That is so cool...thank you for sharing the good news with us. I've enjoyed your posts over the years even though some of have gone right over my head. This post though may be your best.
Does Gary have a point here...maybe explained in his own terms rather than TGM.
A Flat left wrist at top requires an off plane motion ? (assuming attempt at square-square set up plane line)...or, IMO, an early roll of the sweetspot off the plane?
Thanks for your last post, Matthew - very clear....and congratulations!
Does Gary have a point here...maybe explained in his own terms rather than TGM.
A Flat left wrist at top requires an off plane motion ? (assuming attempt at square-square set up plane line)...or, IMO, an early roll of the sweetspot off the plane?
Thanks for your last post, Matthew - very clear....and congratulations!
My preference (as there is alternatives) is for the primary lever assembly at startup to be moved as a single structure - in its entirety. When the left arm starts slowing down after the initial force at startup subsides, you then just 'allow' the clubhead to continue to go around the left hand. It is like if I pushed a shopping cart with open hands - providing I continue to accelerate - it will keep touching my hands and as soon as I slow down the cart will pass me. It is the same with the left arm - as soon as it slows down the clubhead will start to move around the left wrist. The physics of the clubhead swinging around the left wrist creates the wrist conditions. The same effect occurs in the downstroke.
If you had a flat left wrist at the top of the backstroke the release would have to be simultaneous inorder to be onplane. The rolling of the left hand has a symbiant relationship with the uncocking of the left wrist. This is precisely the difference between the vertical flail and onplane flail of 2-K.
However if you are allowing the physics to work in this manner (as one of my experiments once showed me that perhaps I will reproduce for you at some point) is that the rotation happens long before the loading is completed and vise versa in the downstroke. Im not a physics genious so I create experiments to overcome my shortcomings in that department to understand a particular aspect of golfing mechanics. The simultaneous release doesn't allow this to happen in this manner and therefore is incompatible with swinging.
, you crack me up Burner. Come to Australia and lap it up, our culture is to shout the guests Come and catch up oneday, then hit darty and guru up,
just remind them bio has taught you educated hands and it's the coaches job to teach you so it's there shout Drinking beer is a required skills to teach extensor action, applying the right hand action