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That odor eminating from the mixture, is from the "hint" of Bucket. lol:) |
100
I got nothin'...just post # 100
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Congrats Okie. |
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Yoda, That rocking right shoulder section of the video is Tommy demonstrating the Flying wedge "drill"....it's part of a "drill" (in the video it's a demonstration from an acquired motion stroke, not to be confused with a total motion stroke). Trust me, Tommy started the downswing with the right arm when the hands are above shoulder high....the uncocking of the right elbow through the use of the right forearm. The Magic of the Right Forearm. Tommy throws the club down with the uncocking motion of the right elbow through the right forearm....Tommy did not in any way teach the full swing with the right shoulder starting the club down or with the lower body....total mis-interpretation. DG |
101 Elvis Impersonators
Did he tilt his axis first? As I may have mentioned a while back I had the darndest time making that 2 inch lateral move...but when I thought in terms of what TT said doing his "stick drill" i.e. right shoulder moving down on plane...it helped. For ME the two toughest moves in golf are cocking and uncocking the right elbow while keeping the right wrist level and bent...and...the 2 inch lateral move to tilt the axis! My associated feel to tilt the axis is the right shoulder moving down the turned shoulder plane...I no longer look like an uncoordinated Elvis impersonator. Too be honest this post was a Trojan Horse...real purpose?...to announce my 101th post!
PS Thanks Daryl! |
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The next time I send you a video....I'll be on a plane with the delivery of the package. Because I need to go through the video with you. You're killing me with the above analysis. Tommy rocks the shoulders with the flying wedge demonstration so the student gets the feel of the on-plane shoulders......in the demonstration Tommy rocks his shoulders three times....then stops at the top of the acquired motion stroke which he uses for a flying wedge drill....then he says to uncock the right forearm to complete the acquired motion swing (it's just a drill). That's right....the magic of the right forearm works from all locations in the stroke (again, reference the letter series #2 video, please). In the book, Homer suggests isolating and practicing each component. In that drill Tomasello is doing just that...isolating the shoulder component number 13 at the beginning of the drill. Yoda....please re-review the video and watch the extensor action drill (right after the flying wedge drill) for how Tommy starts the downswing. Listen to the conversation between Jack and Tommy. DG |
Translating Tommy's Instruction
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That said, I certainly can understand your interpretation. In other segments of the video, e.g., when demonstrating Extensor Action, Tommy just as clearly isolates the action of the Arms and moves them independently from the Top, i.e., with zero Pivot transport. He leaves his Body in a full turn and pumps only his arms, i.e., no 'shoulder rock'. The video will speak for itself. We are presently working hard to prepare other video (Blake/Trolio) but will post this one soon. Once it is up, members can draw their own conclusions. As always, we will welcome all comments, including yours. |
Jack's Ok
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Thanks, DG |
Arms, then Pivot
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Based on the above, one could convincingly argue that the pivot precedes and sets up the start down, storage, delivery, and release of the power package, but one could also convincingly argue that start down, storage, delivery, and release are muscularly handled by the arms once the plant and pivot have supplied the braking action, groundforce production, and subsequent slow down necessary for the arms and hands to then muscularly form a harness and transmit the groundforce. Until the force is transmitted by the arms and hands, a golfer has not swung to hit the ball yet. So the arms harness and transmit the force on the downswing and the slowed pivot reaccelerates and follows thereafter. Arms initiate downswing force transmission and the pivot follows, but the pivot has already accelerated a bit and then slowed to facilitate this. First pivot then arms to initiate, generate, and complete the actual strike of the ball or the other way around? Either explanation works for me. I just need to know someone's definitions of when the backswing stops, when the downswing begins, and when the actual muscular force to strike the ball is transmitted. I usually prefer to say that the legs and pivot stop the backswing and create the groundforce that the arms can then harness and transmit to initiate the strike of the ball. Since I can check my swing and decide not to strike the ball after my downswing leg and pivot action has occurred, then I really do feel that my bent right arm receives the ultimate message from my brain to initiate the strike of the ball. I predict that there will always be two sides to this argument and both are right, but I do believe that the legs are the engine and the arms and hands are the transmission. The muscularly active and reactive pivot is necessary for both the engine and the transmission to be effective. Einstein said that answers to complex questions like this are usually simple, elegant, and predictable, but in this case I believe in HL Mencken who said that "For every complex problem there is a simple solution. And it's always wrong." Both sides in this debate should be prepared to be wrong, right, or neither wrong nor right depending on the premises and context of the argument. |
Just Pull It Down
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:salut: It calls to mind an old memory of when I was working with Homer Kelley on the range in Seattle in January 1982. He advised me to pull the club down from the top. "What do I pull it with?" I asked. "My body? Arms? Hands?" "I don't care what you pull it with. Just pull!" :shock: |
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