That's a top video guys, that's much better Milo, this is how it should be you standing back letting big strong Henry do all the work and you giving instructional information for the rest of us to digest, well done !
Great drill, finally an instructor teaching impact and how to get there with feels. The key point was showing how the arms stay and the body pulls the arms forward by using the hips creating correct shaft lean. But let's be honest a mid to high handicapper will do 2 or 3 chip shots with this drill and then straight back to full shots learning nothing in the process.
@@MiloLinesGolf Malaska refers to a slapping motion that releases and straightens the trail hand that was bent. I believe this is the source of significant club head speed. This drill doesn't reference this move. Please comment.
@@billstewart852 correct the release of angles/slap happens automatically due to physics not muscular effort. This drill is to make sure your body is moving correctly which will automatically create that release with the addition of speed.
@@MiloLinesGolf I have been trying to use that slapping move and have difficulty with timing. I think what you're saying is to let the release happen naturally as a result of natural forces. When I skip a stone I am using this slapping motion and I think this is a conscious action. Are there two schools of thought or am I missing something.
Brilliant!! Loved this one - Teaching my wife ATM- we having a blast. I'm having trouble with the fat shot and will work the hell out of this great little drill...
As usual fabulous video. Would u agree that the during downswing left femur must be firm as chest rotates past it. I spin my left hip too early and too freely. That would be a great topic for a future video. Thank You
I think this one tip will revolutionize my game. Huge! Great video. I’m now subscribed. Also, your last swing/and that drill reminds me of Matthew Wolf’s swing!
Milo, huge fan of the channel and youre one of the few coaches who responds on youtube. How much of what is shown here, needs to be modified for someone who is overweight? Like 300+lbs? I struggle so much with setup and I think its because im trying to setup like a fit golfer and it just doesnt sync up to my body.
Check out Fred Shoemaker, E.A.Tischler (check spelling) or Mike Adams on you tube. In fact check them all. They all teach to build your swing around your physiology.
Thanks for watching. I try to respond to most comments and questions. My goal is to get everyone swinging as athletically as possible, what that looks like will vary because we are all built differently with varying degrees of mobility. But the same principles can be seen in most high level swings
Great vid. Can you also explain the relationship with the right elbow as well? To me it seems the right elbow also needs to stay bent otherwise the shaft lean will be gone. My problem is for longer clubs like hybrid or 3Wood I have problem maintaining that right wrist and right elbow position.
This is my 2nd summer being new to the game at 65. I love this body rotation feel vs any other instruction I've received. It just sits more logical and feels natural in my thinking of the swing. I simply don't feel all locked up. My question now is, are the positions of the deep knee bend, posterior push, torso tilt, and hip rotation accentuated due to the wood or iron length used? Is it gradual from wedge to wood?
Certainly club to club, the swing and setup will change ever so slightly. I'm happy to hear our swing resonates with you, have you looked into joining my online academy? milolinesgolf.com
Great video! Do you have any videos that explain ball position in detail? It seems like it needs to be somewhat forward of center for all clubs to make this setup work correctly, is that correct?
Great video! By holding this angle in the trail wrist, and therefore creating shaft lean, can you then rotate through as much as you want? Cheers Andrew
I have done multiple videos on release but the short answer is the trail wrist extension begins to unwind moving towards neutral around p6 and at impact still has some extension but is rapidly moving towards flexion
@@christopherwilliams2092 just turn!, One almost holds on to the flexion , more than releases it. The instinct to hit the ball wont let you do anything funny. 2 buckets and it will arrive, if not sooner. One vid that helped me a lot recently is your swinging the shaft at " this "of the ball (not the clubface). It wont take long, Listen I've been golfing 30 years(stuck at an 8 hdcp), not a great chipper but if I can get on most greens I can putt pretty good so this will be easy to break 80 cause your gonna be hitting ALOT of greens. My problem was that I was left and right with no understanding of why it was happening. THIS 5 minutes has changed my life in one day, all shots in the direction of the flag! I asked MIlo on why it seems the pro's arms are crossed over by waist on the follow through, and he said the same thing it just physically happens, no pause or filp just a good release. Play with your release for fun for ball shape as we've all seen hold offs (speith) and the Patrick Reeds of the world but to hit a stock straight shots, the S**t is the golden egg! I was hitting fat shots with an 8 iron off a tee then and hitting thin, I was told to lead(pull) with the left arm etc, but good lord this info is uber great info. Sorry to rant but look at the top 10 pros in a tournament, how many 5 irons do we see fade off to the right and go into the bunkers, OK sure they are playing long par 3 etc, but I'm just saying even the top ten guys in the world are having issues. I've messed with releasing from the top, turning the hands over , etc but THIS is the golden egg I promise. Some may say its a hinge and hold and yes it is with that body being open but the Emphasis is that dorsiflexion of the right hand. Stick with this tip and you'll be amazed. Now go work on your putting 8)
I can do this drill well, but continue to lack inconsistency when I don't start with the impact position. Is it a terrible idea if I start from impact all the time? So frustrated I'm about to give up. Never broken 90, Topping/fat, slicing/hooking, amazing strike, all have an equal chance if I start at address. Love your vids, btw!
Milo the driver tip works too! Thanks I also played w/o my normal back pain, the rotation helps me not stand up at impact and jam my lumbar spine! Got to keep hips lower on downswing like yours. Thanks again
AWESOME VIDEO!! NICE JOB GUYS!! And I loved the video the other day on head rotation and eye movement/dominance. I posed this question a ways back, and am very happy you covered it. These are the two most unique golf instruction videos out there on the two topics, and trust me, I've searched high and low for good content. Milo, next time I'm in AZ, I'm coming in for a lesson. Thanks for helping me on my journey to scratch golf. I'm down to from a 4.6 to a 1.9 as of today! I'm 48, and one thing that I've done that helps me a ton with my rotation and ball striking is setting up as close to my impact position as possible. I slightly drop back and flare out my left foot, which helps relieve unnecessary strain on my left knee and left hip. Hips and shoulders are also slightly open at address. I play a slight cut off the tee and a fairly straight ball with the irons. Am I doing the right thing here? Do you recommend my type of setup for aging/less mobile golfers like myself? Thanks!!
I work hard to open my hips and chest at impact, but sometimes it slowly sneaks away. When I've found this happening, I can actually do this drill on the golf course to make sure I reach the right positon: the solid contact and straightness of the shot more than compensates for the slightly abbreviated backswing.
Great stuff, but how do you release the club? Shouldn't the body rotation slow down so the arms gain speed with the left hand go into extension after impact, a throw release. It looks like you're holding it off
Yes you are correct but in this drill we hold it to force the body to pivot. As pivot speed increases we begin letting the angles release themselves. Most students struggle to pivot at all and simply throw the angles to create speed which is the problem this drill helps resolve.
I believe Jon Rahm said that this was his issue after TPI testing. His focus became bowing the lead (left) hand which seems to work for him. When you look at his swing in slow motion however, he has a sufficient amount of right wrist extension. I'd have to see your swing to give you more feedback. Let me know if I can help at milolinesgolf.com. Thanks for watching!
Looks like you're hitting the ball off the heel of the front foot, is that the ball placement for all irons? I can do this pretty good with wedges and short irons with ball placement progressively back from middle of stance with 7 iron to heel of back foot with 60' , 5 iron not so much no matter the ball placement.
Inside of left heel for clubs with a changing width of stance is a good starting point. Specialty shots, you may move around a bit. Thanks for watching!
I don't know if you read all the comments, but I sure hope you'll read this one. I'm a 3-5 handi and I definitely fall into the category of one of those players you describe that doesn't mess with my grip. I use a "neutral grip" (V's pointed around right armpit). Interestingly this grip you describe, at least as I see it--strong lead hand and neutral to slightly strong trail hand--is the one I use for my chipping a la James Siekmann's instruction. It makes exposing the bounce easier on chips and pitches, cups the lead wrist. In any event, in the 15 years of golf swing study, I've never heard anyone talk about lead hand flexion being a physically weak position, but it reminded me of my boxing/kickboxing days and it is true, lead wrist flexion at impact is how you break your wrist (hence the wraps), and radial/ulnar deviation is a strong axeing motions. But as you mention the radial/ulnar is slower than the flexion/extension. And this is why, at least I believe, you advocate that the trail wrist be neutral-ish, so it can take the lead in firing the wrists through impact via flexion toward extension. I decided to try your "athletic grip", and I observed a few things:1) I found it easier to square the face as it feels like I didn't need to rotate as drastically with my body and wrist (think how open Dustin Johnson and Collin Morikawa are; they are "maxed out" on hip turn and lead wrist flexion at impact); 2) It tended to more easily promote lag (which I'm still trying to wrap my head around because it would seem lead wrist flexion would do that more??) 3) My ball flight was lower (again, I'm trying to wrap my head around that as it would seem a flexed wrist would promote lower ball flight, but maybe it's just that I am able to achieve this position better and so actual loft is lower albeit not the maximum de-loft that one can achieve through lead wrist flexion) 4) It felt like the grip sat in my fingers more naturally--almost as if I had no choice, given the lack of "match-up" as the palms are not facing together; 5) turning the club down so hard as is required with max lead wrist flexion feels less "natural" than this "athletic" grip, as you call it. It's almost as if the club lie at impact is more as intended, if that makes any sense. Sorry for rambling, but it's rare that I learn anything completely new like this, and I just wanted to comment on my experience. BTW, I'll be joining up on your subscription model as soon as it's in the budget, and I sure hope you will be coming out to So Cal for a clinic sometime soon. Thanks to you and your fellow coaches for all your teachings. --Joseph (your regular IG commentor)
Thank you sounds like you experienced exactly what I did as a youngster and as a result I have passed it on helping 100s of other golfers to get the same results!!
this is not talked about enough , if you fix the hip motion, and keep your side bend at impact , after a while your body will fix the shaft lean issue. if you early extend, stand up at impact, swing over the the top . no matter how hard you try and keep the right wrist bent back you wont solve the issue, go back to the basic and make sure your pivot and angles are correct first
no. the idea that the right palm should be pressing down, with a full shot, is a complete misnomer. the swing isn't like skipping a rock or throwing a medicine ball etc. we cannot direct the force directly into the clubhead like we can a stone or medicine ball. that isn't to say that the club doesn't strike down on the ball- notwithstanding the fact that the clubhead is being released thru. the grip and the left side of the head ensure that the late hit is built into the swing. and, the simple fact is that the left hand has to apply force to both the left side and the right side of the shaft to apply maximum force. if force is applied to the left side of the shaft, with the left hand, it will apply force to the right side of the shaft, also. the right hand has to go with the flow. i agree that "maintaining the hinge up of the wrists" is "death" but the "hinge up", in its self, also, has fatal consequences. the wrists don't hinge up, in the backswing. they hinge down; or, at least, the heel pad of the left hand does.
What's your most common mishit??
⛽🔥 *Milo’s Favorite Drill to COMPRESS the Golf Ball: milolinesgolf.com/compress
U guys are simply the BEST
Thanks so much Gerry!
Love the way you teach the golf swing. Henry is a terrific addition to your videos as well
Thanks 👍
Milo, Henry and every guest coach are the absolute truth
Thanks so much Stephen!
This drill is so underrated! Compression, rotation, arm structure, all in one great drill. Thanks for sharing!!
Glad you like it!
I really like the way you guys present things. My execution of those techniques is another story.
The struggle is real!!
You'll get it Mark, stay the course.
That's a top video guys, that's much better Milo, this is how it should be you standing back letting big strong Henry do all the work and you giving instructional information for the rest of us to digest, well done !
Haha, thanks!
Haha , Milo said, “well I’m strong too”!
Milo you’re easily the best instructor on you tube. Honestly, thank you, your videos are gold
Glad you like them! Thanks JD
Milo! Agreed. I take your stuff to the course and it actually works. Approaching single digits thanks to you
Great drill, finally an instructor teaching impact and how to get there with feels. The key point was showing how the arms stay and the body pulls the arms forward by using the hips creating correct shaft lean. But let's be honest a mid to high handicapper will do 2 or 3 chip shots with this drill and then straight back to full shots learning nothing in the process.
Slowing things down, exaggerating with many reps is how change can come along, true.
Great video. I understand a lot more now!
Awesome, thanks for watching!
That hand-motion is exactly what Mike Malaska teaches. Also, beginning the swing from the impact-position. Great similiarities.
Impact can be a fine trainer. Thanks for watching!
@@MiloLinesGolf Malaska refers to a slapping motion that releases and straightens the trail hand that was bent. I believe this is the source of significant club head speed. This drill doesn't reference this move. Please comment.
@@billstewart852 correct the release of angles/slap happens automatically due to physics not muscular effort. This drill is to make sure your body is moving correctly which will automatically create that release with the addition of speed.
@@MiloLinesGolf I have been trying to use that slapping move and have difficulty with timing. I think what you're saying is to let the release happen naturally as a result of natural forces. When I skip a stone I am using this slapping motion and I think this is a conscious action. Are there two schools of thought or am I missing something.
@@billstewart852 there are many schools of thought but I like to let natural forces control the release because they are a constant and I’m not
Love Watching and Learning!
Trying to break old habits !!
Would love a video lesson!
Information? Milo
Thank you in ADVANCE
Milo is amazing. Go to his site to make a video lesson appointment. milolinesgolf.com
Thanks guys. My site is milolinesgolf.com.
Love this drill!!
A good one to incorporate into the foundations! Be well Tom!
Love it!
Thanks, Christian!
Brilliant!! Loved this one - Teaching my wife ATM- we having a blast. I'm having trouble with the fat shot and will work the hell out of this great little drill...
Thanks for watching!
Great drill. Love you guys.
Haha, thanks Riley! Appreciate you watching.
Excellent!
Thanks Kelly!
As usual fabulous video. Would u agree that the during downswing left femur must be firm as chest rotates past it. I spin my left hip too early and too freely. That would be a great topic for a future video. Thank You
We have a video on a similar topic in the hopper. Thanks for watching
I think this one tip will revolutionize my game. Huge! Great video. I’m now subscribed.
Also, your last swing/and that drill reminds me of Matthew Wolf’s swing!
Awesome! Thank you! We can all thank Matthew Wolff for bringing further attention to impact drills =).
Milo, huge fan of the channel and youre one of the few coaches who responds on youtube. How much of what is shown here, needs to be modified for someone who is overweight? Like 300+lbs? I struggle so much with setup and I think its because im trying to setup like a fit golfer and it just doesnt sync up to my body.
Check out Fred Shoemaker, E.A.Tischler (check spelling) or Mike Adams on you tube. In fact check them all. They all teach to build your swing around your physiology.
@@williamjohnson8092 Thank you so much
Thanks for watching. I try to respond to most comments and questions. My goal is to get everyone swinging as athletically as possible, what that looks like will vary because we are all built differently with varying degrees of mobility. But the same principles can be seen in most high level swings
Great vid. Can you also explain the relationship with the right elbow as well? To me it seems the right elbow also needs to stay bent otherwise the shaft lean will be gone. My problem is for longer clubs like hybrid or 3Wood I have problem maintaining that right wrist and right elbow position.
Will add it to our list, thanks for watching Andy!
This is my 2nd summer being new to the game at 65. I love this body rotation feel vs any other instruction I've received. It just sits more logical and feels natural in my thinking of the swing.
I simply don't feel all locked up.
My question now is, are the positions of the deep knee bend, posterior push, torso tilt, and hip rotation accentuated due to the wood or iron length used? Is it gradual from wedge to wood?
Certainly club to club, the swing and setup will change ever so slightly. I'm happy to hear our swing resonates with you, have you looked into joining my online academy? milolinesgolf.com
Great video! Do you have any videos that explain ball position in detail? It seems like it needs to be somewhat forward of center for all clubs to make this setup work correctly, is that correct?
ua-cam.com/video/G6ErMRZyDYU/v-deo.html
Is the lead leg locked out at impact to pivot around or can it still be a little flexed?
Great video! By holding this angle in the trail wrist, and therefore creating shaft lean, can you then rotate through as much as you want?
Cheers
Andrew
If angles and structure are right, the rotation should bring the face back squarely, yes =). Thanks for watching!
Thank you Milo and Henry. why and how is the re-gripping being done ?
Was just because he took off his lead hand to get feeling really open.
I am wondering at what point does the flexion if the right wrist release or I suppose in your parlance go into extension
I have same question
I have done multiple videos on release but the short answer is the trail wrist extension begins to unwind moving towards neutral around p6 and at impact still has some extension but is rapidly moving towards flexion
@@MiloLinesGolf Thanks I am working on this technique and appreciate your reply.
@@christopherwilliams2092 just turn!, One almost holds on to the flexion , more than releases it.
The instinct to hit the ball wont let you do anything funny. 2 buckets and it will arrive, if not sooner. One vid that helped me a lot recently is your swinging the shaft at " this "of the ball (not the clubface).
It wont take long, Listen I've been golfing 30 years(stuck at an 8 hdcp), not a great chipper but if I can get on most greens I can putt pretty good so this will be easy to break 80 cause your gonna be hitting ALOT of greens. My problem was that I was left and right with no understanding of why it was happening. THIS 5 minutes has changed my life in one day, all shots in the direction of the flag!
I asked MIlo on why it seems the pro's arms are crossed over by waist on the follow through, and he said the same thing it just physically happens, no pause or filp just a good release. Play with your release for fun for ball shape as we've all seen hold offs (speith) and the Patrick Reeds of the world but to hit a stock straight shots, the S**t is the golden egg!
I was hitting fat shots with an 8 iron off a tee then and hitting thin, I was told to lead(pull) with the left arm etc, but good lord this info is uber great info.
Sorry to rant but look at the top 10 pros in a tournament, how many 5 irons do we see fade off to the right and go into the bunkers, OK sure they are playing long par 3 etc, but I'm just saying even the top ten guys in the world are having issues.
I've messed with releasing from the top, turning the hands over , etc but THIS is the golden egg I promise.
Some may say its a hinge and hold and yes it is with that body being open but the Emphasis is that dorsiflexion of the right hand. Stick with this tip and you'll be amazed.
Now go work on your putting 8)
Ok thanks, and I'll get to work practicing the drill and putting too
That’s a good one.
Thanks Michael!
Super drill. Can't get stuck.
This can be a great feel.
Hello Milo, could you help me with some exercise to prevent the body from moving forward on the downswing. Thank you so much.
ua-cam.com/video/2jkoW5oJDgQ/v-deo.html
I can do this drill well, but continue to lack inconsistency when I don't start with the impact position. Is it a terrible idea if I start from impact all the time?
So frustrated I'm about to give up. Never broken 90, Topping/fat, slicing/hooking, amazing strike, all have an equal chance if I start at address.
Love your vids, btw!
Worked for Matt Wolff. Would need to see swing otherwise, thanks for watching!
At what point do you release the extension in your wrist on the through swing? Or don’t you?
I don’t but physics releases the angles for me
@@MiloLinesGolf thanks, so just let it happen 👍
Will the impact pre-set make it more difficult to get the right hip deeper when you make a longer backswing?
It shouldn’t
Can I use this with Driver? works great with irons, can I treek it a little for driver? Thanks
Sure can, just ensure the setup adjustments match. This video could help: ua-cam.com/video/jSmp_DadzOc/v-deo.html
Milo the driver tip works too! Thanks I also played w/o my normal back pain, the rotation helps me not stand up at impact and jam my lumbar spine! Got to keep hips lower on downswing like yours. Thanks again
AWESOME VIDEO!! NICE JOB GUYS!! And I loved the video the other day on head rotation and eye movement/dominance. I posed this question a ways back, and am very happy you covered it. These are the two most unique golf instruction videos out there on the two topics, and trust me, I've searched high and low for good content. Milo, next time I'm in AZ, I'm coming in for a lesson. Thanks for helping me on my journey to scratch golf. I'm down to from a 4.6 to a 1.9 as of today!
I'm 48, and one thing that I've done that helps me a ton with my rotation and ball striking is setting up as close to my impact position as possible. I slightly drop back and flare out my left foot, which helps relieve unnecessary strain on my left knee and left hip. Hips and shoulders are also slightly open at address. I play a slight cut off the tee and a fairly straight ball with the irons. Am I doing the right thing here? Do you recommend my type of setup for aging/less mobile golfers like myself? Thanks!!
Thanks for sharing and watching Christopher!
I work hard to open my hips and chest at impact, but sometimes it slowly sneaks away. When I've found this happening, I can actually do this drill on the golf course to make sure I reach the right positon: the solid contact and straightness of the shot more than compensates for the slightly abbreviated backswing.
👊
Got it. How do I sign up for the PGA?
Monday qualifiers? =)
Great stuff, but how do you release the club? Shouldn't the body rotation slow down so the arms gain speed with the left hand go into extension after impact, a throw release. It looks like you're holding it off
ua-cam.com/video/DjPWiohKeUk/v-deo.html
How about for us with less rotation and flexibility
Can still be a great practice, you may just not want to lower and bend as much.
So Matt Wolfe it?
That’s what I thought 👍
Impact drills have a place, yes!
important to point out that the trail wrist does not "hold" the extension and goes into flexion bigtime after the ball is hit.
Yes you are correct but in this drill we hold it to force the body to pivot. As pivot speed increases we begin letting the angles release themselves. Most students struggle to pivot at all and simply throw the angles to create speed which is the problem this drill helps resolve.
What if your trail wrist can physically only extend half the required amount due to biomechanic limitation?
I believe Jon Rahm said that this was his issue after TPI testing. His focus became bowing the lead (left) hand which seems to work for him. When you look at his swing in slow motion however, he has a sufficient amount of right wrist extension. I'd have to see your swing to give you more feedback. Let me know if I can help at milolinesgolf.com. Thanks for watching!
@@MiloLinesGolf thanks Milo, I’ve signed up for the academy and submitted swing clips so any feedback would be great.
A little bit of Matthew Wolff preswing routine.
Impact drills, yes!
Looks like you're hitting the ball off the heel of the front foot, is that the ball placement for all irons? I can do this pretty good with wedges and short irons with ball placement progressively back from middle of stance with 7 iron to heel of back foot with 60' , 5 iron not so much no matter the ball placement.
Inside of left heel for clubs with a changing width of stance is a good starting point. Specialty shots, you may move around a bit. Thanks for watching!
Wow! tried this yesterday on course and it was Amazing!!
Great to hear Derek!!
@@MiloLinesGolf Does Henry work at your site or just a traveling expert?
Henry works with me on the site.
where does speed come from?
I prefer to see it come from the pivot as that can be most efficient and dynamic, but it can come from several factors.
Seems like my wrists want to go into flexion all the time on their own, even when focused on it. It is a hard habit to break.
Takes some training, yes. Take the hit out of it and train the trail arm.
I don't know if you read all the comments, but I sure hope you'll read this one. I'm a 3-5 handi and I definitely fall into the category of one of those players you describe that doesn't mess with my grip. I use a "neutral grip" (V's pointed around right armpit). Interestingly this grip you describe, at least as I see it--strong lead hand and neutral to slightly strong trail hand--is the one I use for my chipping a la James Siekmann's instruction. It makes exposing the bounce easier on chips and pitches, cups the lead wrist. In any event, in the 15 years of golf swing study, I've never heard anyone talk about lead hand flexion being a physically weak position, but it reminded me of my boxing/kickboxing days and it is true, lead wrist flexion at impact is how you break your wrist (hence the wraps), and radial/ulnar deviation is a strong axeing motions. But as you mention the radial/ulnar is slower than the flexion/extension. And this is why, at least I believe, you advocate that the trail wrist be neutral-ish, so it can take the lead in firing the wrists through impact via flexion toward extension. I decided to try your "athletic grip", and I observed a few things:1) I found it easier to square the face as it feels like I didn't need to rotate as drastically with my body and wrist (think how open Dustin Johnson and Collin Morikawa are; they are "maxed out" on hip turn and lead wrist flexion at impact); 2) It tended to more easily promote lag (which I'm still trying to wrap my head around because it would seem lead wrist flexion would do that more??) 3) My ball flight was lower (again, I'm trying to wrap my head around that as it would seem a flexed wrist would promote lower ball flight, but maybe it's just that I am able to achieve this position better and so actual loft is lower albeit not the maximum de-loft that one can achieve through lead wrist flexion) 4) It felt like the grip sat in my fingers more naturally--almost as if I had no choice, given the lack of "match-up" as the palms are not facing together; 5) turning the club down so hard as is required with max lead wrist flexion feels less "natural" than this "athletic" grip, as you call it. It's almost as if the club lie at impact is more as intended, if that makes any sense. Sorry for rambling, but it's rare that I learn anything completely new like this, and I just wanted to comment on my experience. BTW, I'll be joining up on your subscription model as soon as it's in the budget, and I sure hope you will be coming out to So Cal for a clinic sometime soon. Thanks to you and your fellow coaches for all your teachings. --Joseph (your regular IG commentor)
Thank you sounds like you experienced exactly what I did as a youngster and as a result I have passed it on helping 100s of other golfers to get the same results!!
Show the swing front on.
Right?
Right what?
Tried this.... huge duck hooks with driver. Any advice?
Make sure the face isn’t shut and try to feel right hand under left post impact no roll release
this is not talked about enough , if you fix the hip motion, and keep your side bend at impact , after a while your body will fix the shaft lean issue.
if you early extend, stand up at impact, swing over the the top . no matter how hard you try and keep the right wrist bent back you wont solve the issue,
go back to the basic and make sure your pivot and angles are correct first
Thanks for watching!
Would like to see this drill from face on
We could certainly do another video in the future. Thanks for watching!
He could be a plasterer with technique like that.
no. the idea that the right palm should be pressing down, with a full shot, is a complete misnomer. the swing isn't like skipping a rock or throwing a medicine ball etc. we cannot direct the force directly into the clubhead like we can a stone or medicine ball. that isn't to say that the club doesn't strike down on the ball- notwithstanding the fact that the clubhead is being released thru. the grip and the left side of the head ensure that the late hit is built into the swing. and, the simple fact is that the left hand has to apply force to both the left side and the right side of the shaft to apply maximum force. if force is applied to the left side of the shaft, with the left hand, it will apply force to the right side of the shaft, also. the right hand has to go with the flow. i agree that "maintaining the hinge up of the wrists" is "death" but the "hinge up", in its self, also, has fatal consequences. the wrists don't hinge up, in the backswing. they hinge down; or, at least, the heel pad of the left hand does.
With so much wrist extension, is there any long term damage from hitting hundred of ball compress into the ground over time?
Far less this way in my experience as opposed to manufacturing late wrist bow and having tilt in the swing.