I've looked at some recent video of my swing and noticed that i'm losing the lag into impact. Hitting them ok but just not getting nice compression.
If i specifically focus on trying to delay the hit (or at the range put a hurdle behind the ball that means i can't lose the lag early) then things go pear shaped and i either top it or shank it from the inside dragging the hosel into the ball.
Any ideas or drills that i could work on?
I don't have a good video from the range but i've attached one i took in the back yard without a ball.
The more the shaft stressed (effective weight), the tougher for it to be maintained, due to gravity, the stressed shaft and your subconcious "hacking" intent.
__________________ Yani Tseng, Go! Go! Go! Yani Tseng Did It Again! YOU load and sustain the "LAG", during which the "LAW" releases it, ideally beyond impact.
"Sustain (Yang/陽) the lag (Yin/陰)" is "the unification of Ying and Yang" (陰陽合一).
The "LAW" creates the "effect", which is the "motion" or "feel", with the "cause", which is the "intent" or "command".
"Lag" is the secret of golf, passion is the secret of life.
Think as a golfer, execute like a robot.
Rotate, twist, spin, turn. Bend the shaft.
Here's a still that i've taken showing how i'm currently setting up.. again looks like right forearm too high at address which may lead to the running out of right arm?
Getting the right forearm more on plane as i mentioned just feels like i'm cramping the ball too much
It looks from your earlier photos you are not setting up with axis tilt. To set up in the position you want you have to drop your right shoulder when you grip the club. Your upper body will then angle back and your head will set behind the ball. You will be able to to have the bend in your right elbow and you will find your shouler turn will be dramatically easier.
Setup looks fairly decent, but you want to relax that right arm. Just let the elbow bend and be lower than your left. At impact fix, someone should basically be able to slide a shaft into the gap (under your left elbow, over your right elbow pocket), from down the line. A slight exaggeration, but should get you feeling the right forearm being lower, and will get your axis tilted a bit too. When you are in that position, imagine that you are taking your hands up a plane that is 'between' your arms.
Your left foot looks a touch to square to the line, you might experiment turning that open a touch, which will let your pivot move through better.
__________________
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