| Home | Forum | Tips | Gallery | Blog | Reviews | Lessons | Gym | Staff | Podcast |
| Register | FAQ | Links | Events | Arcade | Mark Forums Read |
| Our golf forum has 72,482 discussions | 34,902 members | 21 online now | mc3157 has just joined the GTO golf forum |
| ||||||||
| Welcome to golftuitiononline.com | the global golf forum You are currently viewing our golf forum as a guest which gives you limited access to the many features available here at the GTO golf forum. We are one of the largest golf forums online with 34,902 members worlwide and we pride ourselves on being the friendliest golf forum online. JOIN NOW (It's FREE) and you will gain immediate access to all these great features:
|
Register Now for FREE! |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| |||
| Re: compression Skywalker, please dont take this the wrong way, but he will be confused if this is not cleaned up. I like you and have liked having discussions with everyone on here Quote:
|
| ||||
| Re: compression S4P, i agree that may be misleading, thanks for clearing that up.... i just have trounle trying to explain what i do. main thing is you have to feel the club head throughout the DS. if you are just swinging the club without trying to throw the club head at the ball then you might as well have a steel shaft with no bend in it. we want to use the shaft to hit the ball extra far. i think people should start with a senior shaft and work on bending the shaft and feeling the head and then work their way up to a stiff. you have to learn to use your body so that your arms aid in the swing and end up loading the shaft so that it can compress and release through the ball. you can swing with just arms or just body and hit it decent, but to hit good you need to collectivly use both. if you can't bend a shaft throughout the whole swing then you are swinging with the body, then arms..... it like pulling a bow back, you want to let it go, you don't want to push it foward. everyone is different, but for me to learn how to use them both, i had to learn my arms first, then i could put my body into it (before i learned i just used my body and very little used my arms because i didn't know how to and i was told many times the body wing the arms)..... i like the RHD too, and i did it int he DS even when i had a false shoulder turn.... the RHD speaks of holding the right wrist cup at impact, and if you are pulling the arms down correctly with enough force than even though you are trying to uncup you can't and still hold the cup. Last edited by lgskywalker37; 10-16-2006 at 02:11 AM. |
| ||||
| Re: compression Quote:
a thought having the red strip pointing towards the ground gives you compression and that is only done by maintaining back wrist cup Last edited by lgskywalker37; 10-16-2006 at 02:15 AM. |
| |||
| Re: compression skywalker, I agree with you that trying to explain on here can be like pulling teeth. Very frustrating because while in conversation I could use 300 words a minute and show you examples, on the computer you loose body language visual demonstrations, and back and forth discussion. Well we try our best, keep it civil, and discuss it. One thing I really like about this forum, most people on it are very civil. Last edited by shootin4par; 10-16-2006 at 03:53 AM. |
| |||
| Re: compression Quote:
James |
| ||||
| Re: compression Hi PGAPlayer#1 (Joseph), You asked about compressing the ball. This is how I see it with a little help from my Guru Nick Bradley: The actual point of "hit" during the downswing happens just after impact. This is for two good reasons: The first is that the position just in front of the ball is where the clubhead should be travelling at maximum speed. Remember that the downswing is a gradual increase of momentum that climaxes just after the ball has been struck. This way, you can guarantee the clubhead is accelerating through impact. Secondly: It is important to understand that you do not hit at the ball, but through it. A great golf swing simply captures the ball In it's path. Here is a good drill to learn this: Take a 7 iron and tee the ball up. Place your left hand behind your back and hover the clubhead just in front of the ball. Swing back smoothly to the top of your backswing with your right arm only while allowing it to close and hinge back. In the downswing, your focus is to release the two angles that you have created in the elbow and wrist joints. You should feel your right arm gradually "Open Up" as it accelerates into the ball and beyond.
__________________ Best Regards Brian ________________________________ Funny o'l game! |
| ||||
| Re: compression A simple drill I learned many years ago: Address the ball with a 7 iron nice and relaxed and make sure your hands are ahead of the clubhead/ball position. Take a slow easy backswing and on your downswing focus on pointing the grip end of the club down the target line so your hands are always ahead. Accentuate keeping your head down a little longer(ala, corey pavin) and learn to feel the lag position as you strike the ball. This is the position you want with every club. |
| ||||
| Re: compression Quote:
Last edited by lgskywalker37; 11-09-2006 at 11:07 PM. |
| ||||
| Re: compression Quote:
There are a few nice graphic examples on this Golfdigest site from Nick Bradley's book. http://www.golfdigest.com/photos/pho...dex=7&g_id=131 This laser device sold by Butch Harmon does exactly that. The video probably explains the action clearer. http://www.practicerange.com/detail.aspx?ID=649
__________________ Best Regards Brian ________________________________ Funny o'l game! Last edited by BrianW; 11-10-2006 at 10:06 AM. |