He teaches golf, not English. It is far more preferable to me that he paints a vivid picture in my mind than it is for him to impress an English critic. His statement, along with the enlarged club face prop, conveyed his point very clearly to me.
In contrast to non-invasive technologies which enable a user to “feel” the movement by watching the user’s animation on the screen, my Golf Interactive Trainer (watch in UA-cam) could enable users to experience visually and physically what is happening throughout the swing and get the visual and physical feeling of the exact mechanics of the right move by seeing and feeling the positioning of the club, the user’s arms, wrists, and parts of the body at each moment of the swing.
hum.... This is based on his starting position, not on a straight line visual basis... his shoulder are obviously opened at address ... so it will obviously not LOOK like it's 166, but it sure as f*** is.
>shoulder rotation >starts talking about the back As 'shoulder rotation' suggests, it's talking about where his shoulder (the left one) ends. Not where the back is facing. Like honestly, how fucking dumb can you be? How about you just go back to school, forget geometry, you need to learn y'all some english boiiiii
166 degrees of shoulder rotation??? Do the geometry folks. If I stood facing you then turned my shoulders until my back was now squarely facing you , I would have turned my shoulders 180 degrees. Now look at Jamie's back when he reaches the top of his backswing. Does it even look close to squarely facing you??? 166 degrees is only 14 degrees short of 180. He is nowhere NEAR 166 degrees.
@Inmotion70 You don't know what you're talking about. The expert is in fact scientifically correct as the "most efficient" & speed producing means is rotational starting with the forward knee, then hips, shoulders, so forth. A pitcher uses precisely the same sequence but strides toward the plate for accuracy. The kinematic sequence is virtually identical accross all sports 'cause it's the way the human being moves.
@Inmotion70 Neither of the experts actually said what you claim . The first expert says that amateurs typically move laterally into their right side (aka sway) while Jamie rotates his hips behind him. However, he definitely sets his mass into the inside of his right leg on the backswing. Also, we can learn alot about rotational movement with baseball pitchers but pitchers aren't hitting something that is sitting still so they can move laterally all they want.
Really cool 3D capture set up. However, I submit that the first expert makes quite a number of erroneous scientific statements. For example, he states that any lateral movement of the center of mass would be bad, that only rotation of the hips creates speed. If this were true, you would see many baseball pitchers successful striding towards first base as they pitched 90 mph or more. Never has this been the case.
Awesome
There are lots of older golf instructors on UA-cam that really should watch this video as they don't understand it
Perpendicular In all directions? Not good syntax
He teaches golf, not English. It is far more preferable to me that he paints a vivid picture in my mind than it is for him to impress an English critic. His statement, along with the enlarged club face prop, conveyed his point very clearly to me.
240p baby!
Wtf
best D plane instructional video on youtube.Great Job!
What is this 240p bullshit? waste of fucking time, remove this shit.
which pixel is Jamie??
HA HA HA HA!!!
VIDEO QUALITY ON POINT
Swing the club fast to hit the ball late!
Squat and use the up force of the large powerful leg muscles to increase gyroscopic speed.
He makes it so easy to understand. Awesome!
Simply the best description of D Plane I've seen
In contrast to non-invasive technologies which enable a user to “feel” the movement by watching the user’s animation on the screen, my Golf Interactive Trainer (watch in UA-cam) could enable users to experience visually and physically what is happening throughout the swing and get the visual and physical feeling of the exact mechanics of the right move by seeing and feeling the positioning of the club, the user’s arms, wrists, and parts of the body at each moment of the swing.
no you would have likely turned your shoulders 270 degrees
Liked. Just wish he had a few more examples of how to change plane,path and angle but maybe that's another video.
Well done video
hum.... This is based on his starting position, not on a straight line visual basis... his shoulder are obviously opened at address ... so it will obviously not LOOK like it's 166, but it sure as f*** is.
Mind = BLOWN!
>shoulder rotation >starts talking about the back As 'shoulder rotation' suggests, it's talking about where his shoulder (the left one) ends. Not where the back is facing. Like honestly, how fucking dumb can you be? How about you just go back to school, forget geometry, you need to learn y'all some english boiiiii
His left shoulder makes it around to 166 degrees.
James... great job!!...Doc
The only way that number is possible is if he addresses the ball with his shoulders open.
166 degrees of shoulder rotation??? Do the geometry folks. If I stood facing you then turned my shoulders until my back was now squarely facing you , I would have turned my shoulders 180 degrees. Now look at Jamie's back when he reaches the top of his backswing. Does it even look close to squarely facing you??? 166 degrees is only 14 degrees short of 180. He is nowhere NEAR 166 degrees.
Brilliant job.Nice presentation with simple and to the point explanations.
Mahalo for the tip. Cool exercise to get the weight across!
kevin bacon only had six degrees of separation...
stays very still and swings within the barrel. good vid thanks.
Nice explanation.
This might be the single best video on UA-cam. There's an absurd amount of information in here. Unbelievable job!
I love hand action
What an excellent presentation! Well DONE!
Really, really terrific man!
Great!!!
@Inmotion70 You don't know what you're talking about. The expert is in fact scientifically correct as the "most efficient" & speed producing means is rotational starting with the forward knee, then hips, shoulders, so forth. A pitcher uses precisely the same sequence but strides toward the plate for accuracy. The kinematic sequence is virtually identical accross all sports 'cause it's the way the human being moves.
frickin cool
@Inmotion70 Neither of the experts actually said what you claim . The first expert says that amateurs typically move laterally into their right side (aka sway) while Jamie rotates his hips behind him. However, he definitely sets his mass into the inside of his right leg on the backswing. Also, we can learn alot about rotational movement with baseball pitchers but pitchers aren't hitting something that is sitting still so they can move laterally all they want.
Cool
Really cool 3D capture set up. However, I submit that the first expert makes quite a number of erroneous scientific statements. For example, he states that any lateral movement of the center of mass would be bad, that only rotation of the hips creates speed. If this were true, you would see many baseball pitchers successful striding towards first base as they pitched 90 mph or more. Never has this been the case.