
birdie_man said:
Spike said:Tourdeep,
Isn't this a picture of Hogan in the start down?
spike
p.s. thanks for the pics! Can never get tired of looking at this guy no matter what position!
tourdeep said:Hogan's downswing is a tough one to pinpoint since it often has been said that he begins his lateral shift, the bump, the slide, the prolonded hip turn, prior to the completion of the backswing. The dude moves his weight from the trail to lead side fairly fast due to his fast swing tempo and a more compact swing (for Ben Hogan).
Because he works from the ground up, I focus on is his feet and knees. His left knee appears to have yet to start moving forward. The right knee looks like it has yet to initiate that Hogan lean, where the right knee moves inward, toward the target line.
His trail foot appers to be firmly planted without any evidence of a inward roll, or push. Regarding his left foot, hard to tell. I do not see the inward roll. Rather, it looks flat. If so, he has begun the start down. Again, hard to tell from this angle. Most of the front view images I see of Hogan has the left foot rolling inward, whether it appears the shoe itself makes the move or the action of the knee makes the move more apparent, to an outwrd roll on the downswing.
anyway, glad you enjoy the pictures and really enjoy talking about the dynamics of his swing and throwing in my .02 along the way for debate.
birdie_man said:I think he keeps more weight on the left side sometimes....can't figure out how else he'd do that w/o a steeper shoulder turn or something...
David Alford said:The master keys will be revealed next year...and all the b.s. about Hogan's swing will be OVER, once and for all. Virtually everything I read about Hogan's swing is either wrong or simply position analysis. Hey, I had a tough time with it, too. Most of my "assumptions" were also incorrect...for many years.