We also have some Horizontal Bending of the Left Wrist through Impact. Uncocking of the Left Wrist is a Clubhead Motion. The Hands execute the Clubface Motion. In your case, the Wrist Motion is throwing the clubface at the ball, resulting in Steering and Clubhead Throwaway. Steering gets its work done with it partner in crime Quitting. We will have to learn to swing the Hands not the clubhead. Do you have a copy of the TGM?
Reference 2-P and 4-D-0, 4-D-1.
Watch Ted Fort in action during the first half of the video... http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/index.p...-Barclays.html
Lynn also did two recent videos that you will find helpful.
Driver - twice.
09-18-2010, 05:51 PM A couple of weeks ago on the 18. hole (360y) at my home course. I hit a very bad tee shot with the driver - very high and short to the right into some trees. I took a short cut with my driver still in my hand to look for the ball. It had jumped off the tree into the rough, so I was able to continue to play from there. The tee shot was only 80 yards. Since my bag was about 50 yards away I decided to use my driver once more and hit a rabbit killer that advanced about 150 y . About 150 yards left. I then had a very good 3.shot to the green - with only 15 feet left to the hole and I managed to make it. It was the first time I had ever made par using the driver on the 2 first shots.....
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Today Jason Day did exactly what I have described here in the Hyundai Tournament of Champions on hole 13.
Driver - twice.
09-18-2010, 05:51 PM A couple of weeks ago on the 18. hole (360y) at my home course. I hit a very bad tee shot with the driver - very high and short to the right into some trees. I took a short cut with my driver still in my hand to look for the ball. It had jumped off the tree into the rough, so I was able to continue to play from there. The tee shot was only 80 yards. Since my bag was about 50 yards away I decided to use my driver once more and hit a rabbit killer that advanced about 150 y . About 150 yards left. I then had a very good 3.shot to the green - with only 15 feet left to the hole and I managed to make it. It was the first time I had ever made par using the driver on the 2 first shots.....
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Today Jason Day did exactly what I have described here in the Hyundai Tournament of Champions on hole 13.
There is a difficult, IMO, quote out there by Clint " Dirty Harry" Eastwood , "a mans got to know his limitations". I think it works in the short-term, but not in the long-term.
Tommy Armour would agree, but then again he probably had money riding on the bet.
There is a difficult, IMO, quote out there by Clint " Dirty Harry" Eastwood , "a mans got to know his limitations". I think it works in the short-term, but not in the long-term.
Tommy Armour would agree, but then again he probably had money riding on the bet.
I wasn't so surprised to see Jason Day make par.(I surprised myself more). Jason chunked his drive and hit it only 106 y. That was the big surprise - and he had almost 300 y left to the green and then he went for it and hit the driver off the deck but missed the green into a bunker 50 yards from the green. But he got up and down. It brought back some nice memories - and Jason seemed happy as well.
I'm stuck between trying to hold on to on to what I have learned about alignments and what to do with them and how to develope this even more.
After a week with the flu I haven't done much training. I feel better now and since we have had some milder weather (32F), I went out on the veranda and dug away 2 feet with snow and found my green hitting math and made some swings. But it was too slippery. I have saltet the math and will try later to see if that helps.
I can't find the big inspiration in the basic motion or the brush - brush technique. Now I am wondering if it's better to train on the delivery path - to force it into a more in-to-out swing path - preferably combinded with lag and hinging training, but ... I don't really know what to do ...