Twenty years of restricting my torso in the golf swing and one visit to your channel has corrected that horrible technique...Thank you for posting this...I'm sure this video will help countless, clueless, golf lovers out there who have been lead down the wrong road, and fed disinformation about how a proper golf swing should be executed...Brilliant!!!!!
Body friendly with effortless power due to a bigger turn. Plus you're less likely to sway or steepen the club coming down. I connect my lead arm until the throw. Thanks!
I mean I really dont understand what this guy is talking about. Who coils like that with the lower body completely inactive? Every single pro does what he is doing in this video, the lead knee bends, lead hip dips down as the upper body rotates, its all in sync together.
I think he is referencing the technique known as the "X-Factor"...I remember this concept where your lower body should stay as still as possible while your upper body turns... Supposedly allowing for more coil...
@@tonyshans2226 The lower body should stop coiling at some point before the upper body. I am not famimliar with this x factor but I will assume people misunderstood it. And he just moved the coiling into downswing, this is what Jon Rahm does. I dont think anyome ever said that the lower body stays completely still.
@@outlander234Jim McClain back in the sat popularized the x factor move and ideally, we all have the physical capability to have a huge difference between the turning of the upper body and a minimal turn of the lower. His point is that most of us don't. Hence rather than trying to get that differential on your backswing, you do it on your downswing.
Mr. Wang, this is the single best lesson on the swing that I have ever been taught, witnessed at a clinic, seen on video or read in a book. I am 68 years old and have been playing since I was five. You have a new subscriber and devotee. Thank you.
Kevin, what a great explanation. As a much younger man, I threw the frisbee a lot and far! When we really wanted to rip it, I specifically remember turning the legs and hips hard, then pulling the torso around, and finally letting the arms and wrists just RIP!!! Now I get sequence. Funny, no one ever had to teach us that with the frisbee! But when you put a club in our hands, our athletic instincts just bleed our of our feet! Thanks, again!
This is such a gem, simple and concise to the point for all the golfer, especially for senior, baseball is exactly concrete evidence. Sub your channel.
The absolute single best swing tip!!! Covers the takeaway, downswing, and follow-thru without over-complicating. I watched this video yesterday and went to the range immediately after, best and most consistent range session I’ve had. Went to the range earlier and same consistent results. Thanks a million
You are 100% correct! Jim McLean killed many amateur golfers swings with his X-factor article in Golf Digest many years ago. Unfortunately, there is a lot of bad instruction out there and we have no way to separate the good from the bad which leads to constant doubt. No wonder we struggle.
@rw_golf6387 To this day Jim McLean still pushes that X-Factor B.S. along with his 21 "death moves", or however many he decides to chat about. I heard him on Mark Immelman's podcast (which is terrific) and he must have mentioned "X-Factor" 200 times. I mean, how archaic of an approach to golf instruction is that?
Thankfully there is a market of ideas. Pure physics approach is going to be the best no matter what. Lots of propaganda took hold before this internet thing. It really is crazy.
McClain in his defense, is still technically correct. But as this guy says, not all of us have the capability to create the x factor on the backswing, so it might be easier to do so on the downswing swing. But McClain is still correct. That differential is still important. How you get that differential might be more nuanced.
This can be very useful swing thought for many golfers. By not thinking about the separation, but the movement and the end goal they can stop limiting their motion and, some of them, stop hitting with their hands. And if you stop this video at the top of the backswing at around 5:47 for example, you see that there is separation. Shoulders have turned more than pelvis. Not 90 degrees (or even more like some pros), but probably an amount that feel comfortable for him. Only thing missing here (that some other YT coaches are saying, even if they talk about the separation) is that you can lift the heel of your front foot to get more turn on your hips. I used that at one point just to have a "trigger" for my downswing; start by planting that heel and it's almost granted that you start with your hips.
I am not as flexible as i used to. So this will help me and others a lot. That back swing coil thing destroyed me now but was good back then. Good tips.
100% correct. As an addition to what's been said in the video, a lot of amateurs will find issues with the timing off the turn, so it is possible to pre set the shoulders and hips at address, which leaves you with just an arm back swing (to get the rubber band feeling you mentioned) and then follow through. This pre set also guarantees a draw. For anyone interested this is generally called stack and tilt, but some instructors have variations. Saguto and Jim Venetos have good examples of this.
Would the feeling be like you want to throw/ release your club out? If so is thdt something you can show us to try throwing the club into a net? Thank you
Great explanation. Important I believe it cos my son throws his club similar to the way you do it. His 7 iron is 170 m carry as logged on the simulator on the range. There is both visual and electronic verification. My other son same age don't seem to be able to generate the same speed and his swing does not seem to have the throws pattern like yours. He average 140 m for his 7. Still alright but I believe in using your body both upper and lower to throw the arms with the club together across the ball.
I agree with pretty much everything spoken about here. The only caution is that "throwing the club at the target" should be done with zero tension in the arms and wrists. All good, great video.
This is what I’ve been telling people for years. Unfortunately it took me years to find this out for myself, I remember when the “X Factor “ story came out in golf digest and I bought it hook line and sinker, to my own detriment.
This goes against everything I’ve heard on Utube. Pete Cowin even says to coil to the top. Hips open 45° and shoulders open 90°. I think this could be the key for me. Gonna try it this week. It sure makes a lot of sense. Great lesson!
Thank you for your great videos. When I watch your swing in slow motion, it looks like you are using a really weak shaft. Is this right or just a distortion? Greetings, Richard
Kevin...noticed that your head appears to move a bit i.e. to the right and up in your back swing and down and back to setup position on your forward swing. Can you please clarify this a bit more? Doesn't moving your head promote an inconsistent swing? Thanks
Just realized I get all of my golf habits from, its from my disc frisbee days as a kid. I couldnt throw it well regular, I flicked everything... as a right handed player
This seems contrary to Leadbetter and the Pro's we see. In the back swing the pro's end up at 90 deg torso and 45 deg hips. In Leadbetter they taught coil in the backswing, but that in the coil process the hips will naturally stop earlier than the torso. what you seem to be saying is that the lower body and upper body "coil" the same in the back swing. is that right?
Cliff notes......for an instinctively safe swing; all rotation takes place BELOW the pelvis and cooperates with your anatomy. Check out the ball and socket joints at the top of the femurs located BELOW the pelvis. Vertebrae located above the pelvis are not designed for safe rotation. This is the root cause of a generation LOST.
While the X-Factor has helped many golfers understand the relationship between body rotation and power, it has been criticized for its potential to lead to injury and for being less relevant in modern swing theory. Today, many instructors focus on a more balanced, athletic approach rather than maximizing separation between the hips and shoulders.
It should maybe be mentioned that "coil" can mean a couple things. Pete Cowen emphasizes "coiling" but its relative to the entire body--starting from the ground up. Id think you'd support his instruction/theory no??
You know what? You're right. This explains why I'm always rebounding (bouncing) back from the top of my backswing. To stop it , I force myself to stop all motion at the top. But I find that I can't do that without a prolonged pause, and I look ridiculous. The other players might as well go out for their lunch at the top of my backswing. So now I'm experimenting with putting a loop at the top. But that has me hooking it a whole fairway over. I don't know what else to do? Any ideas?
@@MrLondinium I tried that squat move, but the timing through the bottom of the downswing more often than not, results in inconsistent ball strikes for me (fat and thin).
@@pappaflammyboi5799 that's what happened to me too but my coach pointed out that I was lifting my hands too much in the backswing. The snead squat only works if your hands stay below the shoulder line like Snead or Hogan
Unfortunately I am left handed thrower and a right handed golfer, guess I need to learn to throw right handed too. Of course I have been playing golf for 67 years, hope it isn’t too late!
@@kevinhwangjrastounded you responded to me. You are right, I was actually kidding a bit because I do still play decently but the thought of the frisbee throw is excellent. I struggled for years trying to get my right side better involved, maybe I should have always been just going with my strength😎
ok ok ok.... so you can't compare pitching and any other rotational movement to the golf swing. It has similarities but also very different. Pitchers don't use long clubs, and they throw much faster, bigger and vigorous movements (kinda more like long distance driver hitters). The key difference is most amateur golfers don't have the flexibility or strength to have an x-factor. In fact, most amateurs can't even touch their toes. So x-factor works but it requires flexibility strength and muscle memory of playing golf for years (correctly) to do it naturally. Listen to Dana Dahlquist talk about it in a recent video on Jerome Rufin's channel. He asks the question about x-factor. Dana's response is yes you need it for speed, but you don't need it to play golf.
Human spines are not designed to twist and it does not have that recoil factor. Our spine is not elastic and we should do everything to protect it, if you apply excessive amount of torque to your spine you will effe it up very easily, please look at Tiger Woods
Just tell me what is this video based on? Every single pro does what you do in this video. As the takeaway starts, the lead knee starts to bend, the lead hip dips down and upper body is rotating all in sync. The only time the lower body is more locked in is when you do approach wedge shots because you wanna limit the compressing and driving of the ball and you wanna give it higher ball flight and release the club earlier. Also the coil does happen at the end of the back swing, it has to happen, even the slightest, the upper body and lower body have to separate for the kinetic chain to activate properly.
The 20-some year old X factor cover article in golf digest ruined many amateur golf swings (mine is exhibit 1) for many years and caused chronic back discomfort for many. I believe that concept was golf instruction malpractice and whoever it was who came up with that concept should be banished from golf instruction. To this day, I’m still trying to recover from that misinformation and the bad habits and psychological damage it caused. I’m working on this very concept for some time now with inconsistent results…
I indirectly blame Tiger for promoting the “X” Factor Swing because of all the analysis of his powerful upper body swing when he was in his prime. Eventually it took its toll on his back and knees.
@@GoGetFletch I believe Tiger is one of a kind and his swing in the early 2000s to give home the benefit of the doubt had a X factor feel. However now even when he recently won the masters you can see him turning everything together compared to back in the day. The X factor is not a problem if you have to mobility 👍🏼
I like your explanation of using your whole body like throwing a baseball we just don't use our upper body we use our whole body. But I don't like your title, it should say use your whole body to get effortless power. Stack and tilt is great for accuracy on the wedges and low irons but is a killer for the driver and distance.
McClain's X Factor creates a lot of torque which is great for more diistance. But, it also creates a LOT of stress and tension in our backs, knees, hips, and shoulders. Not good!
The whole X factor thing never made any sense after hitting baseballs when I was young - my baseball swing obviously took some tweaking but it made me a natural at my golf swing and my whole body rotates and my front foot actually slightly leaves the ground on my backswing just like it did in baseball but it works.
Yes sir. 100% correct.
Great Job explaining such an important concept, that's been forgotten, but finally returning us to sanity and logic.
Twenty years of restricting my torso in the golf swing and one visit to your channel has corrected that horrible technique...Thank you for posting this...I'm sure this video will help countless, clueless, golf lovers out there who have been lead down the wrong road, and fed disinformation about how a proper golf swing should be executed...Brilliant!!!!!
Body friendly with effortless power due to a bigger turn. Plus you're less likely to sway or steepen the club coming down. I connect my lead arm until the throw. Thanks!
I mean I really dont understand what this guy is talking about. Who coils like that with the lower body completely inactive? Every single pro does what he is doing in this video, the lead knee bends, lead hip dips down as the upper body rotates, its all in sync together.
I think he is referencing the technique known as the "X-Factor"...I remember this concept where your lower body should stay as still as possible while your upper body turns... Supposedly allowing for more coil...
@@tonyshans2226 The lower body should stop coiling at some point before the upper body. I am not famimliar with this x factor but I will assume people misunderstood it. And he just moved the coiling into downswing, this is what Jon Rahm does. I dont think anyome ever said that the lower body stays completely still.
@@outlander234Jim McClain back in the sat popularized the x factor move and ideally, we all have the physical capability to have a huge difference between the turning of the upper body and a minimal turn of the lower. His point is that most of us don't. Hence rather than trying to get that differential on your backswing, you do it on your downswing.
Mr. Wang, this is the single best lesson on the swing that I have ever been taught, witnessed at a clinic, seen on video or read in a book. I am 68 years old and have been playing since I was five. You have a new subscriber and devotee. Thank you.
@@jeffreyprice2982 thank you so much for the kind words 🙏🏼
I think it's good too
Kevin, what a great explanation. As a much younger man, I threw the frisbee a lot and far! When we really wanted to rip it, I specifically remember turning the legs and hips hard, then pulling the torso around, and finally letting the arms and wrists just RIP!!! Now I get sequence. Funny, no one ever had to teach us that with the frisbee! But when you put a club in our hands, our athletic instincts just bleed our of our feet! Thanks, again!
This dudes setup is amazing. Very clean.
This is such a gem, simple and concise to the point for all the golfer, especially for senior, baseball is exactly concrete evidence. Sub your channel.
The absolute single best swing tip!!! Covers the takeaway, downswing, and follow-thru without over-complicating.
I watched this video yesterday and went to the range immediately after, best and most consistent range session I’ve had. Went to the range earlier and same consistent results. Thanks a million
I subscribed. This is the most logical swing, for us old non-flexible guys, that I've seen. Can't wait to hit the driving range. Thanks.
Excellent, Kevin, and much easier on the back.
You are 100% correct! Jim McLean killed many amateur golfers swings with his X-factor article in Golf Digest many years ago. Unfortunately, there is a lot of bad instruction out there and we have no way to separate the good from the bad which leads to constant doubt. No wonder we struggle.
@rw_golf6387 To this day Jim McLean still pushes that X-Factor B.S. along with his 21 "death moves", or however many he decides to chat about. I heard him on Mark Immelman's podcast (which is terrific) and he must have mentioned "X-Factor" 200 times. I mean, how archaic of an approach to golf instruction is that?
Thankfully there is a market of ideas. Pure physics approach is going to be the best no matter what.
Lots of propaganda took hold before this internet thing. It really is crazy.
X Factor = BAD issues with lower vertebra in back!
McClain in his defense, is still technically correct. But as this guy says, not all of us have the capability to create the x factor on the backswing, so it might be easier to do so on the downswing swing. But McClain is still correct. That differential is still important. How you get that differential might be more nuanced.
This can be very useful swing thought for many golfers. By not thinking about the separation, but the movement and the end goal they can stop limiting their motion and, some of them, stop hitting with their hands.
And if you stop this video at the top of the backswing at around 5:47 for example, you see that there is separation. Shoulders have turned more than pelvis. Not 90 degrees (or even more like some pros), but probably an amount that feel comfortable for him.
Only thing missing here (that some other YT coaches are saying, even if they talk about the separation) is that you can lift the heel of your front foot to get more turn on your hips. I used that at one point just to have a "trigger" for my downswing; start by planting that heel and it's almost granted that you start with your hips.
I am not as flexible as i used to. So this will help me and others a lot. That back swing coil thing destroyed me now but was good back then. Good tips.
you are a very knowledgeable and informative young man, thnx.
Excellent insight into the mechanics of the swing sir!
Throw the club. Simple and accurate example. Thank you
I like your thoughts 👍🏽
In a different way , I will try it. it Looks very simple. Good video thanks
Very true! I just started doing this, and it works!
Thank you!
Great advice!!
100% correct.
As an addition to what's been said in the video, a lot of amateurs will find issues with the timing off the turn, so it is possible to pre set the shoulders and hips at address, which leaves you with just an arm back swing (to get the rubber band feeling you mentioned) and then follow through. This pre set also guarantees a draw.
For anyone interested this is generally called stack and tilt, but some instructors have variations. Saguto and Jim Venetos have good examples of this.
I really like your easy to understand explanations on the different parts of the swing. Nice video! That is some serious speed from a nice rhythm!
Wow, incredible lesson. Thank you!
Will be trying this at the range this weekend.
Aha. This is what I needed. Just went on my practice area at home and it clicked. Thank you! Good lord I needed this.
Amazing! I will try this new golf swing style soon!
Impressive golf tip and I have watched a lot of UA-cam golf tips! I’m definitely going to try this out. Thanks!
Another excellent lesson
Thanks Kevin ⛳️
Great video!
So simple yet so effective!
@@WyleCote thank you 🙏🏼
Thank you Keving for another nugget.
Would the feeling be like you want to throw/ release your club out? If so is thdt something you can show us to try throwing the club into a net? Thank you
good lesson! Thanks!
Great explanation. Important I believe it cos my son throws his club similar to the way you do it. His 7 iron is 170 m carry as logged on the simulator on the range. There is both visual and electronic verification. My other son same age don't seem to be able to generate the same speed and his swing does not seem to have the throws pattern like yours. He average 140 m for his 7. Still alright but I believe in using your body both upper and lower to throw the arms with the club together across the ball.
This is a monumental breakthrough
It is working well, but my trajectory is too high, any thoughts on how to swing this way but get a somewhat lower ball flight? Thanks.
I agree with pretty much everything spoken about here. The only caution is that "throwing the club at the target" should be done with zero tension in the arms and wrists. All good, great video.
Brilliant
This is what I’ve been telling people for years. Unfortunately it took me years to find this out for myself, I remember when the “X Factor “ story came out in golf digest and I bought it hook line and sinker, to my own detriment.
Its Ok, We all bought into that nonsense..
Great teaching! But, I was more fixated with the ball coming up through the hitting surface. Wow!
Wow, look great
That is the most effortless swing I’ve ever seen
You da man🤛🏾
Is this the same feeling for both the driver and irons?
It would be very helpful to see the flight path of the ball’s you hit as well as the club head and ball speeds.
This goes against everything I’ve heard on Utube. Pete Cowin even says to coil to the top. Hips open 45° and shoulders open 90°. I think this could be the key for me. Gonna try it this week. It sure makes a lot of sense. Great lesson!
That's the secret.
Don't listen to the people with an agenda....
Very well explained thanks 🙏 but should not we bring our arms first in the back swing and let the hips rotate naturally following the arms ?
In the downswing are you dropping your hands straight down or not? Explain. Thank you
Thank you for your great videos. When I watch your swing in slow motion, it looks like you are using a really weak shaft. Is this right or just a distortion? Greetings, Richard
Alright, good video and tips. I was skeptical at first. Ha.
Trebuchet 🎉
where did you get your trousers
Seriously, THAT"S what you got out of the video?
LMAO
Kevin ,Should Rolling be done with the left or right hand to hit the ball? for right hands golfers
Kevin...noticed that your head appears to move a bit i.e. to the right and up in your back swing and down and back to setup position on your forward swing. Can you please clarify this a bit more? Doesn't moving your head promote an inconsistent swing? Thanks
When you throw your club towards the target, which arm do you dominate to generate the power?
Right hand throw is the key.
@@MeandMyStaffyAgree to disagree. Lead arm is the key.
Just realized I get all of my golf habits from, its from my disc frisbee days as a kid. I couldnt throw it well regular, I flicked everything... as a right handed player
Lol@discgolf
@shmitty33 yee I meant to write is as disc/Frisbee days but the lack of punctuation and word vomit makes it very silly
This seems contrary to Leadbetter and the Pro's we see. In the back swing the pro's end up at 90 deg torso and 45 deg hips. In Leadbetter they taught coil in the backswing, but that in the coil process the hips will naturally stop earlier than the torso. what you seem to be saying is that the lower body and upper body "coil" the same in the back swing. is that right?
Hey Kevin can you do a video on your grip. How strong is your left hand?
Makes sense.
I’ve e always heard it’s 90degress upper body and 35-40 degrees lower body on the back swing.
Lower body slings upper body on downswing?
@@greggallego3111 yes just like throwing a ball or frisbee 👍🏼
When you throw a ball or skip a rock you don't need an x Factor it comes natural
I'm hypermobile, everyone said not to copy the pros. It was easy for me went from 120-95 and hit in the 80s from time to time in my first year
Cliff notes......for an instinctively safe swing; all rotation takes place BELOW the pelvis and cooperates with your anatomy. Check out the ball and socket joints at the top of the femurs located BELOW the pelvis. Vertebrae located above the pelvis are not designed for safe rotation. This is the root cause of a generation LOST.
👍
Not sure how I got here.. But this deserves a sub.
Kevin can u demonstrate the downswing I notice that u dip on the way down
Every player dips down on the downswing. Its how you use the vertical force.
What club are you hitting?
Are you flipping your hands at impact to square the club?
Almost similar to Ben Hogan 🎉
When I pitched, it looked like I was targeting the batter, I wound up playing centerfield.
While the X-Factor has helped many golfers understand the relationship between body rotation and power, it has been criticized for its potential to lead to injury and for being less relevant in modern swing theory. Today, many instructors focus on a more balanced, athletic approach rather than maximizing separation between the hips and shoulders.
Welp, I know what I'm gonna be working over the winter months.
Great lesson! If I were going to teach a new player, I would start at a pond skipping stones.
@@MB-rh3ym absolutely 👍🏼
Yes and this is exactly how Bobby Jones allowed his lower body to turn with his upper body!
It should maybe be mentioned that "coil" can mean a couple things. Pete Cowen emphasizes "coiling" but its relative to the entire body--starting from the ground up. Id think you'd support his instruction/theory no??
Most people in the US, need to develop YIN (soft) energy and speed before they can develop it in their golf swing.
The MLB example is the BEST picture for the full downswing sequence, even better the the frisbee. Boo the X-Factor😂
You know what? You're right. This explains why I'm always rebounding (bouncing) back from the top of my backswing. To stop it , I force myself to stop all motion at the top. But I find that I can't do that without a prolonged pause, and I look ridiculous. The other players might as well go out for their lunch at the top of my backswing. So now I'm experimenting with putting a loop at the top. But that has me hooking it a whole fairway over. I don't know what else to do? Any ideas?
Oh man, just don't watch any Charles Barkley golf video's.
Hideo Nomo was a unicorn. But he coiled first. Dude was a stud
Man I miss living in Korea they have the best screen golf facilities
It's just like a Ben Hogan swing.
Or Sam Snead - in fact the Snead squat is a great way to initiate that whole "lower body first" move.
@@MrLondinium I tried that squat move, but the timing through the bottom of the downswing more often than not, results in inconsistent ball strikes for me (fat and thin).
@@pappaflammyboi5799 that's what happened to me too but my coach pointed out that I was lifting my hands too much in the backswing. The snead squat only works if your hands stay below the shoulder line like Snead or Hogan
@@MrLondinium Ah, I lift high above my shoulder line too. I've been trying to stop that. Bad habits die hard.
Agree with everything except I don't see the separation. It sure looks like your coming down together to me
Unfortunately I am left handed thrower and a right handed golfer, guess I need to learn to throw right handed too. Of course I have been playing golf for 67 years, hope it isn’t too late!
@@davesabine9912 left hand frisbee throwing motion would be great for you 👍🏼
@@kevinhwangjrastounded you responded to me. You are right, I was actually kidding a bit because I do still play decently but the thought of the frisbee throw is excellent. I struggled for years trying to get my right side better involved, maybe I should have always been just going with my strength😎
actually the right side of my body slows down my swing!, my frisbee “swing” is tons faster.
ok ok ok.... so you can't compare pitching and any other rotational movement to the golf swing. It has similarities but also very different. Pitchers don't use long clubs, and they throw much faster, bigger and vigorous movements (kinda more like long distance driver hitters). The key difference is most amateur golfers don't have the flexibility or strength to have an x-factor. In fact, most amateurs can't even touch their toes. So x-factor works but it requires flexibility strength and muscle memory of playing golf for years (correctly) to do it naturally. Listen to Dana Dahlquist talk about it in a recent video on Jerome Rufin's channel. He asks the question about x-factor. Dana's response is yes you need it for speed, but you don't need it to play golf.
Some slo mo would be helpful
Anyone know what club he’s using to hit 200?
Was in meters. So like 175 to 180. Probably 7 iron or so
Human spines are not designed to twist and it does not have that recoil factor. Our spine is not elastic and we should do everything to protect it, if you apply excessive amount of torque to your spine you will effe it up very easily, please look at Tiger Woods
Making lots of sense. I never like the classic golf coaching.
Yes. Too hard on the lower back.
This WAS the classic teaching until 1990
Watch Fred Couples perfect example
Swing the shoulders. The body will follow
I coached a couple who went to Jim McLean every winter for weeks at a time. They were both dreadful golfers.
I have no doubt about that.
Mclean has ruined more gofers than all the rest combined.
Just tell me what is this video based on? Every single pro does what you do in this video. As the takeaway starts, the lead knee starts to bend, the lead hip dips down and upper body is rotating all in sync. The only time the lower body is more locked in is when you do approach wedge shots because you wanna limit the compressing and driving of the ball and you wanna give it higher ball flight and release the club earlier. Also the coil does happen at the end of the back swing, it has to happen, even the slightest, the upper body and lower body have to separate for the kinetic chain to activate properly.
The 20-some year old X factor cover article in golf digest ruined many amateur golf swings (mine is exhibit 1) for many years and caused chronic back discomfort for many. I believe that concept was golf instruction malpractice and whoever it was who came up with that concept should be banished from golf instruction. To this day, I’m still trying to recover from that misinformation and the bad habits and psychological damage it caused. I’m working on this very concept for some time now with inconsistent results…
I indirectly blame Tiger for promoting the “X” Factor Swing because of all the analysis of his powerful upper body swing when he was in his prime. Eventually it took its toll on his back and knees.
@@GoGetFletch I believe Tiger is one of a kind and his swing in the early 2000s to give home the benefit of the doubt had a X factor feel. However now even when he recently won the masters you can see him turning everything together compared to back in the day. The X factor is not a problem if you have to mobility 👍🏼
some of us are actually very flexible and to say that amateurs are not flexible like the tour players is not very accurate
@@merciejo1 in my opinion for the most part it is pretty accurate, you might be a special few 👍🏼
I like your explanation of using your whole body like throwing a baseball we just don't use our upper body we use our whole body. But I don't like your title, it should say use your whole body to get effortless power. Stack and tilt is great for accuracy on the wedges and low irons but is a killer for the driver and distance.
Coiling and torque in the back swing ruined my back in the 90's!
McClain's X Factor creates a lot of torque which is great for more diistance. But, it also creates a LOT of stress and tension in our backs, knees, hips, and shoulders. Not good!
The whole X factor thing never made any sense after hitting baseballs when I was young - my baseball swing obviously took some tweaking but it made me a natural at my golf swing and my whole body rotates and my front foot actually slightly leaves the ground on my backswing just like it did in baseball but it works.
I noticed you don't show your ball's flight path. I bet you can't hit a straight shot to save your life