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Is the world "flat"?
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Hogan and Father K
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Q and A with Homer Kelley. Fact vs Illusion, Golfs problem.
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stress on the left arm
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2-F Plane of Motion
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3-F-7-A Steering Anti-Steering Therapy: The Inside-Out Cut Shot
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3-f-5 The Address Routine
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The Gateway
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The Golfing Machine Explained
Use the above sketch (1-L) to see and understand the following characteristics
of all Mechanically and Geometrically correct Golf Strokes – form the longest Drive to the Shortest Putt per Chapter 2. visualize this System as based on three all-encompassing Primary Concepts on which all details can easily be attached as the surface – they are the Hinge Action (2-G) of an Angular Motion (2-K) operating on an Inclined Plane (2-F). 1) The Stationary Post (player's head) accurately returns the Clubhead through the ball (Centered Arc). Regardless of Axis Tilt of the body, Tripod with centered eyes. 2) The Post may turn (Pivot) but does not "Sway" or "Bob". Provides a fixed Head height. 3) There is no wobble in the Clubshaft attachment (Grip). The Hands are clamps. Extensor Action. 4) The Hinge Assembly controls Clubface alignment. The First Imperative. 5) The Clubshaft lies full length on a flat. tilted plane. When on Plane. 6) The Clubshaft always points to the Plane Line except when they are parallel to each other. See 2-F 7) The Lever Assembly is driven by exerting pressure against it. (Note: 7 thru 11 deal with the movement of the Lever Assemblies and the Second Imperative). Pressure is on the aft side of the shaft Pressure Points 1,2,3. 8 ) No portion of the Lever Assembly can swing forward independently. Bent Left Wrist. 9) Regardless of how the Lever Assembly is driven, it moves in a circle. Around the left Shoulder. 10) The Lever Assembly must be driven through Impact by an On Plane force, (moving towards the Plane L:ine). Swingers use Centrifugal Force, Hitters use Muscular Drive of an active Right Arm. 11) Clubhead Force and Motion is On Plane at right angles to the Longitudinal Centre of Gravity and varies with the speed, Mass, and Swing Radius. Not Clubface Motion, Sweetspot, Pressure is on the aft side of the shaft. 12) Ball speed is dependent on both before Impact and after Impact Clubhead Speed. Not from effort, but a mechanical advantage. Reference 2-E. 13) The Clubhead travells Down and Out until it reaches "Low Point". Reference Yoda’s drawings 14) Divots are taken "Down and Out" not just "Down". Reference Yoda’s drawings 15) The Club starts Up and In after "Low Point" but the Thrust continues Down Plane during the Follow-Through. No quitting, the right elbow is still bent at Impact and Low Point and continues to Drive or be Driven until straight which is at the end of the Follow-Through (8-11), reference 6-A-4. 16) The Plane Line controls the Clubhead Line-of-Flight. Clubface alignment controls the Ball Line-of-Flight. Both must be monitored. Imperative #3 and #1. 17) The Clubface need to be square to the Line-of-Flight only at Point of Separation. Impact and Separation are two different points and can be up to 3/4 of an inch in difference. The Left Hand face down the Angle of Approach at Impact. 18 ) Changing the Plane Angle has no effect on the Plane Line. The roof can change, but the gutter remains the same. 19) Stance Line, Plane Line and Flight Line are normally parallel. “Normally” being the key word. 20) For any given Line-of-Compression (through the ball) every Machine must produce identical Impact Alignments. Impact Alignments must match the desired shot. 21) The relationship of all Machine positions and motions can be described by a geometrical figure. Everything has a geometric relationship to everything else. Explanations By DREW CHAPMAN – PGA – GSEB |
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Editor's Pen
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Stationary Head Primer
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3-F-7-B Quitting
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3-F-7-D Swaying Students with Pivot (Swaying) Problems
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The Waggle -- Golfing Machine Style
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Mr. Bo Jangles
I've forgotten so many of these posts, Air. Thanks for resurrecting!
This one was written in the 'heat of battle' and in response to a certain 'goings on' in our threads. Seemingly above board, the poster inspiring my Policy Statement -- #216 An Honourable Company -- was, in Old West parlance, wearing his own 'white hat' and shooting bullets at our feet, demanding (in his own milquetoast way) that we 'dance'. That disrepective behavior didn't last long . . at least not around here. http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/s...light=strawman :salut: |
Downswing waggles
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Dowel rods
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Zone #1 questions
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What does it mean to obliterate the plane line?
How is it done? Why is it important? ...... From O.B.Left : My take on it: To trace the Plane Line is golf's geometry given the circular like club head orbit and the inclined plane. To "obliterate" the Plane Line is to add force , physics to the geometry. But the direction of Thrust and the Line of Flight of the club head are not similarly aligned. I don't have my book with me right now, but somewhere in the 1-Ls Homer discusses how the thrust is down and out towards the plane line prior to impact, after impact up to and including both arms straight. This is a geometric riddle in a way. The thrust is cross line towards the plane line even though the club head (post low point) is travelling UP and IN. This cross line thrust is readily apparent to those who employ the Aiming Point Procedure and/or an Active Right Arm Right Throw but it is equally important if less apparent or intuitive for the Swinger who Homer regarded as having a similar thrust a similar right arm throwing motion though a product of CF rather than active right arm muscle. This is why Homer thought all Swingers should experiment with Hitting I believe. To sense this cross line direction of thrust. So swingers and hitters alike Thrust cross line towards the Plane Line both prior to and after impact. I'm referring here to a square plane line procedure of course. The Hitter's Angle of Approach procedure being a slightly different deal in terms of the direction of the plane line. So for me anyways to destroy the plane line is the physics of thrusting at the Plane Line. If hitting a cross line throwing motion, swinging a similar but passive right arm extension. See the Aiming Point procedure (the alternate to the Tracing Procedure) as it seems to be related and makes this direction of this thing more intuitive. I can't remember who said this but I've always liked it. The idiot's guide to TGM : "Keeping swinging out until your divots point at the target. " (although the divots themselves are really slightly curved). It could be rewritten to be "keep thrusting out until you can see the club heads blur cover the arc of approach and trace the straight line plane line." But only a few would understand that one. Again I'm writing quickly and have probably made some errors or typos . Let me know if this makes sense. PS - it'd be interesting to hear what others had to say about this. I'm also wondering what the context was when Homer made this statement. It might shed some light on his thinking. |
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This lead me to your wonderful post #2. Which covers an often overlooked aspect of TGM's Basic Motion........and reminds me of the Wild Bill Melhourne and Bill MacDonald drills. |
Snare Therapy
SNARE THERAPY
LYNN BLAKE In a geometrically sound Stroke (1-L #4, #6, and #16), the player insures the correct Club head Line of Flight (2-N-0) -- the arc inscribed on the face of the Inclined Plane by the orbiting Club head through Impact -- by Tracing (with the Lag Loaded [7-19] Right Forefinger #3 Pressure Point) the Straight Plane Line established at Impact Fix. He then insures the correct Clubface alignment through Impact by executing (with the Flat Left Wrist) one of the three Hinge Actions (2-G) so essential for Ball Control. Unfortunately, players have discovered four magnificent ways to destroy this essential geometry. These Four Snares (3-F-7-A/B/C/D) are Steering, Quitting, Bobbing and Swaying. Each Snare disrupts the true downward-and-outward arc of both the Club head and Clubface and is symptomatic of a malfunctioning Golfing Machine. The first two are particularly destructive, and this post will discuss their cause and cure. Steering (3-F-7-A) is the applied misconception that (1) the Club head should move through the Ball along the Target Line; (2) on a level or even upward path; and that (3) the Clubface should stay Square to that Line. Each individual's Golf Stroke tends to reflect his conception of the Basic Motion (Preface), and if the player doesn't know that the Club head should be swung down-and-out through Impact and Low Point or that the Clubface will normally be Square to the Target Line only at the Point of Separation of Ball and Clubface, then it is a virtual certainty that the correct Impact Alignments (2-J-1) will not happen. Quitting (3-F-7-B) is how Steering does its 'dirty work.' In the subconscious attempt to divert the Club head from its true down-and-out orbit through Low Point -- and also in the misguided attempt to increase Club head Velocity by Flattening the Right Wrist (4-D-1)-- the player slows or even stops altogether his Hands during Release. This unintentional and improperly executed Pause Minor Basic Stroke (10-3-J) forces the Club to be swung up and in (below Plane) from the Wrists. The Upward Club head motion leads to Topping the Ball -- an embarrassing problem the player easily solves by hitting more 'under' the Ball - - Scooping! Which sad circumstance seems to be a bit more socially acceptable than Topping. Unless of course, it is perfected into its Art Form: A Mighty (but Powerless) Heave that causes about a foot of sod to simply flop over the still motionless Ball. After that jewel, nobody in the group will even make eye contact! ops: The above 'Seems As Ifs' (Preface) are the major misconceptions in golf. That is, they are perfectly logical ways that should make the Ball behave as you intend but that are also perfectly wrong and will therefore never work. Interestingly, these misconceptions (individually and collectively) cause the Clubface to Close in relation to the Target Line. To avoid the inevitable Pulled Shot, the player begins to habitually aim well to the right of the intended Target Line. Then, when the Clubface dutifully arrives Closed at Impact, the Ball does not go to the right (as it should because that is where he is aiming) but instead is diverted -- more or less -- toward the Target Line. Not exactly a procedure you want to bet tomorrow's lunch money on. And that brings us to the Inside-Out Cut Shot. This procedure is Anti-Steering Therapy -- and hence, Anti- 'Seems As If' Therapy -- because it educates the Hands to disregard the Flight Line with respect to both the Club head Line-of- Flight and the Clubface Alignment through Impact. Let's go back to our player who has learned to compensate for his Pulled Shots -- the inevitable consequence of his Closed Clubface and Bent Left Wrist at Impact -- by habitually aiming to the right. He doesn't know he is aiming to the right, of course, and will in fact swear he is aiming straight at the Target! His Computer is playing a major league trick on him: Given a Faulty Procedure that can only send the Ball way left, aiming way right was the only way it could get the Ball flying anywhere close to the Target Line! Note this well: In this 'Aim to the right' Alignment of the entire Machine, we are not talking about the Square Plane Line-Closed Stance Line combination of 10- 5-C. Instead, it is the Closed Plane Line-Square Stance Line combination of 10- 5-E. In other words, the player has unintentionally established a Club head Line of Flight (2-N-0) that will actually cross the Target Line in a true In-to-Out Stroke. This is not simply the normal Inside-Out Impact (from Impact Point to Low Point) of the normal Down Plane orbit produced by the Square Plane Line of 10-5-A. What to do? Enter the Instructor-Therapist and the Anti-Steering Therapy of the Inside-Out Cut Shot. Seeking to repair --- or more accurately, rebuild -- this malfunctioning Golfing Machine, the Therapist insists that the player hit Chip Shots to the right of where he thinks he is aiming. He also insists that the player keep his Left Wrist Flat and his Right Wrist Bent as he hits those Shots to the right. Under the vigilant eye of the Therapist, the player is trained to Trace the Closed Plane Line (with his Right Forefinger #3 Pressure Point) that he has inadvertently erected during his Address Procedure (8-1/2/3). No fair Steering the Club head back to the Target Line! No fair Quitting with the Hands so that the Club head can be cowtailed into Impact ahead of a Bending Left Wrist and a Flattening Right Wrist! No sirree. The player has accidentally incorporated this Closed Plane Line into his procedure and, by golly, he now has to Trace it! Furthermore, the Therapist -- better yet, The Exorcist -- insists that the Clubface not align itself in any way with the Target Line. To accomplish this, he demands that the Flat Left Wrist execute the 'Reverse Roll' Feel (7-10) of a proper Dual Vertical Hinge Motion (10-10-E). This keeps the Clubface Square to the Baseline of the Closed 10-5-E Plane (and nowhere near Square to the Target Line). Despite the apparent simplicity of the instruction -- "Hit this Chip Shot to the right of where you think you are aiming." -- the player's overwhelming preoccupation with the Target Line at first causes his Shots to continue to be Pulled back toward it. This is because his Ignorant Hands (5-0) and faulty Computer Programming (Chapter 14) continue to exercise their Habits. Undaunted, the Therapist continues to insist that the player totally disregard the Target Line and instead Trace the Closed Plane Line -- all the while keeping the Clubface Square to its Baseline through Impact. Gradually, the player's Hands become educated enough to do this. The Target Line is still there, of course, but he no longer attempts to keep the Club head on it or the Clubface Square to it. He finally has become totally (and correctly) preoccupied with his Plane Line and not his Target Line (3-F-7-A). Let's listen in… Player: "Okay, I've learned to ignore the Target Line during my Stroke. I don't attempt to keep my Club head on it or my Clubface Square to it. Instead, I focus on the Plane Line. I feel like we've made some progress here, but if I keep doing this Inside-Out Cut Shot stuff, the Ball will keep going to the Right of the Target." Therapist: "Correct. And when the Ball no longer goes to the left and when you have grown tired of seeing it go to the right, you are permitted to reposition your entire Machine to the left . Then you may begin Tracing the Square Plane Line of 10-5-A. Remember, though, you must keep your Flat Left Wrist and Right Wrist Bent through Impact just as you did while Tracing the Closed Plane Line (10-5-E). If you do this, you will find your Shots flying Straight toward the Target and your Pulled Shots will merely be a memory. If you don't do this, then the Ball will fly to the left, and your Computer will once again react by making you aim to the right. And that will bring about Plane Line confusion and the silent sabotage of the correct Impact Alignments." Player: "Been there, done that. Let's see now…Left Wrist Flat, Right Wrist Bent. Move smoothly through the Ball -- no Quitting and hacking at the Ball -- while Tracing the Square and Straight Plane Line with my #3 Pressure Point…Hey! It went straight at the hole!" Therapist: "Imagine that." Moving the Head backwards during the Down stroke is a Sway (the Fourth Snare 3-F-7-D), and it is the product of a malfunctioning Pivot. Before diving into work on that problem, though, make sure your head is set properly to begin with. Do you set your Head position first at Impact Fix, and then attempt to keep it Stationary? Or do you, like most people, start with your Head in an Adjusted Address position that ignores a proper Impact Fix position (and therefore cannot possibly be maintained through Impact)? My guess is the latter. So, what is a good Head position at Impact Fix? First, a plumb line from your chin to the ground should fall precisely between your Feet. Your Head should form the tip of an isosceles triangle whose base is the Feet. Most people hang back -- probably in response to instruction that emphasizes that the Head should be 'behind the Ball' and even 'over the right knee.' Consequently, their Head and Feet form a right triangle. Second, the Head should be located a good deal lower than most people's 'normal' Address position. The exact position will be dictated by the amount of Knee Bend and Waist Bend. In turn, these are determined by the distance the Hips must move to enable the Right Forearm to return precisely to its preselected Impact Fix Angle of Approach (pointing at the Plane Line well in front of the Ball). Bottom Line: Most people -- even good players -- move their Head entirely too much during the Stroke. And one of the primary reasons is that they have failed to set it properly in the first place. As nearly as your current skill allows, assume a static position replicating your precise Impact position and alignments: 1) Body position (comparatively squared away with the Head between the Feet). 2) Arms position (the Flying Wedges with the amount of Knee and Waist Bend necessary to allow the Right Forearm to point at the Plane Line). 3) Hands position (Impact Hand Location with the Left Wrist Flat, Level and Vertical). Wherever your Head is located now... That is where it should remain until the end of the Follow-Through (Both Arms Straight position). |
Tom Tomasello
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Martee Makeover
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Homer's Greatest Hits Contest
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Hogan's Journey...And Ours
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Anti Slice Curriculum
ANTI SLICE CURRICULUM
LYNN BLAKE There are two things you must learn to do. First, you must learn to keep your Left Wrist Flat. You say you are doing that. Look, look LOOK to make sure. Second, you must learn to swing through the Ball and not at the Ball. Swinging at the Ball is 'Hacking the Ball' and that produces only Hackers. Here's how to get started. Take your normal grip -- hopefully it is a Strong Single Action per 10-2-B -- and a Square Stance. Be sure that the Stance is actually parallel to the Target Line. Put a Club down and check it out. There's a very good chance you are aimed to the right. Now start the Club swinging continuously over the top of the Ball as if you were going to hit a short Chip Shot. No more than three feet back and three feet through. Back and through and back and through and back and through. Continuous motion. Don't Cock your Wrists. Instead, just Turn and Roll your Left Forearm as you swing your Flat Left Wrist back and through and back and through. Turn and Roll and Turn and Roll and Turn and Roll and Turn and Roll. It is the Rolling of the Flat Left Wrist that gets the Club through Impact, not the Flattening of the Right Wrist. Please read that last sentence again. And one more time. Thank you. As you continue this motion, be aware of the pressure created in the right forefinger as you swing down and through and down and though and down and through. Continue to be aware of that pressure and keep it 'pointed' at the Straight Target Line as you swing back and through and back and through. Turning and Rolling and Turning and Rolling. Keep pointing at the Line, 'Tracing' it with the Pressure in your Right Forefinger as you Turn and Roll and Turn and Roll the Flat Left Wrist. On each Downstroke, be very aware of theRight Hand Tracing and the Left Hand Rolling. Now lower the Club behind the Ball and make the exact same Motion away from the Ball and through it. The Ball will go straight. If it did not, first make sure that you properly 'Traced' the Line. If you did not, try again. If you did and the Ball went to the right, Roll more. If it went to the left, Roll less. Moving the Head backwards during the Downstroke is a Sway (the Fourth Snare 3-F-7-D), and it is the product of a malfunctioning Pivot. Before diving into work on that problem, though, make sure your head is set properly to begin with. Do you set your Head position first at Impact Fix, and then attempt to keep it Stationary? Or do you, like most people, start with your Head in an Adjusted Address position that ignores a proper Impact Fix position (and therefore cannot possibly be maintained through Impact)? My guess is the latter. So, what is a good Head position at Impact Fix? First, a plumb line from your chin to the ground should fall precisely between your Feet. Your Head should form the tip of an isosceles triangle whose base is the Feet. Most people hang back -- probably in response to instruction that emphasizes that the Head should be 'behind the Ball' and even 'over the right knee.' Consequently, their Head and Feet form a right triangle. Second, the Head should be located a good deal lower than most people's 'normal' Address position. The exact position will be dictated by the amount of Knee Bend and Waist Bend. In turn, these are determined by the distance the Hips must move to enable the Right Forearm to return precisely to its preselected Impact Fix Angle of Approach (pointing at the Plane Line well in front of the Ball). Bottom Line: Most people -- even good players -- move their Head entirely too much during the Stroke. And one of the primary reasons is that they have failed to set it properly in the first place. As nearly as your current skill allows, assume a static position replicating your precise Impact position and alignments: 1. Body position (comparatively squared away with the Head between the Feet). 2. Arms position (the Flying Wedges with the amount of Knee and Waist Bend necessary to allow the Right Forearm to point at the Plane Line). 3. Hands position (Impact Hand Location with the Left Wrist Flat, Level and Vertical). Wherever your Head is located now... That is where it should remain until the end of the Follow-Through (Both Arms Straight position). |
Study Of The Basic Motion
STUDY OF THE BASIC MOTION (STAGE ONE)
LYNN BLAKE DEMONSTRATION AND EXPLANATION I like what I see in this Basic Motion Stroke (12-5-1 / Hitting Pattern). http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/index.p...urriculum.html The Basic Motion (Stage One) involves a miniaturized Stroke (12-0) -- approximately two feet back and two feet through. It puts in place the Basic Body Position and the Power Package alignments. It is a One-Accumulator Stroke, and that one Accumulator may be either the Right Arm (Accumulator #1 / Hitting) or the Left (Accumulator #4 / Swinging). I have elected to begin the Stroke from the Half-and-Half Fix (10-8-C). Here, the Body is in Standard Address Position, and the Hands are in their Impact Location and Position. This is the second of four Address Position alternatives listed in 10-9-0; namely, "Both at selected Impact" (10-9-0-2). Let's examine this Selected Impact Address Position (10-9-B) and its Power Package alignments and then the Basic Stroke itself. THE BODY 1. Square Stance and Plane Line. 2. Feet close together with Weight slightly toward heels. 3. Appropriate Knee and Waist Bend. 4. Hips Square. 5. Head centered. THE ARMS 1. In Normal Position, i.e., Left Arm Straight and Right Arm Bent (6-A-4). 2. Right Forearm On Plane (2-F). 3. Left Arm and Right Forearm Flying Wedges established and properly aligned (6-B-3-0-1). THE HANDS 1. Strong Single-Action Grip (10-2-B). 2. In Impact Location. 3. Left Wrist Flat. THE CLUB 1. Forward-Leaning Clubshaft. 2. Clubface Square. THE STROKE 1. Only one of the Arm Accumulators (Right Arm or Left) is active in this Stage One. The Hand Action Accumulators (Left Wrist Cock and Uncock and Left Hand Turn and Roll) are introduced in Stage Two (Acquired Motion). I have chosen to use the Right Arm and the bending and straightening of the Right Elbow to lift and lower the Left Arm (7-3) and to provide the Basic Thrust of the Stroke. Thus, this is a Hitting Stroke. Had I elected to Swing, I would have used my Left Arm to Pull the Club through Impact (Pull Minor Basic Stroke / 10-3-D). Also, I may have used the Standard Address Position with an Extensor Action Takeaway (6-B-1-D) to Flatten the Left Wrist (and Bend the Right) in Start-Up. Had that been the case, Backstroke Arm Motion would have been minimal. Down stroke action and alignments would have remained the same. 2. Note that my Right Shoulder moves little, if at all, throughout the Stroke. That's because I am using my bending Right Arm -- and not my rocking Body - - to move the Club away from the Ball. In Start Up, I apply Extensor Action against Pressure Point #1 (heel of the Right Hand against the Left Hand thumb), and I use my Right Forearm and bending Right Elbow to "Carry" (7-9) the Left Arm and Club (Primary Lever Assembly) to the Top (Up, Back and In in a true Three-Dimensional Start-Up). The Right Forearm Fans (about the Elbow) and Traces the Straight Plane Line. Had this been a Swing, I would have used a "Swing-Back" Motion instead of the Hitter's "Carry-Back" Motion. Also, when using Standard Address position of the Hands, I would initiate Extensor Action using Pressure Point #3 [Right Hand index finger] to pull the Left Arm and Club shaft In-Line. But no matter which Motion is employed, the geometry of the Right Arm and Elbow Action -- how they 'look' to an observer -- is identical. All this is in stark contrast to most golfers whose Basic Motion is to freeze their Right Arm and Elbow and then to rock their Body back-and-forth to move the Club (Paw Minor Basic Stroke / 10-3-H). 3. During the Start Down, I Load my bent Right Elbow against Pressure Point #3 (Drive Loading / 10-19-A). From the Top, I simply Push radially (sidewise) the entire Left Arm and Club Assembly through Impact (Right Arm Throw / 10-20- B). When Swinging, I Load my Level Left Wrist against Pressure Point #2, the last three fingers of the Left Hand (Drag Loading / 10-19-C). I then simply Pull longitudinally (lengthwise) only the Club itself through Impact (Left Wrist Throw / 10-20-E). 4. At Impact, I have returned precisely to my Half-and-Half Fix Address Position alignments. The Body -- including the Head -- has remained Motionless and the Power Package (Arms, Hands and Club) has returned to its Impact alignments. Compare Photos #1 and #14. They are identical. 5. Through Impact, my Right Elbow Drive-Out against Pressure Point #3 (and possibly #1) has automatically produced Angled Hinge Action (10-10-C). That is, the Flat Left Wrist has remained perpendicular (Vertical) to the Angled Plane of the Stroke. This Action is executed as a 'No Roll' Feel and produces a 'Half- Roll' of the Clubface at the end of the Follow-Through. In contrast, the Swinger's Centrifugal Force Throw-Out will automatically produce Horizontal Hinge Action (10-10-D). That is, the Flat Left Wrist will remain perpendicular (Vertical) to the Horizontal Plane. This Action is executed as a 'Roll' Feel and produces a 'Full-Roll' of the Clubface. All Hinge Actions MUST be executed on the Straight Line Delivery Line. This is the essential requirement for all Golf Strokes and why only Items #22 and #39 are capitalized in the Mechanical Checklist For All Strokes (12-3-0). 6. My bent Right Elbow at Impact continues its Drive toward the Plane Line (NOT toward the Target!) during the Follow-Through (1-L-10 and -15). The Angled Hinge Action has insured that the Left Arm and Club shaft have remained In- Line and that there is perfect Rhythm (RPM). 7. The Stroke concludes when my Right Arm has fully-straightened (6-G-0-C). This is the end of the Follow-Through (Section 11), and because it is also the end of the Stroke, it constitutes the Finish (Section 12). Since the Thrust has continued Down Plane until the Right Elbow has fully-straightened, there properly has been no 'Upstroke.' This despite the fact that the Club itself has passed Low Point (opposite the Left Shoulder) and has begun its own Upward, Inward and Forward journey to the Finish. Work on your Basic Motion. Pay attention to each Component and its alignments. This is the foundation of your Stroke and of your Game. IT IS NO LESS THAN THE GATEWAY TO YOUR BEST GOLF. BASIC MOTION CURRICULUM I LYNN BLAKE 12-5-0 BASIC REQUIREMENTS Use a slow, smooth motion up-and-back, down-and-out and up-and-in the same distance in both directions and as continuously as possible. Make no adjustments during the Stroke, for – or because of – Impact. NEVER EVER. That is “Hacking at the Ball” and produces only “Hackers.” Attach the items listed in the Three Stages, in sequence, without unnecessarily interrupting the Motion. Carefully develop the Address Routine (3-F-5). Execute the items, single or in short series, first without a Ball and then with a Ball. Comply with 3-B, 5-0 and 12-3 – including The Triad. Observe the special instructions at the head of each Stage list. Where applicable, interpret the items per the basic Stroke Pattern, that is, Hitting or Swinging. Either 12-1 OR 12-2 – not both at the same time. The Strong Single Action Grip (10-2-B) is mandatory throughout. A lesson begins where the last one left off. Asterisks in list indicate items for an abbreviated version. This Curriculum can stand alone for many students but may also serve as preparation for a Basic Certificate course. But most importantly, MUST be used in conjunction with all other G.O.L.F. curriculums. BASIC MOTION CURRICULUM II LYNN BLAKE Yes. Most players wait far too long to get the Bending Right Elbow into action. They have been led astray by the instruction to "Take the Club away with your Shoulder Turn" and, by all means, "Preserve the Triangle." This procedure is nothing more than a Paw Minor Basic Stroke Start Up (10-3- H) with both arms frozen (Bent or Straight) and a Shoulder Turn Takeaway. Though the Power Package is usually later assembled, the damage has been done: The true Orbit of the Club head has been disrupted and, with it, the required On Plane Loading of the Club head Lag. Without substantial realignment at the Top, a true Three-Dimensional Impact with its maximum compression has become impossible. Instead, integrate the Magic of the Right Forearm into your Stroke by practicing the Bending and Straightening of the Right Elbow. To do this, use the Continuous Motion procedure of 12-5-1 (with Zero Pivot) and 12-5-2 (with Minimal Pivot). Also, per 7-3, practice the Right Forearm Takeaway from Fix (with Zero or Minimal Pivot) making sure to preserve the all-important alignments of the Flying Wedges Assembly (6-B-3-0-1). You are wise to use the Basic Motion Curriculum (12-5-0) to assemble your G.O.L.F. Stroke. Homer Kelley was very proud of it and felt it would one day become, in his words, "more popular than the book itself." Remember, the purpose of the Curriculum is best served if the Motion is kept continuous, i.e., back-and-through and back-and-through and back-andthrough, as you integrate each Component. Use 'breaks' in the process to rehearse the Address Routines of 3-F-5 and 2-J-1. You have observed that Pressure Point #1 is not listed in the Curriculum. Nor is Pressure Point #4. However, you will find Accumulator #1 (the Right Arm) and Accumulator #4 (the Left Arm) as Items #12 and #9 respectively in Stage One (the Basic Motion per 12-5-1). The Accumulators are normally actuated by their "same numbered" Pressure Points (7-11). So, when the Study References are given to 6-B-1 (Power Accumulator #1) and 6-B-4 (Power Accumulator #4), the references to Pressure Points #1 (10-11-0-1) and #4 (10-11-0-4) are implied. As stated in 12-5-0, the items in each of the Three Stages are meant to be interpreted per the Stroke Patterns of 12-1-0 (Hitting) and 12-2-0 (Swinging). In other words, if you are learning to Hit, then the Right Arm becomes active, and Pressure Point #1 becomes its Direct Drive. If you are learning to Swing, then the Left Arm becomes Active, and Pressure Point #4 becomes the Direct Drive. Pressure Points #2 and #3 are listed (as Items #14 and #15 in 12-5-1). Their associated Power Accumulators (#2 and #3) are not introduced into the Curriculum until Stage 2 (the Acquired Motion per 12-5-2). The Swinger uses Pressure Point #2 to drive the #2 Accumulator -- the Wrist cock – but normally only as actuated by Centrifugal Force. The Hitter drives the #2 Accumulator with Right Arm Thrust (2-P) using either Pressure Points #1 or #3. Finally, the Club head Lag must be assigned to one of the employed Pressure Points, and this is almost always #3. For both Hitters and Swingers, this constitutes the Indirect Drive of the Club through Impact. Zero Out Pivot means don't move your Body -- Shoulders included -- and keep the Left Arm and Club shaft in a straight line -- either by Gripping the Club in the Cup of the Left Hand or by using a Reverse Wrist Cock (FVU) per 6-B-3-B, as you move the Club back and through the Ball continuously, two feet in both directions. This first stage of the Basic Motion Curriculum can indeed serve "as a syllabus for an exercise lesson." But it is so much more. In fact, it is no exaggeration to state that it is the Foundation of the Golf Stroke. Finally, Homer's notes for a revised 7th Edition added a new first sentence for each of the three stages, and I suggest you write them into your book: 12-5-1. "This stage concerns mainly the Basic Body Positions and Basic Power Package Component Alignments and Arm Motion Power Accumulators." 12-5-2. "This stage introduces Body Motion and the Alignments and relations of the Hand Action Power Accumulators of the Power Package." 12-5-3. "This stage should move slowly toward unrestricted motion but not to Full Power even with Long Irons and Woods. This stage is for the perfection of execution prior to Full Power." Do not underestimate the benefit of each of these three stages and the skill that their progressive mastery will produce. They are your keys to a lifetime of Better Golf! The 'Two feet past the Ball' of Stage One of the Basic Motion Curriculum is the Follow-Through of Stroke Section 11. So, make sure you reach this point. If you can't, it's because you have not 'pre-positioned' your Right Shoulder (down On Plane) to allow a Follow-Through of this length. If not, then do so. I also suggest 'Arms separate' practice. Focus on your Flat Left Wrist with the Left Arm motion and the Bent Right Wrist with your Right Arm motion. Then, put them together, and as you go through the Ball, make sure there is absolutely zero interruption in your Rhythmic Motion through Impact. Remember, you swing through the Ball, not at the Ball. The Basic Drill is without a Ball and with continuous 'back and through' and 'back and through' and 'back and through' motion. Periodically, stop at the end of the Stroke, and Look, Look LOOK to verify that your Wrist Alignments have been maintained. Then, resume the 'back and through' continuous motion. This is the only Train out of Hackerville. Finally, as you are learning, the 'sound' of Impact is diagnostic. A true 'Three Dimensional' Impact will sound like hitting a stone -- especially with these Basic Motion Chips and even with Putts. The more 'mushy' the sound, the greater the Compression Leakage. 1. Use Angled Hinging for the Right Arm Only Stroke. Feel the On Plane Paddlewheel nature of the Right Forearm action from Release(8-9) to Both Arms Straight (8-11). The is the 'Underhand Pitch, Motion and Feel' (2-N-0) that keeps the Club shaft On Plane. 2. There is no 'dual' Angled Hinge Action because the one Angled Hinge governs both Club shaft and Clubface. For all practical purposes, Horizontal and Vertical Hinging will always be 'dual.' That's because you need two hinges: one to control the Club shaft and another to control the Clubface. 3. In the shorter Non-Pivot Strokes, Swingers should use the Magical Right Forearm Takeaway (7-3) on the Backstroke; then, on the Down stroke, use the Minor Basic Left Arm Pull Stroke (10-3-D) to Pull the Club through Impact. In the longer Strokes -- from the Top -- they should emphasize the Right Shoulder Turn thrust of the #4 Accumulator (6-B-4-0/A/B/C) to 'crank up the gyroscope' of Centrifugal Force. Hitters -- with or without Shoulder Turn Thrust -- should use the Right Arm Throw (10-20-B) to Trigger the Release, and then use Right Elbow Drive (6-B- 1-0/A/B/C) to Push the Club through Impact. If you are more comfortable with this latter action, then use it and learn The Joy of Hitting. A technique that emphasizes Right Arm Power is more natural to most of us, and because of the active sensing of Muscular Thrust -- as opposed to the passive sensing of Centrifugal Force --it is the best way to learn to use the Right Forefinger #3 Pressure Point. The key to the effective use of the Right Arm is learning to straighten it without Flattening the Bent Right Wrist. Experiment and see which way works best for you. BASIC MOTION CURRICULUM QUESTIONS LYNN BLAKE Left Wrist Action (7-18 ) is independent of Plane Angle (7-6). For Swingers using Standard Left Wrist Action, the Start Up Swivel places the Left Palm On Plane almost immediately. That said, I did not necessarily advocate Standard Wrist Action. I simply said 'Turn and Roll.' Even with Single Wrist Action, there is a degree of Turn and Roll. Only with Zero Wrist Action would there be none. Remember, too, the problem I'm trying to solve here: Failure to allow the Clubface to properly close through Impact. This is Steering (3-F-7-A), the Game's #1 Snare. And if the Left Wrist (Clubface) doesn't Turn going back, it won't Roll going through. Remember... LEFT HAND: CLUBFACE. RIGHT HAND: CLUBHEAD. Also, for all Hitters and 'Manipulated Hands' Swingers (which is almost everybody else), a Ball Positioned forward of the Straightaway Position tends to produce Fades and Slices. That fact, combined with the lack of proper Left Hand Roll during Release and Impact, causes an Off-Center Impact -- the Clubface contacts the Inside-Aft Quadrant (2-B) of the Ball instead of directly in the Back, i.e., through its Centerline. Similarly, a 'back of Straightaway' Ball position tends to produce Draws and Hooks. So, if you're fighting a Fade or Slice, make sure the Ball is Back in your Stance rather than Forward. And, keeping your Left Wrist Flat, Level and Vertical (4- A/B/C-1) in Fix, align the Clubface more Closed (which will tend to make it contact the Center or Outside-Aft Quadrant of the Ball). Properly executed, this will produce Clubface Alignment-Club head Path divergence and the Draw you are looking for. Most players wait far too long to get the Bending Right Elbow into action. They have been led astray by the instruction to "Take the Club away with your Shoulder Turn" and, by all means, "Preserve the Triangle." This procedure is nothing more than a Paw Minor Basic Stroke Start Up (10-3- H) with both arms frozen (Bent or Straight) and a Shoulder Turn Takeaway. Though the Power Package is usually later assembled, the damage has been done: The true Orbit of the Club head has been disrupted and, with it, the required On Plane Loading of the Club head Lag. Without substantial realignment at the Top, a true Three-Dimensional Impact with its maximum compression has become impossible. Instead, integrate the Magic of the Right Forearm into your Stroke by practicing the Bending and Straightening of the Right Elbow. To do this, use the Continuous Motion procedure of 12-5-1 (with Zero Pivot) and 12-5-2 (with Minimal Pivot). Also, per 7-3, practice the Right Forearm Takeaway from Fix (with Zero or Minimal Pivot) making sure to preserve the all-important alignments of the Flying Wedges Assembly (6-B-3-0-1). You are wise to use the Basic Motion Curriculum (12-5-0) to assemble your G.O.L.F. Stroke. Homer Kelley was very proud of it and felt it would one day become, in his words, "more popular than the book itself." Remember, the purpose of the Curriculum is best served if the Motion is kept continuous, i.e., back-and-through and back-and-through and back-andthrough, as you integrate each Component. Use 'breaks' in the process to rehearse the Address Routines of 3-F-5 and 2-J-1. You have observed that Pressure Point #1 is not listed in the Curriculum. Nor is Pressure Point #4. However, you will find Accumulator #1 (the Right Arm) and Accumulator #4 (the Left Arm) as Items #12 and #9 respectively in Stage One (the Basic Motion per 12-5-1). The Accumulators are normally actuated by their "same numbered" Pressure Points (7-11). So, when the Study References are given to 6-B-1 (Power Accumulator #1) and 6-B-4 (Power Accumulator #4), the references to Pressure Points #1 (10-11-0-1) and #4 (10-11-0-4) are implied. As stated in 12-5-0, the items in each of the Three Stages are meant to be interpreted per the Stroke Patterns of 12-1-0 (Hitting) and 12-2-0 (Swinging). In other words, if you are learning to Hit, then the Right Arm becomes active, and Pressure Point #1 becomes its Direct Drive. If you are learning to Swing, then the Left Arm becomes Active, and Pressure Point #4 becomes the Direct Drive. Pressure Points #2 and #3 are listed (as Items #14 and #15 in 12-5-1). Their associated Power Accumulators (#2 and #3) are not introduced into the Curriculum until Stage 2 (the Acquired Motion per 12-5-2). The Swinger uses Pressure Point #2 to drive the #2 Accumulator -- the Wrist cock – but normally only as actuated by Centrifugal Force. The Hitter drives the #2 Accumulator with Right Arm Thrust (2-P) using either Pressure Points #1 or #3. Finally, the Club head Lag must be assigned to one of the employed Pressure Points, and this is almost always #3. For both Hitters and Swingers, this constitutes the Indirect Drive of the Club through Impact. I've been trying 12-5-1 Basic Motion for a while. I decided to take it to the range and hit balls with it. I would take a short swing back and through the ball, about two feet on each end. All the while trying to feel pressure points #2 and 3, watching my hands, watching and feeling for a flat left wrist all with very little lower body motion. After a while, I could hear a nice sharp crack and the ball would fly. I then seemed to want to add the follow through ( like 8-11). I was using my 9 iron and occasionally my 7 iron. My questions: Am I doing it correctly? How long should I do it? And I'm assuming 12-5-2 Acquired Motion is next? The 'Two feet past the Ball' of Stage One of the Basic Motion Curriculum is the Follow-Through of Stroke Section 11. So, make sure you reach this point. If you can't, it's because you have not 'pre-positioned' your Right Shoulder (down On Plane) to allow a Follow-Through of this length. If not, then do so. I also suggest 'Arms separate' practice. Focus on your Flat Left Wrist with the Left Arm motion and the Bent Right Wrist with your Right Arm motion. Then, put them together, and as you go through the Ball, make sure there is absolutely zero interruption in your Rhythmic Motion through Impact. Remember, you swing through the Ball, not at the Ball. The Basic Drill is without a Ball and with continuous 'back and through' and 'back and through' and 'back and through' motion. Periodically, stop at the end of the Stroke, and Look, Look LOOK to verify that your Wrist Alignments have been maintained. Then, resume the 'back and through' continuous motion. This is the only Train out of Hackerville. Finally, as you are learning, the 'sound' of Impact is diagnostic. A true 'Three Dimensional' Impact will sound like hitting a stone -- especially with these Basic Motion Chips and even with Putts. The more 'mushy' the sound, the greater the Compression Leakage. You're on the right track now. Stay with it. |
Thoughts On Hitting & Swinging
THOUGHTS ON HITTING & SWINGING
LYNN BLAKE 10-19 SWING OR HIT? DO YOU FEEL WHAT I FEEL? The Computer requires Five Programming Routines to do its best work (Chapter 14). The first of these is the Feel of your Total Motion -- your Basic Procedure. This 'one' Feel is actually a composite of the many Feels you have learned and mastered separately during your G.O.L.F. journey. Each of these Feels maintains their separate identity and yet always relate harmoniously to the whole. What I will describe are my Primary Feels -- themselves also a composite -- that govern my Stroke and that I can depend upon to reliably reproduce the Mechanics patiently and deliberately acquired through the Star System Process of 1-J and 3-B. Swinging: My Lower Body leads and my Upper Body and Power Package lags. This Start Down Motion causes my Wrists to Cock a bit more and the Club head Lag to Load against my #3 Pressure Point (Right Forefinger). Since Start Up, I have been aware of a definite Extensor Action (against the #1 Pressure Point -- heel of the Right Hand against the Left Hand thumb). The Lead-and-Lag Start Down Motion accentuates that Feel. I sense a Gyroscopic Motion as I Pull the Club Down Plane until it is automatically Thrown-Out by Centrifugal Force in Release. I am very aware of the Left Wrist Throw through the #2 Pressure Point (the last three fingers of the Left Hand sensing the Centrifugal Left Wrist Uncock per 10-20-E). And -- from The Top (Station Two) to The Finish (Station Three) -- I Trace the Straight Plane Line with my Right Forearm and #3 Pressure Point. Hitting: Except for the Lag Loading (Drive versus Drag) , the Feel is essentially the same as above until Release. Then, the Club is Driven-Out by Right Arm Muscle Power. I am very aware of the Right Elbow's Drive against the #1 Pressure Point per 10-20-B and my Right Shoulder acting as a Launching Pad for that Drive. As with Swinging, I Trace the Straight Plane Line with my Right Forearm and #3 Pressure Point. However, because I am Actively Thrusting, I Feel the Pressure Point Combination (the Active Muscular Drive against #1 and #3) much more strongly than when Swinging (with its Passive Centrifugal Drive against #2 and #3). |
all types of lag
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Tracing the plane line
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re Basic Motion
Ive asked Mr Blake a lot of dumb questions over the past few years , here's my latest from Cusowilla October 2011.
"When employing the Left Arm Pull Minor Basic Stroke (see one Accumulator Swinging chipping above) do you still use a Right Forearm Takeaway?" Mr Blakes reply; "Yes". As Johnny Carson used to say to Ed......" I did not know that!" P.S. Like most things Homer , there may be exceptions , conditions etc. Stage One Swinging Basic Motion the Left Arm Pull Minor Basic Stroke when combined with an Extensor Action takeaway (Hogan style chipping) will show very minimal Hand Motion and would not be consistent with a Right Forearm Takeaway. I don't think, maybe. Unless you consider EA Takeaway or Right Hand bending as a form of RFT. |
Air , you Sir are doing some fine digging these days!
Where did you get the info presented above in 2629? |
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What does it mean to obliterate the plane line?
How is it done? Why is it important? ...... From O.B.Left : My take on it: To trace the Plane Line is golf's geometry given the circular like club head orbit and the inclined plane. To "obliterate" the Plane Line is to add force , physics to the geometry. But the direction of Thrust and the Line of Flight of the club head are not similarly aligned. I don't have my book with me right now, but somewhere in the 1-Ls Homer discusses how the thrust is down and out towards the plane line prior to impact, after impact up to and including both arms straight. This is a geometric riddle in a way. The thrust is cross line towards the plane line even though the club head (post low point) is travelling UP and IN. This cross line thrust is readily apparent to those who employ the Aiming Point Procedure and/or an Active Right Arm Right Throw but it is equally important if less apparent or intuitive for the Swinger who Homer regarded as having a similar thrust a similar right arm throwing motion though a product of CF rather than active right arm muscle. This is why Homer thought all Swingers should experiment with Hitting I believe. To sense this cross line direction of thrust. So swingers and hitters alike Thrust cross line towards the Plane Line both prior to and after impact. I'm referring here to a square plane line procedure of course. The Hitter's Angle of Approach procedure being a slightly different deal in terms of the direction of the plane line. So for me anyways to destroy the plane line is the physics of thrusting at the Plane Line. If hitting a cross line throwing motion, swinging a similar but passive right arm extension. See the Aiming Point procedure (the alternate to the Tracing Procedure) as it seems to be related and makes this direction of this thing more intuitive. I can't remember who said this but I've always liked it. The idiot's guide to TGM : "Keeping swinging out until your divots point at the target. " (although the divots themselves are really slightly curved). It could be rewritten to be "keep thrusting out until you can see the club heads blur cover the arc of approach and trace the straight line plane line." But only a few would understand that one. Again I'm writing quickly and have probably made some errors or typos . Let me know if this makes sense. PS - it'd be interesting to hear what others had to say about this. I'm also wondering what the context was when Homer made this statement. It might shed some light on his thinking. .... Posted by 12 piece bucket: I think this is where yellow book devotees can get of track....it is the CLUBHEAD that is moving cross line OUT to the plane line...not nessarily the hands....do some look look look.....if you take your hands out to the plane the clubhead wants to "laydown" underplane and swing to far underneath plane line shifted right and low point compromised..... Imagine that the butt cap of the club has a flashlight in it...you need to get the butt cap (flashlight) looking back at your left hip to get the clubhead to throw OUT to the plane line... |
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I wish I had spent less time formatting documents and more time studying. :-) I am starting to rectify that now!
Kevin |
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