It looks like a swing vision as seen in PGA broadcast. You can see the flat left wrist or throw away impact. Here is a clip from hacker like....me
__________________
If you cannot take the shoulder down the clubshaft plane, you must take along some other path and add compensations - now, instead of one motion to remember, you wind up with at least two!
It is my dead move.... Total motion always end up with in-up-crossline...but in good day, it came back on plane with good impact alignment.
__________________
If you cannot take the shoulder down the clubshaft plane, you must take along some other path and add compensations - now, instead of one motion to remember, you wind up with at least two!
Looks like you got too much axis tilt at address . . . power package looks nice . . . Do you hit pushes and hooks?
Pull shots and sometime dead straight!!!
Yoda,
THX for the link and i will try me best.
__________________
If you cannot take the shoulder down the clubshaft plane, you must take along some other path and add compensations - now, instead of one motion to remember, you wind up with at least two!
Thanks for all the great videos. I also love that camera. I will have to research its availability here in Canada. How many frames per second was that clip?
In my humble opinion, I see a lot of good things in your swing and a couple of bad alignments that I am sadly very familiar with. Namely, two things, you are under the plane going back with the club face getting too shut. Club shaft and club face misalignments. Fixing these two things will probably help the throwaway problem you mention. That and maybe adding a little more bend to your right arm at impact via a more active "at the ball" move of the right shoulder taking the entire power package down the plane from top.
To correct the plane of your start up get some flash lights or lasers to see what an on plane takeaway looks like and turn it into a feel you can repeat when hitting a ball. The laser should point at the plane line going back, you appear to be pointing the grip end well outside of this.
To correct your club face alignment and assuming you are a swinger, keep your left wrist perpendicular to the ground for horizontal hinging during start up then swivel your left wrist onto the turned shoulder plane.
If you have a strong left hand grip at address PERPENDICULAR should not be taken literally. Consider your strong left hand grip to be "perpendicular" at impact fix though it isnt literally and keep this "new perpendicular" perpendicular to the horizontal plane or ground. Flattening your left wrist literally is a common misunderstanding that closes the club face and takes the plane of the left wrist cock and the entire LFFW off plane. Given a strong single action grip the left wrist when cocked on plane will have a slight bend or cup at top. Look at your left hand and train it to comply with these alignments ie the associated plane of the selected hinge action, the turned shoulder plane and the plane of the left wrist cock and uncock.
I struggle with a similar ingrained bad habit but have recently gotten it under control thanks to a better understanding of the alignments and extensor action which really simplifies my hand action. Thanks be to Yoda. (TBTY)
Lots of great things in your swing though and please keep those videos coming.
If none of this works simply fly to Marietta. I did. Something about the air around the Swamp really seems to agree with me and my golf swing. That and Yoda of course.
THe clip was set at 300 fps only...it can be 1200 fps.
I will work on and report later...
__________________
If you cannot take the shoulder down the clubshaft plane, you must take along some other path and add compensations - now, instead of one motion to remember, you wind up with at least two!