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| Re: My Right Leg Start with practicing a few shots with all the weight on the right leg the whole time. Just balance with your toe of your front leg to keep you from falling down. Then hit 2-3 with a normal setup still thinking of the drill. You will feel the exact same position in teh back leg. Then there is the "Screw" thought. Imagine your back leg a screw as you go back, it drives into the ground slightly (this is mainly to keep the flex the same, but is also works to help in the weight transfer). Then there is the thought of placing your leading shoulder directly over your trailing knee at the top. This is something to help both shoulder turn And weight transfer. And the last one, is my walking drill. If you do this AND walk the straight line without falling, you have proper weight transfer.
__________________ I'm a golfaholic, no question about that. Counseling wouldn't help me. They'd have to put me in prison, and then I'd talk the warden into building a hole or two and teach him how to play. ~Lee Trevino Last edited by GregJWillis; 01-10-2008 at 10:36 PM. |
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| Re: My Right Leg I used to focus too much on keeping right knee flex well now I understand that keeping the same flex at address and at the top of the backswing is not important, what hogan tried and wanted to do was keep the right leg at the same angle from address to the top. What I mean is this, stand on your rear leg and it is pointing pretty much straight up and down. Now take address position and if your feet are wider then your hips then your right leg will be at an angle, the angle that is is at is where you want to keep it in the backswing, and straightening up some is ok as long as the angle is kept |
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| Re: My Right Leg Outstanding practice technique, Jambalaya. You have demonstrated the ability to learn, placing you in the top tier of golfers. My trick on this was to intentionally cock the right knee towards the target slightly. It worked so well for me that I made it a permanent part of the setup, just because it turned out to be such a good reminder. I had been told years ago by a Scottish teacher that the one thing he would change in all his students is a free lower body turn starting with the takeaway. That can mean even letting the left knee freely follow and the left heel coming off the ground. By now, you have probably recognized that the fly in the ointment is the dreaded sway. Your challenge is to anchor that right side by maintaining the right hip pivot point. Yes, you can turn the lower body fully while maintaining the plant of the right side. Now, the teachers have decided to deemphasize the turn driven by the legs in favor of upper body thoughts, something to do with building torque. I don't know, but the instruction provided in this thread so far are right on the money. It's something you'll have to work out for your self, but as I say, I like the way you are approaching the study. I make a big turn both lower and upper, and it works for me. For one thing, it gets me to the inside. I have a diagram I call the Japanese double hinged gate. Maintain the right hip socket going back, then reverse the turn, still maintaining the right pivot point, then in follow through, establish a left side pivot point and fire the right side through, letting it swing right around the left pivot point, just like a hinge on Japanese screen. Last edited by edshaw; 10-13-2006 at 06:11 PM. |
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| Re: My Right Leg edshaw, I like this quote by you "I don't know, but the instruction provided in this thread so far are right on the money" so many times we may focus on one little minor detail in the golf swing that we disgree about instead of hte big details that we do agree about and that will lead to confusion. me you and greg have givien him some info and he can read all three and see that the discussion is pretty consistent but explained differently so he can cross reference between the three and get more out of it rather then trying to figure out which post is right and which is wrong. |
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| Re: My Right Leg Quote:
One thing to try is a narrower stance, weight on the balls of the feet. Try and kick that right knee a little (not too much) and focus on keeping it pointed at the target as you turn. It may well float back and rotate a little and thats fine. As Greg says also feel you push down on the inside of your right foot (i like to feel the big toe pushing down) as you turn back and use the ground as leverage. A lot of good players actually look like they increased their spine angles at the top because they do this ( as S4P says, trying to keep the knee flex is a misnomer .. thats not what good players do .. they merely use the ground to push their weight too and then spring off it) http://content-golf.live.advance.net...enlawslead.jpg You'll know youve done it right when you feel all that pull up the inside of the right leg. The more tension I can get in the right leg the further i can hit the ball without having to rotate especially hard from the top This is why I beleive the pro's all look so effortless, its like a duck in a pond, the lower body is generating miles of energy allowing the top half to take a free ride Last edited by pnearn; 10-17-2006 at 08:38 AM. |