jenhaoyen
New
I hate seeing an under rotated flying wedge almost as much as an over rotated one. The downswing is almost always an undercutting motion that only a few can save. You need to keep the right heel down and really have a strong twist to resist the undoing of the under rotated part so it falls right back on the plane instead of under.
Can you elaborate more on the under rotated flying wedge? If the club is just going up and down wouldn't it be no rotation at all?
How many degrees of the left arm turn is consider as over rotation and many degrees of the left arm roll is consider under rotated?