Noticed a really big problem yesterday. Was practicing the swing with a mirror and noticed that at the top of my swing, especially with long clubs, I have a distinct bounce of the club, often causing it to pass parallel. My arms aren't changing positions, it's just the weight and momentum of the club adding additional wrist flex (I guess have very flexible wrists). It is not controlled however, and varies shot to shot.
I know this is a huge swing fault and could be having a huge impact on the success of my swing. With short clubs I can compensate, but with long clubs... look out! The bounce only encourages an OTT throw-away move as the body reacts to the jerk in club motion.
Question is, how do I stop it?
I checked my grip, and I'm not losing hold on the club. No slippage.
I tried taking the club back really feeling like I held some pressure in my wrists and didn't allow them to really cock at the top. This helped a little, but was very difficult.
I experimented with a slower backswing, but found only if it was painfully slow did it eliminate the bounce.
I tried increasing grip pressure as the club reached the top. Didn't really do anything but add tension to the swing.
This is really unnerving. It's like I can't physically hold the wrist angle at the top without consciously tensing the wrists. If I take a 3/4 swing, the club hinges itself beyond 90 relative to the lead arm.
Anyone have suggestions on how to stabilize the backswing so I can start my downswing from a more consistent position. Right now the long clubs feel different with every swing as a result of this "bounce".
One last thing, seperate but related issue. If attaining a flat left wrist at the top means the club face now points to the sky (shut position, and it takes a lot of strength to hold), is that ok? Otherwise, my wrist is partially cupped, but the club face lines up with my forearm. This occurs whether I strengthen or weaken the left hand on the club (unless I go totally weak, with thumb on top of the shaft).
Thanks for the help!
I know this is a huge swing fault and could be having a huge impact on the success of my swing. With short clubs I can compensate, but with long clubs... look out! The bounce only encourages an OTT throw-away move as the body reacts to the jerk in club motion.
Question is, how do I stop it?
I checked my grip, and I'm not losing hold on the club. No slippage.
I tried taking the club back really feeling like I held some pressure in my wrists and didn't allow them to really cock at the top. This helped a little, but was very difficult.
I experimented with a slower backswing, but found only if it was painfully slow did it eliminate the bounce.
I tried increasing grip pressure as the club reached the top. Didn't really do anything but add tension to the swing.
This is really unnerving. It's like I can't physically hold the wrist angle at the top without consciously tensing the wrists. If I take a 3/4 swing, the club hinges itself beyond 90 relative to the lead arm.
Anyone have suggestions on how to stabilize the backswing so I can start my downswing from a more consistent position. Right now the long clubs feel different with every swing as a result of this "bounce".
One last thing, seperate but related issue. If attaining a flat left wrist at the top means the club face now points to the sky (shut position, and it takes a lot of strength to hold), is that ok? Otherwise, my wrist is partially cupped, but the club face lines up with my forearm. This occurs whether I strengthen or weaken the left hand on the club (unless I go totally weak, with thumb on top of the shaft).
Thanks for the help!