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PM to Bucket
Bucket,
OK - we've got TGMnut right where we want him - a few more posts and he won't be able to hit it out of his shadow- why don't you throw in that holding his breath on the backswing would be good- PM me back with our next line of attack- Oh Ya - what time are we playing him next weekend? Wait a minute!? I think I just posted this on the forum instead of sending a PM:sad2: |
Thinking
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Here is my additional advice to your follow-up post. While you might think that - "Hey! All this thinking is just holding back my natural ability- therefore let's not think so much"- nothing could be further from the truth. Although, believe me I understand the feeling. In fact, you may have already gone back and forth on those two philosophys many times in your golfing career. Certainly if you're at a fork in the road and you've got to decide- "Do I go down the left hand road and just use my athletic ability" or "do I go down the right hand road and try to figure out and consciously apply movement concepts to swing a golf club"- You know the left hand road will look the easiest and in fact when you're on it it'll seem the easiest- but then at some point when you don't get better you've got to apply some knowledge- anotherwords you need to get back on that other road. When you start to think and apply knowledge and you don't get any better then after some time on that road you're thinking "This isn't helping - I need to get back on the other road"-The Athlete Road- "why am I mentally and physically "forcing" myself to do this when I'm getting worse or not getting better!" So you switch back over to the athlete non-thinking road. Well you get the picture. In summary- my advice- "struggle my friend!" - Take the road less traveled~! |
Bucket
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nut |
tgmnut don't worry about thinking too much....unless you're looking for pure execution of the habits you already have ingrained....(when PLAYING I mean)...
It's a very hard game if you aren't one of the ones who has "fluked into" "getting it" easily.... Keep with it and it'll lead to good golf long-term... And/or see a GOOD AI and you will be set. ... Ppl tell me I think too much...well....that makes me THINK that they should go to....(insert word). |
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http://www.geocities.com/robmont64/swing3.html |
More To Do
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You may be able to feel the difference -- and that's a first step -- but I cannot see any differences yet. Your Start Up looks exactly the same, and so does your Shift to the Squared Shoulder Plane. On closer inspection, you do seem to have decreased the Bob somewhat. This time 'round, I would also add the following to your Work In Process Checklist: 1. Left Foot Action. In the Down-the-Line view, check the excess Roll to the outer edge of the Left Foot. Note also the weight toward the toes that has your heel 'tapping' and your Balance teetering. The 'turn' on the heel is not so disruptive, but do you really want all that with a mid-iron? 2. Exaggerated Finish. Again, you are a playing a mid-iron here. This is the super-full Finish one would normally see only with the longest Clubs. The 'wraparound' of your Arms has caused your Hands to separate at the Finish -- the heel of your Right Hand has lost contact with the thumb of the Left Hand. Keep that Pressure Point intact throughout the Stroke, and cut that Finish back. 3. Finish Swivel. You have one, but it is extremely delayed. Your Hands are shoulder-high into the Finish before you finally Swivel. Hitting or Swinging, the Swivel should occur as you exit the Follow-Through (with your Right Forearm about parallel to the ground). You exit the Follow-Through with a non-Swiveled Left Forearm and hence, a Bent Left Wrist. So, Swivel sooner. |
High Expectations
Are changes that are being suggested ones that can be introduced into a swing and take effect immediately...I would imagine that these are significant enough where it will take hard work and months to work into an effective swing with setbacks at times when one may want to abandon a change.
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Tgmnut
TGMNUT,
Lynn makes some very good points in both of his posts #25 and #38. Also, Nice job of retaining your spine angle more and also holding your finish position- in that regard I think Lynn's #2 item in post #38 is an especially excellent point and possibly one of the easier changes that you could add to your already changed finish position. But as HG suggests you've got plenty of information to work with- probably time to hybernate the winter away and see how much progress you've made when you wake up in the spring.:book: :clock: In regards to how I am able to post from Bucket's trunk- well it's called WIRELESS- This guy practically lives at Starbucks- I'm rarely outside of a T-Mobile Hotspot! Whoa- he's headed home now - going to lose you - gotta go! |
Tennessee Walking Horses
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You extend that understanding into Body Participation, Hand Action Accumulators and On Plane Clubshaft in Acquired Motion (Right Forearm level-to-the-ground in both directions). You learn to control your Finish Swivel in Total Motion (12-5-3-#3). Your Finish is dictated by the constraint of the Staged Curriculum, i.e., to Both Arms Straight (Stages One and Two) and to a controlled Finish as dictated by the desired limits of the Pivot and the Arms (Stage Three). The message: You don't learn a disciplined Golf Stroke by whacking as many Balls as you can...as far as you can...with every Club in your bag. You learn it piece by piece...one Stage at a time. For most, this route is too tedious. Nevertheless... It is The Shortcut. |
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