Friday, June 24, 2011

Swing 3.2

I'll for sure not say I've found the magic move anymore.  After working on swing 3.0 I've got the right arm down.  Now chicken wings still keep coming back.  So started working intensely with video and with my son as a coach and started doing a really small backswing with really large extension.  Then had him swing with me simultaneously to get the timing down which helped.
I learned some things from that:

  • was sliding my hips to the left way too much.  Just need to turn hips
  • head comes up on backswing so need to keep it down
  • head lunges forward on swing so need to keep head back.

This I got from video.  But still had extension problems. Then stumbled upon a Golf Channel quick fix where the talked about covering with the right shoulder.  I hadn't been doing that at all so I tried it on the net and doing it helped with lag since my shoulders where slowing down which allowed my hands to catch up and cast. Video confirmed this and tested it out on the range and power and contact were real good.

So added more chunks of knowledge and tools in the toolbox on the never ending path.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Swing 3.1 Left Arm Straight Right Arm Push

Another thought has been to keep the left arm straight and then push hard with the right hand.  It's just like slamming a door by shoving it by the handle or shoving it close to the hinge.  Shoving it close to the hinge will make it close faster.  Well your left wrist is the hinge, the club is the door, and your right hand just shoves the door closed as hard as you can.  I have a friend that swings like this where he barely has a back swing and then generates tons of speed really fast just with his wrists.  His swing is amazing.  I thought he's just young and I'll never have that kind of power in my wrists.  And then you have to rely on timing too much.

Well I found out his secret I think!  He uses the right triceps, pectoral, and front deltoid (big muscles) to push on the club to generate club head speed.  His wrists don't have to do anything except guide the face angle of the club.  I don't even think the wrists hold the lag it's the latisimus dorsi holding the right elbow close to the body.

Now combine the hinge push with the left are moving as well and you can generate a lot of speed!  Something I think I'm going to explore.


**Update March 21:
This idea I think now is not a good idea at all.  First off it would encourage flipping the wrists and not pronation/suppination which is correct.  Also the wrists should remain loose and relaxed and you shouldn't be pushing hard with any hands during the swing!

Swing 3.0 Right Arm

I'm not going to say that I "finally" figured it out because I've already said that about a zillion times on this blog so this time I'll just say I've added another major chunk to my knowledge of the swing.  It all starts with video of course and I've been doing that a lot since for me I can go a lot faster in trying things and seeing if they work than working with a pro who I'll see once in a while and tell me stuff that I might or might not understand or don't see the reason why to do it.  And the teacher will say something about not everyone can have a swing like Tiger blah blah blah. Yes everyone has their own swing but all the pros have a lot of things in common my feeling is if your swing looks like a pro then the performance should eventually be there.  Otherwise you would see more variety on the tour, it's just empirical.

So I asked my son to film me at the range just to make sure things were OK and once again I was horrified by the chicken wings that came back.  I wasn't too panicked because I'd figured out how to get rid of them before but I forgot how.  It's funny how swing thoughts keep evolving.  I guess I'm just too used to experimenting.  Well because my son's swing was all off because of the supination work his back elbow was in a weird position.  So I started looking at the pros and all noticed how their right elbows are much more tucked into their sides and their forearm is vertical.

Before:  right forearm at an angle

After:  right forearm vertical this also brought my swing plane down
This got me experimenting/thinking about the right elbow.  Well I started tucking it into my side to try and also increase the lag.  I wasn't worried about pushing it with the club face too open because I could always close it with supination.  This led to a breakthrough in creating lag and how the swing feels.  I concentrated on keeping my right elbow glued to my right side as long as possible.  Ben Hogan wrote about this but I guess it didn't stick when I read the book.  Then I started looking at swing vision and saw that at the moment of impact the pros all had their right elbow slightly bent.  This is one of those unintuitive things about golf!  You would think both arms would be fully extended at impact with the largest arc of the circle and the wrists released at impact.  The pros also said have the whoosh right after impact.  That's also so unintuitive.  But I ignored the intuitive and I tried keeping my elbow glued to my side and my right arm bent as long as possible.
Before:  At impact both arms are dead straight
After:  even right after impact right arm is still a little bent
This felt so weird because for years it was thinking about the wrists releasing right at impact.  This showed in the scooping motion right after impact.  Even with supination at impact I could still never get the correct looking follow through like the pros.  My son kept telling me to throw my arms like the clubhead is super heavy.  I was almost resigned to thinking that physically I couldn't do it because I wasn't strong or flexible enough.  But in the back of my mind I knew that it was just a matter of having the right technique to get in the correct positions.  So something in my positions and timing were off.  Well I found this piece of the puzzle finally.

Before sequence:  Even though at impact left wrist is straight, right wrist scoops after impact.

No chicken wings but see how right wrist is scooping.
After sequence:  Way more lag, right elbow tucked in at impact and release of wrists after impact

Have never been able to be in this position before!  Finally arm and club are in  a completely straight line.  Just like the pros

Oh happy days.  Only after many repeated self videos, trying different things, reading on the internet lots of stuff has this happened.  But I'm pretty convinced that this would not have happened as quickly with just lessons from our local pros.

The next piece of the puzzle is how to keep my spine angle during impact and after.  I'm too upright and this makes my finish positions weird and why I think I have a real tendency for chicken wings like my left arm being straight is in the way of my torso turning so something has to give and that's bending my left arm resulting in chicken wings or hunched shoulders.  Will have to work on this extensively till I can crack the mystery.  But first will have to groove the new swing 3.0!