Here is the link. I love the drill he is doing near the end. It sure reminds me of the Wild Bill Melhourne grass whip drill. Hogan did take lessons from Melhourne I believe. I remember reading somewhere that Hogan did this drill for 20 minutes or so in the locker room before going out to the range.
Bobby Shave demonstrating the Melhourne Grass Whip exercise: Circle Path Delivery Pivot.
Active Hands and Arms. Ground Forces: (Left Foot -Right Foot - Left Foot), (Left Foot -Right Foot - Left Foot), (Left Foot -Right Foot - Left Foot)
Ben Doyle: Straight Line Delivery Path Pivot.
Hands are clamps, arms are strings. Ground Forces: (Left Ball, Right Heel, Left Heel, Right Ball),(Left Ball, Right Heel, Left Heel, Right Ball), (Left Ball, Right Heel, Left Heel, Right Ball), (Left Ball, Right Heel, Left Heel, Right Ball)
That's a cool clip of Mr. Hogan...showing a sense of humor and an interesting drill...would this classify his swing as pivot controlled?
Great question. Some may say yes,Pivot to Hands, I dont want to name them because Daryl is really a great guy but I beg to differ. The body providing rotation early, moving the club the first wee bit, fanning the right arm even if you look at it closely, does not preclude the brain from sensing via the pressure points in the hands where the club is and directing things accordingly. Remember this is a drill only, you could start the right arm pickup early at the same time even if you wanted. Some may like the feeling of a more radial pivot only takeaway, some may not. But DONT FREEZE YOUR PIVOT IN STARTUP, thinking it to be a Hands to Pivot takeaway. Bad things will happen. Roundhousing for instance. See 12-3-0. Pt #17 is Right Forearm Takeaway but way back at pt #13 is Clear Right Hip.
This Hogan drill is straight out of Melhourne or McDonald's teaching of the 1920's or perhaps even earlier. The body is a rotor and the arms are just blades. Homer would add that the brain directs via the pressure points in the hands. The hands travel their own path UP as opposed to the IN provided from the pivot. That is the key distinction to my mind. Divergent paths in the Back, UP, IN of three dimensional takeaway. It's not unusual we do it all time in everyday life.
Here is a link to a video of Bobby Shave demonstrating the Melhourne Grass Whip exercise.
You will also see some similarities to the way in which Ben Doyle teaches hitting a tire with the pivot, "no adding or double dribble" via the hands or arms. Here is a link from an esteemed golf website frequented by golf's congnazenti. (sp?)
Here is a McDonald drill or two for y'all. The beginning of Hogans drill reminds me of Exercise 11. When he gets the club swinging a bit it reminds me of Exercises 5 and 8.
Drewit or others may know of other similar type exercises from Vardon etc. The great thing is it works, like really works. Lynn teaches this and other drills as part of his Motion training. Ive seen him teach people to walk a line of balls "brushing" in both directions, constant swinging, thwacking off balls with sweet compressions. Results that cant be had as quickly using normal methods. Give up control to gain control etc. VJ Sing says Mr Blake can be seen working his way through the tall grass Melhourne style with a sand wedge. Davis Love has a grass whip and loves it. Mr Hogan wrote extensively on the benefits of his drill as well.
This is not position golf but motion golf. The ball seems to know the difference.
Homers geometry and machine concepts still apply of course.
Why does it work? Im thinking its anti steering therapy. We strike the ball like Homer would strike his dandelions. We trick the brain and learn a secret in the process.