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Posted
EC73IE5MZJEMHITH5VJDQMJPSA.jpg

Many COVID deaths went unreported last year in Florida’s rural counties, allowing the...

 

?url=https%3A%2F%2Fx-default-stgec.uplyn

The number of COVID-19 deaths in Florida is facing new criticism following a study published this...

Wow! Florida must so so proud. And these are just the first few hits. Florida’s new motto should be The COVID Nursery State! Come get infected here and bring a new variant back home along with a sunburn and Mickey Mouse t-shirt!

While most people are doing there best to help mitigate this pandemic, the deniers and scofflaws are just extending it. And they pat themselves on the back for being tough guys. I find it so incredibly selfish. 

And to make matters worse, they mock those that are taking precautions. Pathetic. I find it comical that those nitwits that wear sidearms into Walmart think they are just being prepared but call out we that are wearing masks to be living in fear. I’m not living in fear. I’m being smart and protecting myself and others from extending this virus. If everyone had done this for the first month we’d have been out of this with hundreds of thousands of less deaths.

Think of it this way, the entire population of Wyoming has died from this virus. A whole state’s worth of people are gone. I guess it’s worth it so the selfish whiners don’t have to wear masks. F**k Wyoming I guess.  

Your are not being tough or living free or some such other bullsh*t. Your being selfish a-holes who were just lucky not to get it. And if you don’t get the vaccine, chances increase that you will get it and also add to new variants. Viruses can’t mutate without replicating. So another reason not to be proud of Florida. 

Scott

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Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
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Posted
49 minutes ago, iacas said:

because others made a "risk tolerance" assessment that didn't include the risks to which they were subjecting others.

This. Please read and understand this @Braivo and others. This is such an important point.

16 minutes ago, boogielicious said:
EC73IE5MZJEMHITH5VJDQMJPSA.jpg

Many COVID deaths went unreported last year in Florida’s rural counties, allowing the...

 

?url=https%3A%2F%2Fx-default-stgec.uplyn

The number of COVID-19 deaths in Florida is facing new criticism following a study published...

Wow! Florida must so so proud. And these are just the first few hits. Florida’s new motto should be The COVID Nursery State! Come get infected here and bring a new variant back home along with a sunburn and Mickey Mouse t-shirt!

While most people are doing there best to help mitigate this pandemic, the deniers and scofflaws are just extending it. And they pat themselves on the back for being tough guys. I find it so incredibly selfish. 

And to make matters worse, they mock those that are taking precautions. Pathetic. I find it comical that those nitwits that wear sidearms into Walmart think they are just being prepared but call out we that are wearing masks to be living in fear. I’m not living in fear. I’m being smart and protecting myself and others from extending this virus. If everyone had done this for the first month we’d have been out of this with hundreds of thousands of less deaths.

Think of it this way, the entire population of Wyoming has died from this virus. A whole state’s worth of people are gone. I guess it’s worth it so the selfish whiners don’t have to wear masks. F**k Wyoming I guess.  

Your are not being tough or living free or some such other bullsh*t. Your being selfish a-holes who were just lucky not to get it. And if you don’t get the vaccine, chances increase that you will get it and also add to new variants. Viruses can’t mutate without replicating. So another reason not to be proud of Florida. 

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Posted
3 hours ago, Braivo said:

People can make their own risk decisions from this point forward. 

No, they shouldn’t. That’s like saying we don’t need drunk driving laws because people can judge for themselves whether they want to risk driving drunk or not.

It’s a public health issue. If it were simply that one’s risk assessment affected only themselves, then it’s a different story, but but their decision for themselves can affect other people.

Bill

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Posted

It is healthy to question authority. Maybe they are right. If so, great! Their argument is only strengthened by our questions. 

Blindly trusting leaders has never worked out well in the long run. 

If testing and masking youth recreational soccer players was so effective, wouldn't everyone be doing it? Wouldn't states without such a rule be seeing more cases and deaths? Is there scientific evidence that testing and masking soccer players reduces spread? Of course not. It's arbitrary. You can go to a casino in Michigan, right now, and order a beer, sit at a slot machine, and remove your mask to drink you beer. But you can't play outdoor soccer without a mask. It's arbitrary and political. Casinos bring revenue to the state, so of course they get to be open. Youth soccer? Not profitable.

We could prevent many drunk driving deaths if we required breathalyzers to start the car. Who is in favor of that? 

At some point the tradeoffs between freedom and safety must be considered. We could eliminate almost all traffic deaths if vehicles were restricted to 25mph max. Would you favor that?

I have never said we should do NOTHING about Covid. Wear a mask indoors. Get a vax. But the measures are more effective and get more compliance when they seem to make sense and some consideration is given to getting the most benefit from the fewest number of restrictions. Questioning the masking of youth athletes during intense sporting events is not "Leon Letting" the situation. 

There are some estimates that 2-3 million kids have not attended a single day of school (online or in person) this last year. Their schools closed and they didn't have the access of the home life structure to attend online. What is the cost of that? 

And I will repeat this, when ANY questioning of authority places you in the extreme anti-vax covid hoax bucket then we are done here. There is zero point in discussing this topic any further. If the only way to participate in this discussion is in agreement with the mainstream and the moderators, then it is futile. 

Thunderous applause for people who agree, and a swarm of criticism for those who do not. 

 

- Mark

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Posted
5 hours ago, David in FL said:

When does it end?

July 27, 2021, 8:52AM, PDT.

(It's a moving  target right now, too early to lock down a date)

5 hours ago, Braivo said:

It's over when the citizens of any given state demand that it's over.

Sometimes the citizens are running amuck and don't know what they're doing.  Then they need smarter and wiser minds to intercede.


Posted
6 minutes ago, Braivo said:

Blindly trusting leaders has never worked out well in the long run. 

Nothing here is blindly trusting our leaders. Its trusting the science community who put unknown hours into getting us this vaccine in a timeframe thought impossible. 

7 minutes ago, Braivo said:

If testing and masking youth recreational soccer players was so effective, wouldn't everyone be doing it? Wouldn't states without such a rule be seeing more cases and deaths? Is there scientific evidence that testing and masking soccer players reduces spread? Of course not. It's arbitrary. You can go to a casino in Michigan, right now, and order a beer, sit at a slot machine, and remove your mask to drink you beer. But you can't play outdoor soccer without a mask. It's arbitrary and political. Casinos bring revenue to the state, so of course they get to be open. Youth soccer? Not profitable.

Some states are more paranoid than others. It also maybe based on which city you live in, or what league, or what school. Not every situation can be explained away with jaded responses. 

8 minutes ago, Braivo said:

At some point the tradeoffs between freedom and safety must be considered. We could eliminate almost all traffic deaths if vehicles were restricted to 25mph max. Would you favor that?

Not the same. Traffic deaths don't come close to what is happening here. Yes, there is inherent risk. When I am in the car by myself, I drive a bit faster on the freeways then if I have family members in the car. I am also a really good driver and know my skills. 

I have no clue when someone will infect me with the virus and in some situations I have no clue if I could infect my family. One accident may injure 1-4 people. One infection can cause a cascading result across an entire community. 

I guess if you want the freedom to be an asshole, go ahead. People have the freedom to judge the choice you made. So, don't get pissed off when people call you an asshole. Anyone who has not gotten vaccinated, who doesn't wear a mask, just because they claim "FREEDOM" is an asshole. 

Guess what, there is no mandate to get vaccinated. Its totally up to you. In Ohio, people sued the governor and won. Gyms were allowed to open up. Most didn't after the ruling. Which shows you that at least some people had their heads on straight. 

I get it, the over the top restrictions on youth athletic sports. We were the first to cry when states were banning golf! You get some sympathy here, but in the end, this whole  Risk notion, and too much government stick you got is a bit much. 

Heh, I am an engineer by trade, we are all about safety factors and conservative judgement calls. I forgone applaud our governor for being level headed, listening to the medical professionals, and saving lives. 

Matt Dougherty, P.E.
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Posted
6 minutes ago, Braivo said:

It is healthy to question authority. Maybe they are right. If so, great! Their argument is only strengthened by our questions. 

Blindly trusting leaders has never worked out well in the long run. 

If testing and masking youth recreational soccer players was so effective, wouldn't everyone be doing it? Wouldn't states without such a rule be seeing more cases and deaths? Is there scientific evidence that testing and masking soccer players reduces spread? Of course not. It's arbitrary. You can go to a casino in Michigan, right now, and order a beer, sit at a slot machine, and remove your mask to drink you beer. But you can't play outdoor soccer without a mask. It's arbitrary and political. Casinos bring revenue to the state, so of course they get to be open. Youth soccer? Not profitable.

We could prevent many drunk driving deaths if we required breathalyzers to start the car. Who is in favor of that? 

At some point the tradeoffs between freedom and safety must be considered. We could eliminate almost all traffic deaths if vehicles were restricted to 25mph max. Would you favor that?

I have never said we should do NOTHING about Covid. Wear a mask indoors. Get a vax. But the measures are more effective and get more compliance when they seem to make sense and some consideration is given to getting the most benefit from the fewest number of restrictions. Questioning the masking of youth athletes during intense sporting events is not "Leon Letting" the situation. 

There are some estimates that 2-3 million kids have not attended a single day of school (online or in person) this last year. Their schools closed and they didn't have the access of the home life structure to attend online. What is the cost of that? 

And I will repeat this, when ANY questioning of authority places you in the extreme anti-vax covid hoax bucket then we are done here. There is zero point in discussing this topic any further. If the only way to participate in this discussion is in agreement with the mainstream and the moderators, then it is futile. 

Thunderous applause for people who agree, and a swarm of criticism for those who do not. 

 

I am all for questioning authority, but facts and science, not so much.
Just looking at those questioning how their "freedom" has been infringed upon and you can who has a blind allegiance.  Most of those screaming the loudest neither have medical degrees, advance degree i biology or infectious diseases. In my experience, most of the "non-believers" get their talking points from an internet chat board run by a 20 something-year old incel in Japan! 

 

Do masks work? Sure, my kids have been playing competative sports inside and outside since last summer. No colds, no flu and no illnes. Why? Because they are not inhaling your kids germs. The idea behind masks, is basically so I dont get what you have. And by the looks of those non maskers, I dont want anything they are breathing. 

 

And I am not sure of the reasoning regarding limiting motor vehicles to 25 MPH to reduce drunk driving deaths.  You limit the sale of or consumption of Alcohol. 
You want to limit the spread of covid you limit the availability of covid. since we cant lock everyone in bubbles, you wear a mask.

Unless you are in Florida, where they just use an eraser and make up their own numbers.....

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Posted
2 hours ago, boogielicious said:
EC73IE5MZJEMHITH5VJDQMJPSA.jpg

Many COVID deaths went unreported last year in Florida’s rural counties, allowing the...

 

?url=https%3A%2F%2Fx-default-stgec.uplyn

The number of COVID-19 deaths in Florida is facing new criticism following a study published this...

Wow! Florida must so so proud. And these are just the first few hits. Florida’s new motto should be The COVID Nursery State! Come get infected here and bring a new variant back home along with a sunburn and Mickey Mouse t-shirt!

While most people are doing there best to help mitigate this pandemic, the deniers and scofflaws are just extending it. And they pat themselves on the back for being tough guys. I find it so incredibly selfish. 

And to make matters worse, they mock those that are taking precautions. Pathetic. I find it comical that those nitwits that wear sidearms into Walmart think they are just being prepared but call out we that are wearing masks to be living in fear. I’m not living in fear. I’m being smart and protecting myself and others from extending this virus. If everyone had done this for the first month we’d have been out of this with hundreds of thousands of less deaths.

Think of it this way, the entire population of Wyoming has died from this virus. A whole state’s worth of people are gone. I guess it’s worth it so the selfish whiners don’t have to wear masks. F**k Wyoming I guess.  

Your are not being tough or living free or some such other bullsh*t. Your being selfish a-holes who were just lucky not to get it. And if you don’t get the vaccine, chances increase that you will get it and also add to new variants. Viruses can’t mutate without replicating. So another reason not to be proud of Florida. 

For every story like this you find a story about states that are over counting deaths.  

 

ngozi1-860x489.jpg

(CHICAGO) WEEK - State Health officials have acknowledged a bending of the "Covid Curve" seeing smaller spikes in positive cases, or rather, not as exponential of a jump as recorded...

 

I won’t even bother posting stories about the financial and emotional damage caused by lockdowns, mask wearing, school closures, etc...

If it makes you feel virtuous or even genuinely safer to wear a mask, social distance, keep your kids home, or get a vaccine, then please, do so and simply do your best to avoid the millions of people who feel differently than you.  By some counts the overall morbidity of Covid has been misrepresented significantly.  I honestly don’t know, but if you’d rather avoid Florida, Texas, or the many other states like us, then by all means do so.  Heck, I’m not headed to any lockdown states either, so...  :-)

 

 

In David's bag....

Driver: Titleist 910 D-3;  9.5* Diamana Kai'li
3-Wood: Titleist 910F;  15* Diamana Kai'li
Hybrids: Titleist 910H 19* and 21* Diamana Kai'li
Irons: Titleist 695cb 5-Pw

Wedges: Scratch 51-11 TNC grind, Vokey SM-5's;  56-14 F grind and 60-11 K grind
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Posted
5 hours ago, Braivo said:

People can make their own risk decisions from this point forward. 

I think if "people" in general were allowed to make their own risk decisions a year ago we'd be worse off than India.  The populace usually goes for what feels good, not what IS good.  


Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, boogielicious said:
 

And to make matters worse, they mock those that are taking precautions. Pathetic. I find it comical that those nitwits that wear sidearms into Walmart think they are just being prepared but call out we that are wearing masks to be living in fear. I’m not living in fear.

Too true. Imagine carrying a gun around for "protection" but thinking a mask makes you look weak. The rest of the world can only marvel at how wonderful it must be to live in a place where some people think that the pictutre below is an expression of "freedom". Sad.

90.thumb.jpeg.47a15ace8a9235b72ba0e680444e38e8.jpeg

Edited by Shorty

In the race of life, always back self-interest. At least you know it's trying.

 

 


Posted

Here's a good one.  I inquired of a retail clerk this morning if she had scheduled her Covid shot.  "No, I'm not good at being on time for appointments."  So I asked her if she was on time for work this morning.  She was.


  • Moderator
Posted
21 minutes ago, David in FL said:

For every story like this you find a story about states that are over counting deaths.  

 

ngozi1-860x489.jpg

(CHICAGO) WEEK - State Health officials have acknowledged a bending of the "Covid Curve" seeing smaller spikes in positive cases, or rather, not as exponential of a jump as recorded...

 

I won’t even bother posting stories about the financial and emotional damage caused by lockdowns, mask wearing, school closures, etc...

If it makes you feel virtuous or even genuinely safer to wear a mask, social distance, keep your kids home, or get a vaccine, then please, do so and simply do your best to avoid the millions of people who feel differently than you.  By some counts the overall morbidity of Covid has been misrepresented significantly.  I honestly don’t know, but if you’d rather avoid Florida, Texas, or the many other states like us, then by all means do so.  Heck, I’m not headed to any lockdown states either, so...  :-)

 

 

Problem is David it’s like having a peeing section of a pool. It is not effective unless we all do it. How can we avoid contact when 40% won’t be responsible for some macho reason. And it’s not like these folks aren’t moving around the country out of sunny Florida, Texas, etc. I’m not feeling virtuous, I am being responsible. You are not. 

Wars cause financial and emotional damage too. And yet we follow our leaders guidance there. Safety is all of our responsibility, not just your so-called virtuous types. Did you disregard commanding officer’s orders when you didn’t feel like it? No, you respected the chain of command. Our medical and scientific leaders, which we have placed in these leadership roles, have strongly urged us all to pitch in. And yet you disregard them because you think you are smarter than them.

If we had ALL worn masks in the first month, the financial and emotional toll would have been orders of magnitude lower. But the irresponsible types have just thrown gasoline on the fire with their cavalier arrogance and made it much, much worse.
 

Scott

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Posted
8 minutes ago, boogielicious said:

Problem is David it’s like having a peeing section of a pool. It is not effective unless we all do it. How can we avoid contact when 40% won’t be responsible for some macho reason. And it’s not like these folks aren’t moving around the country out of sunny Florida, Texas, etc. I’m not feeling virtuous, I am being responsible. You are not. 

Wars cause financial and emotional damage too. And yet we follow our leaders guidance there. Safety is all of our responsibility, not just your so-called virtuous types. Did you disregard commanding officer’s orders when you didn’t feel like it? No, you respected the chain of command. Our medical and scientific leaders, which we have placed in these leadership roles, have strongly urged us all to pitch in. And yet you disregard them because you think you are smarter than them.

If we had ALL worn masks in the first month, the financial and emotional toll would have been orders of magnitude lower. But the irresponsible types have just thrown gasoline on the fire with their cavalier arrogance and made it much, much worse.
 

So don’t associate with people who have moved around the country if doing so makes you feel unsafe.

As for feeling responsible vice virtuous. Tomato / Tomauto

If you’re doing it for me, you needn’t bother.  I won’t hold it against you, I promise   😊

In David's bag....

Driver: Titleist 910 D-3;  9.5* Diamana Kai'li
3-Wood: Titleist 910F;  15* Diamana Kai'li
Hybrids: Titleist 910H 19* and 21* Diamana Kai'li
Irons: Titleist 695cb 5-Pw

Wedges: Scratch 51-11 TNC grind, Vokey SM-5's;  56-14 F grind and 60-11 K grind
Putter: Scotty Cameron Kombi S
Ball: ProV1

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Posted (edited)
4 minutes ago, David in FL said:

So don’t associate with people who have moved around the country if doing so makes you feel unsafe.

 

How would you recommend identifying such people in the supermarket or on the street?

You seem to be suggesting that people who are treating this like a deadly disease are somehow mindless and that each person has a the right to make a "risk assessment" in relation to how they treat others. 

Edited by Shorty

In the race of life, always back self-interest. At least you know it's trying.

 

 


  • Moderator
Posted

The one thing that the past year has made even more clear to me is that we, as a society, cannot trust individuals to do what is appropriate to keep other people safe.  Just as people will drive 100 mph on a highway to save 5 minutes of their own time, just as they would still smoke in crowded rooms if permitted,  they'll also continue to refuse to wear masks because of the tremendous inconvenience, they'll refuse to take a vaccine.  And their decisions will keep the danger higher for all of society than it otherwise would be.

Dave

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Posted
15 minutes ago, Double Mocha Man said:

I think we've achieved full polarization on this topic.  😁💀

Correct. There is zero point in debating this topic anymore. Everyone has made up their minds and the more we debate the more certain they are that they are correct. Waste of time. 

 

19 minutes ago, DaveP043 said:

The one thing that the past year has made even more clear to me is that we, as a society, cannot trust individuals to do what is appropriate to keep other people safe.  Just as people will drive 100 mph on a highway to save 5 minutes of their own time, just as they would still smoke in crowded rooms if permitted,  they'll also continue to refuse to wear masks because of the tremendous inconvenience, they'll refuse to take a vaccine.  And their decisions will keep the danger higher for all of society than it otherwise would be.

So how do you correct for this? Ever increasing levels of rules and restrictions? More mandates? Careful, there's a lot of stupid out there.

- Mark

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    • I like discussing the golf swing. Whether you call it "swing theory" or what, I like to talk about things that can expand the potential for what I know and understand. As a scientist, I like being shown that I'm wrong, too, because as I've said a bunch of times… "you're wrong and here's why" is an instant opportunity to upgrade my knowledge. I also like to help golfers, and one of the things I'm most glad to have moved away from from 15 years ago was the "Hands In" idea from S&T. Jim Waldron is often credited (probably rightly so) with explaining why so many Tour players and good players talk about "keeping their hands in front of themselves" while it appears that they're moving their arms around their bodies. From over 30 years ago: I've also got videos like… this (Instagram link here😞 I'm happy to say that I've become friends with Shaun and Mike at Athletic Motion Golf (AMG), too. I tend to get along with other smart folks who measure things, who look critically at information, who don't assume that what they thought 20 years ago holds true today. I get along with folks who look for chances to instantly upgrade their knowledge. Andy Plummer remains one of the people who does not look for these opportunities. He didn't care in early 2013 when we had evidence that the information in their S&T 2.0 DVDs was bogus, and they seemingly don't care now. They've been attacking (it's their favorite pastime) AMG in particular for the better part of a year now. There have been a few shots back at them from AMG (like… this), no doubt. But as is typical of the AMG fellas, it's with measured data. Well, recently, Andy took yet another shot at AMG: https://www.instagram.com/p/DZfHe0DuPXC/. Andy demonstrates that true power in the golf swing comes from doing stuff like this: Andy claims that the idea that the arms mostly lift and lower, while the body turns, is bogus. What golfers should be doing is using "angular velocity" to abduct and adduct their shoulders to move the club fast like this (above). Then he makes a ridiculous example of what AMG supposedly teaches, but misses by a mile. Now, it doesn't take a biomechanist to know that you can't possibly swing as Andy demonstrates. His right arm is so far around and behind him that his left arm would have to grow several feet to reach the grip of the club (or alignment stick), and a follow-through with the right arm position like that would be absolutely silly. But, it's a demonstration, so let's not read too much into it. However, I find ideas like this dangerous. Again, I like to help golfers, and in my opinion, the idea that you should abduct and adduct your arms a lot is a dangerous one. There's some adduction and abduction going on, but… it's not much. Anyway, this statement was posted: 130 degrees of dynamic range of horizontal abduction and adduction is quite the claim! I posted some comments to Andy and others, and was issued a challenge: Well, okay then. Here's Bryson's lead shoulder adduction: This measures the angle between the "virtual spine," the left shoulder, and the elbow. Bryson has a 97.34° "adduction angle" at P1, a 62.53° angle at P4, and returns to an 89.21° angle at impact. Rounding, that's a change of 34° from address to the top, and then a change (back toward the angle at address) of about 26° from the top to impact. If we want to worry about only horizontal abduction and adduction (where D = adduction and B = abduction): Left shoulder: 8.33° D, 38.74° D, 14.67° D Right shoulder: 1.03° D, 55.75° B, 14.04° B If we call moving the arms farther around you as negative, those are changes of -30.41° from P1 to P4 for the left shoulder and +24.07° from P4 to P7 for the left shoulder and -56.78° and +41.71° for the right shoulder. I have no idea on earth where he gets 130°. From the last frame of Bryson's swing where he's at 126.98°? But the lowest that number gets is 62.53°, for a range of 64.45, or less than half of the 130° claimed (plus it includes part of the swing, post-impact, that has no bearing on what the ball does). For good measure, another pretty good player: Left: 22.55° D ➡️ 33.35° D (∆ 10.8°) ➡️ 17.36° D (∆ 15.99° from P4, 5.19° from P1) Right: 15.03° D ➡️ 24.29° B (∆ 39.32°) ➡️ 1.93° D (∆ 26.22° from P4, 13.1° from P1) Of the biomechanists and experienced 3D users (on any platform), none of them have seen anything like 130° of dynamic adduction/abduction from a good player P1 to P7. And, like my little joke above, even if you go to the end of the swing, you rarely get much more than a little over halfway there. Maybe Andy is adding them? He does say in the video "and then add it to that with the lead arm." (I think that's what he says, but this isn't an additive type system.) I regularly coach golfers out of positions with a lot of adduction and abduction. I regularly work golfers away from moving their arms around their bodies. Even my juniors (the ones who have paid attention anyway! 🤣) can recite "arms = up/down, body = around." Like this: So, I don't know where this leaves us. Andy claims to have seen something on GEARS that shows 130° of dynamic adduction/abduction. I'm open to being wrong, but… I don't think I am here on this one. And, until that comes to be, I will continue to stand up for what I think is the best information, and do my best to work with golfers toward simpler, easier moves that don't get them stuck. Simpler, easier moves like the moves Tour players and great players tend to make, not complicated, difficult moves. Shaun and Mike said it in a video once where they demonstrated that the average Tour player adducts their lead arm 20° across their chest from the top to impact (P4 to P7), while the amateur often tries to go 40°. They said something like "the amateur is trying to move their arm TWICE the distance in the same amount of time as the professional athlete." Yep. The swings of great players are often easier and simpler. They are not abducting and adducting their arms much in comparison to average golfers. As a smart man once said: "Why would you teach something (abduction in this case) that bad golfers already do?" On a related note… the S&T crowd continues to be… well, who they've been as long as I've known them. Take this comment for example: I mean… I would think that this is pretty self-explanatory, but then again… I didn't think it needed explaining to begin with. P.S. As I was finishing up this article, another biomechanist replied with something so simple I hadn't even thought of it as I had immediately jumped into looking at the actual measurements: "90 doesn’t even seem physically possible.“ No, sir. It doesn't.
    • Day 285 6-14 practiced low point control in some dirt by our garden. Objective was to see how far infront of a set point I could get the divot. No ball. 
    • Interested to hear from those who have gone through something similar. I'm currently around a 9 handicap and have logged 50 rounds so far this year. My issue isn't really my handicap itself, it's the amount of score variation. Looking back through the year, I've had scores ranging from 73 to 95, with everything in between. Within the last week alone I went: 92 - 74 - 80 - 89 - 93. I appreciate there is always a variance to scoring and that is fine but I seem to have the issue of being capable of a mid to low 70's round and then the next day adding 20 shots onto that. Others I know around my handicap, they seem to live in the low-mid 80s and occasionally shoot high 70s. In contrast, I seem to have a very high ceiling and a very low floor. My goal is to get to 5 but I feel a million miles away from that at the moment. I have had periods of lessons where I have got better but that baseline level never seems to have improved and the only sort of logical conclusion I can come to is because my fundamental ball striking and clubface control is not good enough. Over the years I've been through the usual cycle of swing thoughts and feels. Something works for a few rounds and then it disappears. This latest episode involved a "looser arms, smoother swing" feel which coincided with some good golf before scores drifted back upwards this week. The more I look at my scoring record, the more I wonder whether the answer is much simpler. Perhaps score volatility is ultimately just a reflection of strike and clubface variability. If strike and face control vary significantly from day to day, then perhaps 74 one week and 93 the next shouldn't be surprising. So my questions are: Has anyone else experienced this sort of variance? Did you eventually become more consistent, and if so, how? Was it primarily technical, mental, course management, practice-related, or something else? Did you manage to raise your floor, or are some golfers simply naturally more volatile than others? Interested to hear from anyone who has gone from being a "74 or 94" golfer to someone who lives in the 70s and low 80s.
    • Wordle 1,821 3/6 ⬜🟨🟨🟨🟨 🟨⬜🟨🟨🟨 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
    • Wordle 1,821 4/6 🟩⬜🟨⬜🟨 🟩🟨⬜🟨⬜ 🟩🟨🟨🟨⬜ 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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