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The first move is - as Yoda says- a clapping motion. |
Muscle and Wrist Activity In the Right Forearm Pickup
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To understand this action, simply extend your Left Arm directly in front of you about chest-high. Grasp your Left Wrist with the thumb and forefinger of your Right Hand. Then, using only your Right Arm (no Left Arm activity) proceed to lift and lower the Left Arm to your heart's content. Notice that the Left Arm is completely passive and the 'work' is being done with the bending Right Elbow (via the Biceps) as the Right Deltoid (Shoulder muscle) lifts the Right Arm. The only differences between this action and your actual Backstroke are (1) you are lifting and lowering in a vertical plane in this drill versus an Inclined Plane in your Golf Stroke and (2) there is no Pivot in the drill and there is in the actual Stroke. Regarding the Right Hand, Extensor Acton pulls the Clubshaft in-line with the Left Arm, usually during the Start Up. This Flattens the Left Wrist and Bends the Right. This action occurs in tandem with the Right Forearm Takeaway in a true, Three-Dimensional Backstroke (Up, Back and In, simultaneously and On Plane) as the Pivot performs its work (producing the circular motion of the Stroke while maintaing Balance and the stability necessary for a Centered Clubhead Arc). |
Do you have a problem with NOT using extensor action, but with a backswing which is indeed a SWING of the arms caused by shoulders throwing them? Or with not using extensor action in the forward press either...? I for one find lifting the arms a very bad idea. My golf swing begins with the weight moving left to create an imbalance, and the energy and trigger that changes cognitive movements into athletic reaction occurs at that moment.
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A shoulder turn controlled take away can be used- used by millions- but the Hands controlling the pivot of the any golf stroke is ideal. Quote:
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The difference in the golf swing is that there is a pulling action between extensor action and the left shoulder as the body pivot lags the hands, so the left arm is being pulled at both ends, preventing any bending of the left elbow. The exercise could be modified to include a left elbow locked in place to prevent itself from bending but this would send the wrong message to the brain. Quote:
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This discription is clearly a "pulling" action. What would happen to the left arm in the above drill (hands more belt height) if you "pushed" the left wrist away from the center of the body with the right thumb and forefinger? I find that the left arm raises and extends eliminating any left elbow bend. |
Drillin' Down With the Right Forearm Pick-Up
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There is a misconception, however, that Right Arm Extensor Action alone is responsible for the Straight Left Arm. That is not true. There is always a Left Arm Triceps Extensor Action at work as well (12-5-1-#10 and 2-M-3). So, let's add these two items to the drill's instruction: 1. Straighten -- but do not 'lock' -- the Left Arm with a Left Arm Triceps Extensor Action. 2. Further stretch that Left Arm with a gentle tug of the Right Arm's Triceps Extensor Action. The Right Arm will straighten somewhat, but will remain Bent due to the Checkrein Action (the "leash") of the Left Arm. My only concern here is that by introducing this new terminology -- Left Triceps Extensor Action -- I am potentially confusing the definition of Right Triceps Extensor Action as the TGM Power Package structural process outlined in 6-B-1-D. However, in my opinion, there is a need to address the Left Triceps role in straightening the Left Elbow, and that is what this term does. |
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Wouldn't a pushing action of the #2PP against the club grip cause this left arm extensor condition? spike |
No Left Hand In Extensor Action
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Other than normal Grip Pressure, the #2 Pressure Point (the last three fingers of the Left Hand) actuates the Secondary Lever Assembly (the Golf Club) only by Centrifugal Force (as passive Clubhead Lag per 10-11-0-2). |
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