Awesome question and awesome video! Addressing the ball with some forward shaft lean has transformed my ball striking in ways I literally didn't think was possible.
During a recent lessons with my club pro, I was told to keep my setup hand position inside my left thigh for sand shots and pitches of 50 yards or so. But I've been experimenting with that position on longer irons and have seen some success, especially in ball striking. Thanks, Chris.
Thanks Chris I have been looking for 1 video the last 3 days that finally makes this clear there is no one setup for everyone. Now I can work on my game.
This is exactly what I am working on at the moment. I normally address the ball with my hands similar position to yours. I put some white foot spray on the mat at the range. I noticed that I bottom out more on the ball. I tried leaning my hands much more forward toward the middle of my front thigh. I was then bottoming out about 1 or 2 inch after the ball. My ball striking improved 100%. So will definatly be taking this set up to the course. Thank you for the explanation. You certainly know your stuff.
I've always had a problem of hitting the ground before the ball with irons, or in compensating for that, thinning the ball. I tried this setup advice and suddenly iron shots are solid, reliable, straight and longer. Not what the video is particularly aimed at, I know, but it turns out to be an incredibly effective tip. It appears that I'd been trying to hit the ball on the upswing, so either having to hit the ground first or hitting with the base of the club turned up and the blade edge hitting the ball first. Moving hands forward at address (and returning to that position during the swing) seems to make me hit the ball with the clubhead behind the hands, thus striking the ball with the club face, then striking the turf. Which, no doubt, is second nature to many, but I suspect that I'm not the only golfer who's never worked out how to manage this basic action! So thanks for helping.
For so long I had the hinge at address all wrong for full shots vs pitch shots. Literally had them backwards. This video was a eureka moment for me and I’m finally hitting nice draws
Thanks Chris. I also lean the shaft towards the left side at address, feels more natural even in the takeaway... you lesson made complete sense. Appreciate it.
What a great tip , tried this tonight on the course as I’ve suffered with a cupped wrist for years , there was a instant improvement, a great fix with a lot of things in my swing , thanks Kevin
Very good advice from Chris...if you're a golfer who is trying to "time-up" the flattening of the left wrist at impact, that can be very dangerous. By setting the hands forward at address, you have eliminated the need to "time" the flattening of the wrist at impact. You can swing through the impact zone freely, knowing your hands are where they need to be at impact.
Chris Ryan, thanks for the work you do to post these videos, your consistently explain concepts in a way that not only make sense to me, buy they become actionable in my quest for improvement. You are one of the best on UA-cam!
Best piece of information . Now I know that shaft lean is important but at the same time not that important pending if you can achieve a flat wrist at the top
Thanks a lot for this video. I was having problems with returning to a straight wrist at impact. I now place my hands forward, and all my shots are now quite straight!!! Thanks!!!
Thanks for this video and great explanation Chris. Having that bowed wrist coming into impact is definitley something im working on to help compress my irons instead of the thin weak shots ive been hitting before. I prefer bowing the left wrist slightly as it hinges in the backswing instead of keeping the hands further forward at address, this video definitley helps reassure me with that. 👍
Brilliant explanation! Chris, You have a gift for making the complex understand able to the common golfer. My follow up question concerns the grip. Should I take my grip with the club vertical and then lean the club forward?
Mary is my wife. I'm her husband Phil. I have been plaYING FOR 45 YEARS.. i'M 85 AND LOVE GOLF. I happen to get on your video this morning. I watch this video and kept your lesson in mind. I have been trying to draw the ball for 45 years with no results, up to now. Today day, I hiit 4 great draws. Wow. Can't wait to watch your iron videos. Thanks
Thanks Chris. Great video! Can you please also comment on the effect the hands' set-up position has on the (initial) backswing plane? I've been battling with an inside takeaway for years. Having the club vertical (i.e. not leaned forward) at address has helped me to achieve a more upright takeaway.
Thanks for this tip Chris. I struggle to flatten out the left wrist. I've noticed that I've been playing with a very vertical shaft with most clubs and even tend to drag the club back delaying my wrist set. I'll experiment a little with shaft lean now.
If you lean it a little it also promotes a little more inside the line takeaway, which doesn't hurt either........this guy does a really good job in helping people. The struggle is you have to commit to it and not revert back to old hand positions the first time you squirt one off to the right. Committing to changes in your golf swing requires patience, and most of us don't have a lot when it comes to golf.
Hi Chris, I thought the design of Irons required a progressive forward Shaft Lean at Address, with the 7 Iron about 1 inch forward and Wedge about 2/3 inches forward. Your Video suggests vertical is OK if you can handle the Cupping to the correct flat wrist at impact. Love your work.
I’ve noticed that having the handle too far forward makes it hard to bring the club around my body and stay compact. I tried keeping the shaft more vertical with my 5 iron and noticed my swing felt a lot more natural with better ball contact.
Very clear explanation why some players do that for their set up. Before I watched this video I wasn't sure why I have mine lead hand a bit more forward to set up, I tends to do that from mid irons to wedge shots. I find very difficult to aim to the target esp with more loft clubs, even I tried yours method. Hopefully you can do a video help us solve it
just had a lesson and asked the pro about hand/handle position. the forward position is what we went with. feels weird but works lovely. also stops me flipping/looks a lot better on camera too.
Hands in a forward position is the correct setup. It is the way the club is designed otherwise you have simply added loft and made it more difficult to consistently flight the ball. The sweet spot...if you will...on an iron is about groove 3,4. If you add loft at address you will strike the ball far closer to groove 2 which not produce the solids strike and flight as intended by design. If you are referring to a particular shot, say a fade it is really no different. Simply a change in alignment and delivering a normal swing along that alignment will produce a fade. Staying “square to square” is where all players should begin and end with the large body muscles moving the club. Taking the hands out of the swing is the key to producing quality ball compression and steady consistency. Cheers.
Cheers for this, I have been researching "what is a closed stance in golf?" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Have you ever come across - Reyuhaffad Underlying Recognition - (Have a quick look on google cant remember the place now ) ? It is an awesome one off product for discovering how to revealing an effortless golf swing technique minus the headache. Ive heard some great things about it and my buddy got amazing results with it.
Hi Chris. Do you have a video on the routine for setting up to hit your irons. For example. Do you take your grip first then align your feet and posture. Would you take up your posture first and align your club face behind the ball with your left hand then complete your grip with your right hand? What it the correct routine?
Thank Chris , I am blading or topping golf ball , for me this helps me also for better impact , and hit ball with sweet spot. I place my hands inside of left leg. This works for me :) , I like your channel so much. Thanks for this work.
hi Chris - great video on hand position for irons. I will also check out your driver one. My question is on long irons, where the ball is more forward in your stance. Do you still have the handle come back to your zipper/belt buckle position, or is it forward as much as the ball is so as to remain perpendicular to the target line? I tend to have my wrist pretty flat at impact usually, so don't feel I need to start with a big forward press of the shaft. Thanks!
That was a great explanation. Never heard it presented that way. However my problem at least visually to me is that to align the club head (iron) I find that I am moving my hands forward because if I try and take the handle back to neutral as you show in the video the club appears to me to be dead left. Especially with the wedges. I know I must be missing something becasue I have never heard or seen this issue addressed.
Great videos Chris. Seen a lot of stuff recently about the role of the right arm/wrist for a rt-handed golfer. Some say this is really where the power resides? News to me. I know a long distance driver and he agrees. I just can't imaging getting much power from "pushing" with the right arm/wrist. Any comments?Bruce, Toronto, Can.
Chris, Thanks - very helpful! My swing has gone in the crapper and I need a swing thought to avoid coming way over the top and as a result, coming outside in and shanking it off the hosel...please help!
Hi Chris, great video as usual, thank you. I am struggling with my iron game at the moment, as in I believe that setting my hands at vertical at address is causing me to flip the clubface at the ball causing me inconsistent ball striking? As sometimes i hit it thin and other times fat? I think that there are to many moving parts going on with my wrists. And thought that setting my hands at address in a straight line with my left arm, (as per your vid) to help alleviate this movement? Thoughts please? Kind regards, Graham
It seems that regardless of when you create a flat left wrist during the swing, it is still possible to have a cupped left wrist at impact if the right hand and wrist overpower the left. This is my problem, since I’m very right side dominant and want to add “hit” to the swing with the stronger right hand and wrist.
If you decide to have the handle forward at address would you simply move it forward after you have taken your grip or do you set the handle forward and then take your grip? I have tried both and they produce different results concerning where the v's made by your hands point.
I've noticed that Stenson has a very pronounced forward press prior to his backswing, which adds to his take away trigger. When I've had lessons I've been told to have the handle forward which produces more sideways tilt at address
Even though this says it is for irons it explains my issue with the driver. I have always wondered why I can hit a 3 wood much more accurately than a driver without the mega fade and this explained it to a "T". On my 3 wood I start with my hands forward causing the forward shaft lean. I have no idea why, but I have been doing this for years without having been taught. I am much more consistent with the 3 wood. I guess I am no good at flattening the wrist without this forward shaft lean. I am going to try this with a driver and see what happens. I will also look to implement this into my inconsistent mid irons game.
Hi Chris, love your videos. Can you make a video about the angle of the wrists at impact? If the right wrist full extension is 90 degrees to your forearm, at impact is the wrist stay at 90 degrees, 45 or back to neutral?
Setting up with the iron shaft forward isn't optional. It's the design of the club. People have the wrong idea about what a "square" clubface is. What really occurs is the hands hold the club 30-40 degrees shut. But once you drop the trail shoulder in the process of bringing the club down to the ball, this places the shaft ahead of the ball, thus "squaring" the face. What this does is allow us to move into the shot, impacting the ball correctly, with 2 club deloft on irons. The design of the club dictates the hands be forward, otherwise the swing must be manipulated and thus decreasing consistency and repeatability.
Chris, aren’t irons built so that the shaft leans slightly forward when the club face is square at address (mine are). As such, aren’t your hands always going to be slightly forward of the ball at address?
Refreshing to here a golf pro say its down to ur preference. Iv been for lessons in the past with a top 25 teaching pro and he took my shaft lean out at address saying it not the way to set up. Iv just ordered the DST compressor training club. Whats your thoughts on it? Thanks
Good video Chris ,could you discuss bunker shots. I see some players open club face and swing across the ball the club face is open wide.. I also see some player's who don't have club face open wide and they don't come across the ball the swing fairly square at the ball. What's the correct way I struggle with bunker shots.
I have always played golf with the handle forward at address, and I tend to post up strong on the lead foot. Some of the guys give me a hard time about my setup and alignment, despite my ballstriking being superior to theirs in most cases My explanation to them was I pre-set my position so that I don't need to worry about flattening my wrist, which made no sense to them at all. It is nice to see that my golf swing anomaly is not uncommon, though I do from time to time struggle with low left shots with my shorter irons due to this technique and having a fairly strong grip to begin with. It is something I would like to change, but when you hit them pure, and compress them like I do it is hard to convince a change is really necessary. Would you suggest trying to fix this or just learn to live with it as I have for years?
@@ChrisRyanGolf I will work on that, lately I have been gripping the club more neutral then turning into my usual strong grip (open face maybe 5-10*). Sometimes I end up with a big block to the right, sometimes I fan the face open more in the backswing and end up hooking it because I will instinctively close the face rapidly lol. I will work on it.
QUERY: I tend to have a flat swing plane and an prone to pulling my wedges. The pull seens more severe with higher lofted wedges. What is the cause and is there a fix?
Thanks for the video Chris, your videos help me tremendously. I have a really important question that would really help me out. I have the same extension on my lead wrist at address. It helps me put leverage on the club handle during my backswing “hope that’s ok to do?” But at impact my club face is open. So what do u recommend I do? Should I have a Flat leading wrist at address ? I really like to extend my wrist at address so I have that Leverage and that “pushing the heel down so there’s pressure down on the heel so at impact I can compress” please advise it would be greatly appreciative. Btw: i score a consistent 42-45 on a 9hole. Just Incase that matters. Thanks again Chris!!
Awesome question and awesome video! Addressing the ball with some forward shaft lean has transformed my ball striking in ways I literally didn't think was possible.
Man, I love the way you explain things; always thorough and clear. An asset to golftube!
This tip or advise is often overlooked! I struggled with early extension and flipping for years...moved my hands forward and fixed it right away. Thx!
I reckon Chris Ryan is the best golf tutor (if that's what you'd call it) on youtube. No nonsense, just clear questions, and clear answers.
Thanks for that, appreciate the kind words 👊👊
During a recent lessons with my club pro, I was told to keep my setup hand position inside my left thigh for sand shots and pitches of 50 yards or so. But I've been experimenting with that position on longer irons and have seen some success, especially in ball striking. Thanks, Chris.
Thanks Chris I have been looking for 1 video the last 3 days that finally makes this clear there is no one setup for everyone. Now I can work on my game.
Chris, This helps me a great deal. Went to driving range, and it completely change my iron swing and I hit all irons solidly. Thank you so much!
Very helpful. Reinforces what I was thinking as I found it easier to press forward a bit and maintain more consistency in my striking.
Chris has very clear answers to the golf question. My go golf instructor if i need answers
This is exactly what I am working on at the moment. I normally address the ball with my hands similar position to yours. I put some white foot spray on the mat at the range. I noticed that I bottom out more on the ball. I tried leaning my hands much more forward toward the middle of my front thigh. I was then bottoming out about 1 or 2 inch after the ball. My ball striking improved 100%. So will definatly be taking this set up to the course. Thank you for the explanation. You certainly know your stuff.
I just wanted to say thank you for this video. It helped me tremendously. I went with the forward shaft lean and striking my irons pure now !!
Exactly what I needed and wanted to know. Thank you for great and clear explanation
Great video Chris - you've explained the importance of the left wrist at impact v. just describing the hand position!
I've always had a problem of hitting the ground before the ball with irons, or in compensating for that, thinning the ball. I tried this setup advice and suddenly iron shots are solid, reliable, straight and longer. Not what the video is particularly aimed at, I know, but it turns out to be an incredibly effective tip. It appears that I'd been trying to hit the ball on the upswing, so either having to hit the ground first or hitting with the base of the club turned up and the blade edge hitting the ball first.
Moving hands forward at address (and returning to that position during the swing) seems to make me hit the ball with the clubhead behind the hands, thus striking the ball with the club face, then striking the turf. Which, no doubt, is second nature to many, but I suspect that I'm not the only golfer who's never worked out how to manage this basic action! So thanks for helping.
I just discovered the same thing yesterday! Good explanation from Chris.
I moved my hands forward and it has really helped with my irons. Would you say I am fine to do this on all of my irons?
For so long I had the hinge at address all wrong for full shots vs pitch shots. Literally had them backwards. This video was a eureka moment for me and I’m finally hitting nice draws
Thanks Chris. I also lean the shaft towards the left side at address, feels more natural even in the takeaway... you lesson made complete sense. Appreciate it.
What a great tip , tried this tonight on the course as I’ve suffered with a cupped wrist for years , there was a instant improvement, a great fix with a lot of things in my swing , thanks Kevin
Very good advice from Chris...if you're a golfer who is trying to "time-up" the flattening of the left wrist at impact, that can be very dangerous. By setting the hands forward at address, you have eliminated the need to "time" the flattening of the wrist at impact.
You can swing through the impact zone freely, knowing your hands are where they need to be at impact.
Chris Ryan, thanks for the work you do to post these videos, your consistently explain concepts in a way that not only make sense to me, buy they become actionable in my quest for improvement. You are one of the best on UA-cam!
Best piece of information . Now I know that shaft lean is important but at the same time not that important pending if you can achieve a flat wrist at the top
Thanks a lot for this video. I was having problems with returning to a straight wrist at impact. I now place my hands forward, and all my shots are now quite straight!!! Thanks!!!
What a brilliant explanation of how set up affects ball strike. Well done sir! thanks
Thanks for this video and great explanation Chris. Having that bowed wrist coming into impact is definitley something im working on to help compress my irons instead of the thin weak shots ive been hitting before. I prefer bowing the left wrist slightly as it hinges in the backswing instead of keeping the hands further forward at address, this video definitley helps reassure me with that. 👍
Great tip for the average golfer like myself,, this has stopped my slicing of the ball totally .thanks
Brilliant explanation! Chris, You have a gift for making the complex understand able to the common golfer. My follow up question concerns the grip. Should I take my grip with the club vertical and then lean the club forward?
Thank you, Chris. This is one of those questions that has vexed me for years.
Mary is my wife. I'm her husband Phil. I have been plaYING FOR 45 YEARS.. i'M 85 AND LOVE GOLF. I happen to get on your video this morning. I watch this video and kept your lesson in mind. I have been trying to draw the ball for 45 years with no results, up to now. Today day, I hiit 4 great draws. Wow. Can't wait to watch your iron videos. Thanks
THANK YOU CHRIS THAT WAS A REALLY GOOD TIP ABOUT HAND POSITION
Thanks Chris. Great video! Can you please also comment on the effect the hands' set-up position has on the (initial) backswing plane? I've been battling with an inside takeaway for years. Having the club vertical (i.e. not leaned forward) at address has helped me to achieve a more upright takeaway.
Thanks for this tip Chris. I struggle to flatten out the left wrist. I've noticed that I've been playing with a very vertical shaft with most clubs and even tend to drag the club back delaying my wrist set. I'll experiment a little with shaft lean now.
Great explanation! Turned an abstract concept into a concrete one in a few minutes.
If you lean it a little it also promotes a little more inside the line takeaway, which doesn't hurt either........this guy does a really good job in helping people. The struggle is you have to commit to it and not revert back to old hand positions the first time you squirt one off to the right. Committing to changes in your golf swing requires patience, and most of us don't have a lot when it comes to golf.
Great Explanation. One of the best Ive seen.
Hi Chris, I thought the design of Irons required a progressive forward Shaft Lean at Address, with the 7 Iron about 1 inch forward and Wedge about 2/3 inches forward. Your Video suggests vertical is OK if you can handle the Cupping to the correct flat wrist at impact. Love your work.
Wow very helpful
you're the best, Chris. This really helped
Chad Jankowiak Totally agree. It helped me a great deal.
EXACTLY!! The answer I was looking for!!!!! Legend!!
I’ve noticed that having the handle too far forward makes it hard to bring the club around my body and stay compact. I tried keeping the shaft more vertical with my 5 iron and noticed my swing felt a lot more natural with better ball contact.
Excellent explanation, the best I've seen.
Very clear explanation why some players do that for their set up. Before I watched this video I wasn't sure why I have mine lead hand a bit more forward to set up, I tends to do that from mid irons to wedge shots. I find very difficult to aim to the target esp with more loft clubs, even I tried yours method. Hopefully you can do a video help us solve it
It is a wonderful tip. It has changed my golf
Can’t wait to try this Sunday
Wow, this made a huge difference in my golf game.
Good info. Exactly what I was looking for.
I discovered that having a bit of shaft lean at address has helped me stop flipping the club at impact!! 👍
just had a lesson and asked the pro about hand/handle position. the forward position is what we went with. feels weird but works lovely. also stops me flipping/looks a lot better on camera too.
Hands in a forward position is the correct setup. It is the way the club is designed otherwise you have simply added loft and made it more difficult to consistently flight the ball. The sweet spot...if you will...on an iron is about groove 3,4. If you add loft at address you will strike the ball far closer to groove 2 which not produce the solids strike and flight as intended by design. If you are referring to a particular shot, say a fade it is really no different. Simply a change in alignment and delivering a normal swing along that alignment will produce a fade. Staying “square to square” is where all players should begin and end with the large body muscles moving the club. Taking the hands out of the swing is the key to producing quality ball compression and steady consistency. Cheers.
I do have an issue with getting my wrist so definitely going to try that tomorrow thank you
just had a lesson and asked/talked to the pro about forward shaft lean. we did it and it feels so much better, stops me flipping.
Cheers for this, I have been researching "what is a closed stance in golf?" for a while now, and I think this has helped. Have you ever come across - Reyuhaffad Underlying Recognition - (Have a quick look on google cant remember the place now ) ? It is an awesome one off product for discovering how to revealing an effortless golf swing technique minus the headache. Ive heard some great things about it and my buddy got amazing results with it.
@@markspancing9343 Cheers for what?.
Hi Chris. Do you have a video on the routine for setting up to hit your irons. For example. Do you take your grip first then align your feet and posture. Would you take up your posture first and align your club face behind the ball with your left hand then complete your grip with your right hand? What it the correct routine?
Thank Chris , I am blading or topping golf ball , for me this helps me also for better impact , and hit ball with sweet spot. I place my hands inside of left leg. This works for me :) , I like your channel so much. Thanks for this work.
Thanks for watching and commenting, glad you enjoy the channel 👍👍
Thanks I will be trying this on Wednesday
I shoot so well when using hands first starting position. It also reminds me to put the pressure for ball.
Great video Chris, in 6 mins you have helped me understand how i sometimes deliver a open clubface.
Cheers
hi Chris - great video on hand position for irons. I will also check out your driver one. My question is on long irons, where the ball is more forward in your stance. Do you still have the handle come back to your zipper/belt buckle position, or is it forward as much as the ball is so as to remain perpendicular to the target line? I tend to have my wrist pretty flat at impact usually, so don't feel I need to start with a big forward press of the shaft. Thanks!
Incredibly helpful video
That was a great explanation. Never heard it presented that way. However my problem at least visually to me is that to align the club head (iron) I find that I am moving my hands forward because if I try and take the handle back to neutral as you show in the video the club appears to me to be dead left. Especially with the wedges. I know I must be missing something becasue I have never heard or seen this issue addressed.
Hands forward helps you hit the ball first and it can also help with creating an inside to out path.
Great videos Chris. Seen a lot of stuff recently about the role of the right arm/wrist for a rt-handed golfer. Some say this is really where the power resides? News to me. I know a long distance driver and he agrees. I just can't imaging getting much power from "pushing" with the right arm/wrist. Any comments?Bruce, Toronto, Can.
Brilliant video this, thanks mate.
Great help - thanks
Hey Chris, I have to give that your one of the best out there. God bless
Chris, Thanks - very helpful! My swing has gone in the crapper and I need a swing thought to avoid coming way over the top and as a result, coming outside in and shanking it off the hosel...please help!
Hi Chris, great video as usual, thank you. I am struggling with my iron game at the moment, as in I believe that setting my hands at vertical at address is causing me to flip the clubface at the ball causing me inconsistent ball striking? As sometimes i hit it thin and other times fat? I think that there are to many moving parts going on with my wrists. And thought that setting my hands at address in a straight line with my left arm, (as per your vid) to help alleviate this movement? Thoughts please?
Kind regards, Graham
Hi, Chris. Does, this apply to wedges, irons, hybrids, woods and Driver?
It seems that regardless of when you create a flat left wrist during the swing, it is still possible to have a cupped left wrist at impact if the right hand and wrist overpower the left. This is my problem, since I’m very right side dominant and want to add “hit” to the swing with the stronger right hand and wrist.
Another very helpful video! Thank you
Thanks for the video. I always had problem with flipping wrist and seem to have a open face on strike. This seems to help me alot
Many thanks for the explanation. A pro recommended a forward press to address my right ball flight but now I understand why😭!
If you decide to have the handle forward at address would you simply move it forward after you have taken your grip or do you set the handle forward and then take your grip? I have tried both and they produce different results concerning where the v's made by your hands point.
You really seem to care. Thank you for that
That was great, best explaining I have heard
Really great explanation!!!
tks for that because one pro says shaft lean is a must another says straight up so confusing
I've noticed that Stenson has a very pronounced forward press prior to his backswing, which adds to his take away trigger. When I've had lessons I've been told to have the handle forward which produces more sideways tilt at address
Even though this says it is for irons it explains my issue with the driver. I have always wondered why I can hit a 3 wood much more accurately than a driver without the mega fade and this explained it to a "T". On my 3 wood I start with my hands forward causing the forward shaft lean. I have no idea why, but I have been doing this for years without having been taught. I am much more consistent with the 3 wood. I guess I am no good at flattening the wrist without this forward shaft lean. I am going to try this with a driver and see what happens. I will also look to implement this into my inconsistent mid irons game.
Hi Chris, love your videos. Can you make a video about the angle of the wrists at impact? If the right wrist full extension is 90 degrees to your forearm, at impact is the wrist stay at 90 degrees, 45 or back to neutral?
Setting up with the iron shaft forward isn't optional. It's the design of the club.
People have the wrong idea about what a "square" clubface is. What really occurs is the hands hold the club 30-40 degrees shut. But once you drop the trail shoulder in the process of bringing the club down to the ball, this places the shaft ahead of the ball, thus "squaring" the face. What this does is allow us to move into the shot, impacting the ball correctly, with 2 club deloft on irons. The design of the club dictates the hands be forward, otherwise the swing must be manipulated and thus decreasing consistency and repeatability.
Chris, aren’t irons built so that the shaft leans slightly forward when the club face is square at address (mine are). As such, aren’t your hands always going to be slightly forward of the ball at address?
Try tty 711 watch hands. Lighthouses......braillie langs plans right writing also.
Just the advice I was searching for , will give it a try
Great explanation. Thank you
How does that change with the length of club when you move the ball forward in your stance?
I’ll try it. Thanks.
You use the same hand worn for driver/3wood ?
Very helpful!
Cracking explanation & video, tks!
WORKS FOR ME AT 100%, AND YOU KNOW WHAT, IS RELATED ABOUT THE RELAX FEELING, I CANT BE RELAX MUSCLE WISE,
Refreshing to here a golf pro say its down to ur preference. Iv been for lessons in the past with a top 25 teaching pro and he took my shaft lean out at address saying it not the way to set up. Iv just ordered the DST compressor training club. Whats your thoughts on it? Thanks
very, very informative. Many tks. I've struggled with this for years even into my putting. A forward press can do the same thing?
Good video Chris ,could you discuss bunker shots. I see some players open club face and swing across the ball the club face is open wide.. I also see some player's who don't have club face open wide and they don't come across the ball the swing fairly square at the ball. What's the correct way I struggle with bunker shots.
I have always played golf with the handle forward at address, and I tend to post up strong on the lead foot. Some of the guys give me a hard time about my setup and alignment, despite my ballstriking being superior to theirs in most cases My explanation to them was I pre-set my position so that I don't need to worry about flattening my wrist, which made no sense to them at all. It is nice to see that my golf swing anomaly is not uncommon, though I do from time to time struggle with low left shots with my shorter irons due to this technique and having a fairly strong grip to begin with. It is something I would like to change, but when you hit them pure, and compress them like I do it is hard to convince a change is really necessary. Would you suggest trying to fix this or just learn to live with it as I have for years?
Personally I’d learn to control
The shorter irons with a tweak in body then or even just setting the club more open at address👍
@@ChrisRyanGolf I will work on that, lately I have been gripping the club more neutral then turning into my usual strong grip (open face maybe 5-10*). Sometimes I end up with a big block to the right, sometimes I fan the face open more in the backswing and end up hooking it because I will instinctively close the face rapidly lol. I will work on it.
WORKS FOR ME AT 100%
Excellent
Does this apply to driver as well ?( ie handle forward on address)
Great video. Answered my question very well. Wondering if you could give mw
a reason why all my irons seem to go the same distance. Puzzled.
Which arm does the most work on the up and down swing and what is the most important position they both need to be in?
Hi I have a question. Does your wrists hinge downward at address.
QUERY: I tend to have a flat swing plane and an prone to pulling my wedges. The pull seens more severe with higher lofted wedges. What is the cause and is there a fix?
Thanks for the video Chris, your videos help me tremendously. I have a really important question that would really help me out. I have the same extension on my lead wrist at address. It helps me put leverage on the club handle during my backswing “hope that’s ok to do?” But at impact my club face is open. So what do u recommend I do? Should I have a Flat leading wrist at address ? I really like to extend my wrist at address so I have that Leverage and that “pushing the heel down so there’s pressure down on the heel so at impact I can compress” please advise it would be greatly appreciative. Btw: i score a consistent 42-45 on a 9hole. Just Incase that matters. Thanks again Chris!!