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Posted
So I have been hitting my driver well lately, but a draw/hook has been creeping in with almost all of my clubs above an 8. When I was on the range the other day one my my friends who is a club pro told me to focus on keeping both arms straight at impact. I was just curious if this is correct? My swing has always been a little too "handsy" and this could be my problem. It just doesn't make too much sense to me, because at address your arms aren't perfectly straight and isn't the point to try and get your arms/shaft to the same position on the downswing?

In my Ozone stand bag:
Driver: 909 D2 9.5
3 Wood: MT-15
Irons: 1025-C 3-P
Gap: Spin Milled 52-06 Oil-CanSand: Spin Milled 56-08 RawLob: Spin Milled 60-13 Oil-CanPutter: AntiguaBall: Z-Star X


Posted
Neither of my arms are dead strait when i hit the ball. My trailing arm is bent torwards my body. The only time they are both strait in my swing is after the ball is in the air.
THE WEAPONS CACHE..

Titleist 909 D2 9.5 Degree Driver| Titleist 906f4 13.5 degree 3-Wood | Titleist 909 17 & 21 degree hybrid | Titleist AP2 irons
Titleist Vokey Wedges - 52 & 58 | Scotty Cameron Studio Select Newport 2 Putter | ProV1 Ball

Posted
Neither of my arms are dead strait when i hit the ball. My trailing arm is bent torwards my body. The only time they are both strait in my swing is after the ball is in the air.

I completely agree. Post impact is when they are straight. At impact my left elbow is close to my body and right is totally straight. Then after I released the club the ball is gone, both are straight. Look at the pros.

Brian


Posted
Left arm straight, right arm is straightening .
Personally I think worrying about the position of your right arm through impact leads to more potential problems. I tend to think more about pulling my left arm through... right arm is strictly along for the ride for balance purposes. YMMV.

Weapons of choice:
Irons/wedges: Titleist Tour Grind
Driver:Titleist 909D2
3 Wood: Tour Edge Exotic
Putter: Odyssey White Hot


Posted
I completely agree. Post impact is when they are straight. At impact my left elbow is close to my body and right is totally straight. Then after I released the club the ball is gone, both are straight. Look at the pros.

I was baffled by this until I read your screen name

.

Posted
I find that most of my pull hooks are caused by me rolling over the right hand through impact. So I am concentrating on sweeping through instead of rolling the hand. Seems to help.

John Hanley
Sugar Land, TX
Driver: Pinemeadow ZR-1 460cc 10.5 degree; senior flex graphite shaft;
6-PW: ProStaff Oversize; graphite (about 13 years old);
Adams Tight Lies fairway woods.

Cleveland CG14 56° sand wedge

Zebra 395gm Mallet putter


Posted
I find that most of my pull hooks are caused by me rolling over the right hand through impact. So I am concentrating on sweeping through instead of rolling the hand. Seems to help.

Same here, if I roll my hands over during the release I know it's gonna be a snap hook before the ball even gets out there.

 - Joel

TM M3 10.5 | TM M3 17 | Adams A12 3-4 hybrid | Mizuno JPX 919 Tour 5-PW

Vokey 50/54/60 | Odyssey Stroke Lab 7s | Bridgestone Tour B XS

Home Courses - Willow Run & Bakker Crossing

 

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Posted
I think he wants you to get the feeling of straight arms, not actually having straight arms. There is not a single point in the golf swing where both arms should be fully extended.
In The Bag

Titleist 905T 9.5°
Nike Sumo2 15°
Nike Sumo2 19°Nike Forged Irons - 3-PW Titleist Bob Vokey Spin Milled 56°10°Scotty Cameron Pro Platinum Newport 2

Posted
There is not a single point in the golf swing where both arms should be fully extended.

Actually, from just past impact until your hands are about hip level, both arms are fully extended from centrifugal force. Unless you've got a serious chicken wing thing going on.

Weapons of choice:
Irons/wedges: Titleist Tour Grind
Driver:Titleist 909D2
3 Wood: Tour Edge Exotic
Putter: Odyssey White Hot


  • Moderator
Posted
Left arm straight, right arm is

I agree. I like the feel of my left arm pulling through as well...it really helps my hands lead the clubface. Right arm is basically there to add the "solidness" to the club

Bryan A
"Your desire to change must be greater than your desire to stay the same"

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Note: This thread is 6077 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

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