chipingguru
New
Please God not the X-factor!
I don't know what any of that means and I can't tell if you're being facetious or not.
Is one of the beneficial bi-products of the "twistaway" forcing the student into increased trigger delay to avoid hooking it? A two pronged attack on the flip? (might even be three if it got the right shoulder on plane).
Or is that not a important factor in the evolving matrix?
I agree, he needs to stay behind the ball.
Wouldn't you agree that the forward sway with high right shoulder move is from the open face?
Not really. The high right shoulder comes from the forward lean. You tilt him properly and the right shoulder doesn't look so high up. Lean anyone forward and their right shoulder gets to this higher position. Thus why S&T has to be so much more vertical in the face on view to achieve their "steeper shoulder turn".
His right elbow does cause me some concern since is sticks to the side of his body and has to extend downward to get to the ball. That again is from the upper body forward lean though. If he was behind the ball instead of in front of it he could extend his right arm forward more instead of down. I prefer a forward extension instead of straight downward extension because it leads the hands ahead of the clubhead longer.
Thanks for that explanation, it makes more sense now when I look at his swing again. It would seem that the s&t taught pros get their axis tilt sooner into the transition with their lower body to overcome their back extension at the top to make that position work.
To the original poster,
Please, just listen to Brian. You may not slice it, but your clubface IS wide open. Your flip at the bottom helps you to square up the face so you don't hit it miles right.
Learn how to keep the clubface more square (with some Twistaway... buy Never Slice Again), and you'll start doing all this pivot stuff more naturally. Until you fix the clubface, a lot of the suggested changes (which aren't necessarily wrong) will be a struggle.
Promise.
rugby,,,i still question-despite you being athletic and your baseball experience-whether you truly knows how to pivot. imo, everything else can wait until you square this issue out.
in the dtl view, as you backswing, your initially bent right knee straightens/extends, essentially fully. that move alone prevents you from establishing an effective pivot.
can you just backswing but make an effort to keep the bent right knee bent the same way? if you do it correctly, you should feel a lot of muscle tension around the INSIDE of your right thigh area...
No, I don't know how to pivot. I know what it's supposed to look like, and can do it in slow motion or during easy practice swings, but not during a regular swing.
there are real teachers on this forum that probably have a better way to relate to you what i am trying to convey. perhaps they can help out.
for instance, without holding the club, just fold the arms in front of your chest, assume the address position (which you do very well), then start turning the body in backswing fashion. as you do this very slowly, pay 100% attention to your right knee.
1. keep it bent (which you did not do well).
2. as you turn, you should feel the weight slowly shifted from the left leg into the right leg.
3. you should start feeling tightness around the right outer hip and right inner thigh areas.
darn it,,,i know you can do that!!!!!!!
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t1LhqSiXcWE[/media]