bantamben2 said:
im not talkin about centered head im talking about a steady head i dothink if your gonna hit a long iron you should set up with more axis tilt but then still keep you head steady. also what do you mean by lenscrafters. I think it is pretty obvious to see that your left arm is bent 45 degrees or so and your head has moved off where it was at address.
Shows to go ya that when a GOOD teacher defies "conventional wisdom" how trust in him wanes.
That has been Brian's thesis here: don't believe everything you hear.
The ref. to Lenscrafters I presume is to ask you to look more closely. The swing center is on the BACK - touchable with your finger - not in the head or front of the body. C-7 is the top of the spine and you can feel it between your shoulderblades. The hinge of a house door is at the EDGE and the rest of the door swings around IT. A revolving door spine where everything spins around the CENTER PLACED HINGE is a weak, "spineless" action without any force at all.
Hank Kuenhne is one of the better ball strikers in the PGA pool--one of the long drivers weighing in at something like 145#. He bends his left arm at the top. Same as you would do to chop wood. Why? Because, as Harry Vardon the gripmeister did and taught (he was beset with disease and was emaciated, but known for long driving), THE DOUBLE LEVER is more powerful than a rigid left elbow. Would you chop wood that way? Not a chance. The arm GETS straight during the swing.