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  • iacas changed the title to The Secret to Hip Slide/Sway in the Golf Swing

Great summary and and update on the topic.

It makes sense from an athletic perspective. A lot of athletic motions have this kind of flow/momentum built in. That flow/momentum is done by this counteracting motion. 

2 hours ago, iacas said:

Common Mistakes

  • Not shifting back much (see the footnote just below) early in the backswing. This robs you of having a little more forward momentum.
  • Shifting back late in the backswing. Golfers who do this are going the opposite direction at the wrong time.
  • "Actively" shoving your hips forward. This is often either a learned behavior or a compensation for something else, like getting the trail elbow stuck and needing to push the whole hips/elbow "group" forward to try to hit the ball cleanly.
  • "Floating" across. Sure, the hips get forward, but there's no athleticism to their motion.

The third one I did because it gave me time to get the swing back down due to how much I overswung. I was much more of the hip slide, upper body stay back, get the hands down and time up impact. 

I do like the falling feeling, or maybe sinking down into the left hip/knee. This is giving me time in a different way, allowing me time to get my hands down. 

Right now, this is something I am working on the timing of. When we first added this as a secondary item to work on, it was really quick to pick up. It is falling/sinking into my left knee before the club finishes the backswing. Starting somewhere around A3-ish. For me, it is split second feeling, then I need to explode upward with that left leg. It's like, as soon as I feel the pressure build, explode up. 

 

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Falling is part of what we worked on in Erie. The key for me was to not let my hip center move towards the ball in the backswing but instead to shift away from target. That made it easier for the fall to set me up to move my hips forward properly. I think I have changed the picture on that.

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Outstanding post. Of the common faults it became clear from my GEARS visit that I both sway and thrust my hips. Not falling very well either to post up to lead and then swing very well from my swing videos. Quite a bit of work in the last year and thankfully some improvement.

I do think I have poor arm dynamics to be some what self defeating towards core improvement. Need to tie all of it together.  

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This is so good. I especially like seeing how the “ideal movements” evolve over the years and @iacas ‘s willingness to update his opinion as he gets more information.

My experiences with these moves: recentering happens naturally if I shift back early. The fall is surprisingly subtle (perhaps because I have a history of thinking I should push my hips forward as much as possible throughout the entire downswing). Knee movement (especially one that leads internal hip rotation on the lead leg) is important to get the right hip movements.

Reflecting on where I’ve come from (S&T) and how I see things now has me realize that phrases like “hips forward” are too one sided for them to help. I think that way of phrasing things lead me to overdo stuff. What I prefer now are ranges of acceptable movements. As an example… shift pelvis 0-2 inches back from P1-P2.

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3 hours ago, cedrictheo said:

My experiences with these moves: recentering happens naturally if I shift back early. The fall is surprisingly subtle (perhaps because I have a history of thinking I should push my hips forward as much as possible throughout the entire downswing). Knee movement (especially one that leads internal hip rotation on the lead leg) is important to get the right hip movements.

That reminds me of two things, and I may update the OP to point this out. I think it actually warrants a new post (in this topic) on it, though, actually.

Thing 1: The move is small, because if you "fall" an inch or two at the right time, you're going to fall 4 or 5. So if you fall early enough, and the right way, you can almost focus entirely on the rotation. Which explains why a lot of good players — guys or gals who do that fall piece without thinking about it — can say "I just turn as hard as I can." If you don't have that fall part, the "turn as hard as I can" looks like Video #14.

Thing 2: If you watch the left knee in video 14, you'll see it whipping around. It points toward the ball almost at the top of the backswing, then part-way into the downswing it's already pointing 45° toward the target. Good players often keep the lead knee pointing more toward the ball longer into the downswing. When it turns while it's flexed, your hips stay back.

I'll clarify the second in a video. It may take a little while, but I'll add a link at the bottom of the OP when I post it here in this discussion.

P.S. Only three likes on the first post? Man, tough crowd here. 😉

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1 hour ago, iacas said:

P.S. Only three likes on the first post? Man, tough crowd here. 😉

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1 hour ago, iacas said:

P.S. Only three likes on the first post? Man, tough crowd here. 😉

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You've got one incoming from me soon since I can already tell it's good. It's a lot though, and I want to read through the entire thing first. Plus there are a lot of links to click as well. I'm not complaining, just that I'm going to set aside some time soon to go thru the whole thing! Looking forward to it!

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19 hours ago, iacas said:

Are you at a point in your game where you're working on this?

Yep 😉

Trying to work on the fall being a little more passive by softening the lead leg.

19 hours ago, iacas said:

Though the golf swing is largely rotary, there is some "translation" or sway or sliding of the hips in this plane. If you picture a golfer's pelvis as shaped somewhat like an oval — most golfers are wider than they are "thick" — the image illustrates what I'm talking about with regards to "sway." This image is from an "overhead" perspective of a righty golfer with the target to the right.

hip_slide_omnigraffle.jpg

This image was particularly helpful for me to visualize the goal.  For the longest time, I've tried to work on a "centered pivot" and would have thought the left image is more ideal.

 

19 hours ago, iacas said:

Here are a selection of professional golfers in GEARS. Some are men, some women. Some are hitting driver. Some sway as little as 2 or 3 inches, some as much as 8 or more. Again, full-size versions of these images are in this album.

large.slide_touraverage.jpglarge.slide_byrd.jpglarge.slide_ingee.jpglarge.slide_bryson.jpglarge.slide_finau.jpglarge.slide_rickie.jpglarge.slide_sergio.jpglarge.slide_horschel.jpglarge.slide_herbert.jpglarge.slide_nelly.jpglarge.slide_jinyoungko.jpglarge.slide_lydia.jpglarge.slide_cam.jpglarge.slide_rory.jpg

Over the years, I've been concerned with "running ahead" of the ball in my downswing.  In some of these images, the pro's head ends up ahead of address and some behind.  So this might be a question specific to me, but does it matter to you so much where the head ends up at impact?  Sometimes when practicing the fall piece, I'm worried that I'm practicing running ahead of the ball too much.  

But I see you addressed that here....

19 hours ago, iacas said:

Sure, you'll occasionally hear people say "I got ahead of it" or something, and there are cases where amateur golfers will slide their hips too far, but on the whole, amateurs stink at getting their hips to move forward properly.

 

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20 hours ago, iacas said:

"Actively" shoving your hips forward. This is often either a learned behavior or a compensation for something else, like getting the trail elbow stuck and needing to push the whole hips/elbow "group" forward to try to hit the ball cleanly.

This is a very good description of my challenge. It is a good way of saying it.

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  • 2 weeks later...
(edited)

Darn good(and deep dive into) discussion on movements.

This past summer I was fighting this position, that position, and everything else in the golf swing.

I took about a week of just swing the club as fast as I could. Learning how the body moves. Imitate the impact position and maybe a few frames past impact.

NO BALL. It will free your mind of "golf positions"

Then, without thinking about this or that, visualize the path and swing.

Your body will do things without thinking if you know the end you seek.

Guess what?  I finally working into a subtle hip slide forward When you do that it seems you also load the arm against the chest and get better explosion off of the chest.

After a week of that, I tried hitting a ball.  If it went well, I'd hit another.  If not, regain the feel. and repeat.

I gain nearly 2 club lengths during that summer.

Edited by dufferifick
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Decent video there. They emphasize the "falling" as well.

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  • 4 weeks later...
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On 2/7/2023 at 5:32 PM, iacas said:

From the early backswing, where this golfer has shifted slightly to his right, to impact, the center of his pelvis covers 6.9" in going from -1.4" to 5.5" at impact:

large.rory_max_back_impact.jpg

Giving this thread a little bump. Great post and love this graphic.

To help incorporate some of this into my own game I been very conscious and dedicated to NOT stopping at the top of my backswing the past month or so. I might rehearse to 2 or 2.5, then continue to the finish. My tendency is to shift right but get back left too late or not create that "fall" left as I still winding on the backswing.

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  • 4 weeks later...

I don’t believe that the body motion you refer to as translation is properly so termed.  Instead since the head remains fairly fixed, the motion of the upper body should be understood as rotation.  Translation means a uniform movment of the entire figure in the plane, while if a point of the figure remains fixed it’s a rotation.

As far as I can tell, the golf swing involves rotation in all three planes in which the body moves, each movment being fairly easy to perform: the body rotates or twists around a vertical axis, the upper body rotates around a mostly horizontal axis perpendicular to the target line near the upper torso or head ( the hips sway and the shoulders rock), and the uppper body rotates around a horizontal axis near the hips that is parallel to the target line (the upper body extends and flexes).  So, you spin, sway, and lift your head…all the things you are told not to do.


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This isn’t really true @Bumper. The upper body absolutely moves laterally whether you look at the ribs or the shoulders.

I’m teaching all day today but will try to show you GEARS images later today.

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Okay, I'm home now, and can reply.

15 hours ago, Bumper said:

I don’t believe that the body motion you refer to as translation is properly so termed.

Let me quote myself:

On 2/7/2023 at 8:32 PM, iacas said:

Though the golf swing is largely rotary, there is some "translation" or sway or sliding of the hips in this plane. If you picture a golfer's pelvis as shaped somewhat like an oval — most golfers are wider than they are "thick" — the image illustrates what I'm talking about with regards to "sway." This image is from an "overhead" perspective of a righty golfer with the target to the right.

I used the word "translation" or a form of it (translates, translated, etc.) exactly one time in my post, and it's right there, above. It talks specifically about the hips translating (i.e. moving laterally), and I'll stand by my usage of it.

15 hours ago, Bumper said:

Instead since the head remains fairly fixed, the motion of the upper body should be understood as rotation. Translation means a uniform movment of the entire figure in the plane, while if a point of the figure remains fixed it’s a rotation.

I thought perhaps based on what you said here — and because it's true that good players translate their ribs and shoulders (base of their neck if you'd like to think of it that way) forward as well — that I had perhaps talked about the whole torso moving forward when I replied earlier:

9 hours ago, iacas said:

This isn’t really true @Bumper. The upper body absolutely moves laterally whether you look at the ribs or the shoulders.

 

 

I created four images really quickly between lessons that I think illustrate how the whole torso moves during the golf swing. These are all major winners (11 majors between the four of them). The yellow is the backswing, the blue is the downswing. GEARS is showing the ribcage and shoulder "dots". The lines connected to them drop down vertically.

translation1.jpgtranslation2.jpgtranslation3.jpgtranslation4.jpg

Combine the above with the axis tilt numbers (pros shift their hips forward while staying relatively vertical)…

And you arrive at the conclusion that their torsos often translate forward as well. There's some head movement, too, but because the head is above the shoulders… it's not as much.

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  • 1 month later...
On 2/28/2023 at 4:21 PM, iacas said:

Decent video there. They emphasize the "falling" as well.

They include a self-diagnostic of checking lead leg about halfway through downswing to see if it is halfway out of the bounding box of the a-frame at setup. Do you agree that this is a good checkpoint?

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14 hours ago, Chris Brooks said:

They include a self-diagnostic of checking lead leg about halfway through downswing to see if it is halfway out of the bounding box of the a-frame at setup. Do you agree that this is a good checkpoint?

I think that's pretty good. I might like to see it almost… hip and knee stacked on top of the ankle, but that will depend on stance width, too.

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