LynnBlakeGolf Forums - View Single Post - VJ's Hogan Analysis Thread: VJ's Hogan Analysis View Single Post #1 05-29-2008, 12:38 PM dkerby Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2005 Posts: 244 Why You've Struggled From the Final Missing Piece In Five Lesson, Hogan stressed the importance of starting the downswing with the truning of the hips. In fact, he mentions it OVER 40 TIMES, so it was obviously important to him. However, most amatures cannot master this critical move, and it's one of the main reasons they struggle with Hogan's teaching. Most amatures cannot get their weight over to their left side soon enough in the downswing. If the average golfer starts to turn his hips with his weight centered, he completely opens up the left side of the golf course because his center of gravity is behind the ball and his left shoulder may or many not get ahead of the ball. The tendency for the average player is to come over the top and pull the ball left: a better player will likely hit a hook. To counter this tendency and to get the weight over the left foot earlier in the swing, better players will slide the hips forward at the beginning of the downswing before rotating them. However, it is difficult to slide and trun the hips repeatedly and accurately at the beninning of your downswing unless you have the cooridination of a tourning pro, and even then this will occasionally fail. It requires tremendous coordination in order to consistently move the center of mass forward when the hips are turning, so players stop turning their hips, and they tend to hold the clubface open to prevent the pull-hook. They begin to lay the face back and play a pull-slice. By incorporating the missing piece into his swing, Hogan got his hips forward during his backswing. One there, Hogan could start by the downswing by turning his hips and move his body in perfect sequence for maximum power. With his hip action, Hogan figured out a way for his body to produce repeatable alignments, a flat or slightly bowed left wrist and a straight left arm at impact, every time. This body motion allowed his hands to play a much lesser role. His body put him in a perfect position to hit the ball with power and precision. In the thred prior to his one, showing Yodas swing, note that Yoda appeared to keep a lot of weight on the left side in the backswing. The pictures appear to show that Yoda was on his left side prior to starting the downswing. From this position Yoda could set the accumulator with a slight hip turn to start the downsing. Hey V.J., Hope that I did not infringe on your book. It is such a masterpiece. dkerby View Public Profile Send a private message to dkerby Find all posts by dkerby