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Kevin |
Sittin', Starin', and Rockin'
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Left Heel / To Lift Or Not To Lift
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Problem is . . . Few golfers have a proper pivot. And they won't have one until that left heel (and the accompanying knee bend) starts accommodating the necessary Hip Turn (and with it, the necessary Shoulder Turn). The reality is that the average guy's lower body doesn't move very well. Soon, the various pivot Components -- especially the Hips, Knees, and Feet -- get used to that limited dynamic and simply shut down. They're no longer active; instead, they merely accommodate, to a limited extent, the required Golf Motion. To all golfers, I say this: Virtually every great player in history has lifted his (or her) left heel and fully-cleared their right hip, especially with the longer clubs. Off the top of my head, let's make a list over the last century: Early on: Anderson Vardon Braid Ray Ouimet Barnes Jones Vare Hagen Sarazen And almost everyone else. Next gen: Hogan Snead Nelson Picard Demaret Zaharias Guldahl Jameson Mangrum Bell Toski Locke Cotton Suggs Burke Berg DiVencenzo And almost everyone else. Next gen: Wright Palmer Nicklaus Jacklin Whitworth Rawls Player Trevino Casper Watson Miller Nelson Norman Kite Crenshaw Langer Price Haas (gotta put him in here; all-time PGA TOUR leader in Cuts Made!) Watkins And almost everyone else. Next gen: Stewart Lopez Azinger Woosnam King Montgomerie Mickelson Harrington Love And a ton of new (but not yet great) players too numerous to mention. Many of whom will no doubt learn from their new age instructors to keep their heel down in the coming years (risking both their backs and their careers). Woods? No, but then, he's not exactly the straightest driver out there, and at age 35, has already had his 4th left knee operation. Here's my question, to all players, instructors, biomechanists, broadcasters, magazine experts, et. al: If virtually ALL of the great champions in history -- male and female -- have had sufficient pivots to pull their left heel off the ground, why is the average golfer inhibiting his own by leaving the left heel down? :think: Here's an interesting tidbit: Years ago, marine biologists put a test group of sharks in a pool and let them get used to swimming the perimeter. Then, they put a plexiglass wall across the middle of the pool. Boom. Boom. Boom! The sharks soon got used to swimming in the plexiglass defined half-pool. Then, the biologists lifted the plexiglass wall. What happened? The sharks, having learned their constraints, continued to swim in their limited half-pool. And so it is with almost every left heel/right hip-bound golfer. The pivot lacking, they compensate. Usually with an under plane backswing around their frozen right hip, accompanied by an overswing of their collapsing arms, and the inevitable over-the-top move in the Start Down. Here's the real deal: Power is not the problem. The Arm Swing is Power, not the body. And the problem is that the Arms cannot swing freely On Plane (and past the body) while the right hip is in the way. Either back or down. So, get reckless: Lift your left heel. Clear your right hip. Let your left knee be pulled inward and point at or just behind the ball. With that action, you'll create a path for your HANDS to swing, back and down. Follow the lead of virtually every great champion in history . . . Just do it. :salut: |
Yoda, does the lifting of the left heel have to be full blown as in Jack's Golf My Way video where he portrays active feet and seems to be picking up the heels on purpose? I've always thought that the left heel is just allowed to rise up as much or as little as it does as a reaction to the pivot action and not consciously picked up in the back swing.
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Awesome and amazing!
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ICT |
Great Yoda post.
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Thanks Yoda, very informative and helpful! Just what I was looking for!
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I've read so much about resisting too big of a shoulder turn by restricting the length of shoulder turn with the hips. I have been taught that this is supposed to supply torque to the swing, by using hips to limit too big of a shoulder turn it is supposed to be similar to tightening a rubber band.
I guess I have over done it or really didn't understand what was meant. Didn't learn that here. I had been instructed in the past to keep my left heel down on back stroke, and not to let my knee flex to far towards the ball. Taught to me in my first or second lesson actually, probably why its uncomfortable for me to lift my heel now, and I was also taught to try to keep my right heel flat until just after impact. My old body won't allow the flat heel at impact, and I found out as I learned more about the swing that I needed to have some lift in the right heel at impact, that is how I knew I was at least making some type of attempt at a proper weight shift. Per my marching orders I am trying to READ and am searching for how to make a proper pivot. :eyes: There is so much information here its mind boggling. I know a poor pivot and poor use of lower body are two areas of my swing that are really hosed! Per Yoda's advice I will start to do it. I will lift that left heel! Just added another reason to the million I already have to get down to the swamp to see the master! |
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