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Posted
I was out on the course the other day, scoring rather poorly when I decided to see what would happen if I completely locked my wrists in place for the whole swing.

I was pleasantly surprised! My last three holes were all parred thanks to this new technique. I'd basically taken the usual address position and started of the backswing as normal, but instead of allowing the wrists to rotate clockwise, and for the wrists to hinge, loading lag in the usual manner, I locked my wrists in place.

This meant at the top of the backswing, the shaft was more upright than horizontal, and the club face was actually facing away from the target. The wrists were in a perfect position for impact.
From there I simply rotated my shoulders as fast as possible (I'm a one-planer), kept the wrists locked and the arms passive.

My drives were dead straight, and around 240 yards (I'm happy with anything over 200), and with the irons I'd used there was no loss of distance at all, and again they were dead straight.

I was just wondering if anyone had ever tried / heard of this before, and whether or not it's worth pursuing?

Putter - TaylorMade Rossa Corza Ghost
Wedges - Titleist Vokey Oil Can; 50/08, 54/14, 58/04
Irons - Mizuno MP53 4-PW
Hybrid - Mizuno MP CLK 3 iron
Rangefinder - Bushnell Tour V2Ball - Pro V1s / Srixon Z Star Yellow


Posted
What do you mean by locking your wrist? Post a video of you doing this, i can't visualize what your talking about. The only reason i have concerncs about this is because its hard to lock your wrist, its not like your knees, its a different type of joint structure. The only way i can think of locking my wrist is by contracting the muscles in my forearms which leads to my bicep and triceps contracting a bit. I don't like this because it add muscle tension.

Matt Dougherty, P.E.
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What's in My Bag
Driver; :pxg: 0311 Gen 5,  3-Wood: 
:titleist: 917h3 ,  Hybrid:  :titleist: 915 2-Hybrid,  Irons: Sub 70 TAIII Fordged
Wedges: :edel: (52, 56, 60),  Putter: :edel:,  Ball: :snell: MTB,  Shoe: :true_linkswear:,  Rangfinder: :leupold:
Bag: :ping:

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Posted
Yes, but only with my wedges and short irons. My instructor told us to do this because it's one less thing you have to worry about when trying to square the club face. When I started doing this, it helped me in becoming more consistent when about 120 yards and in.

FT-5 driver
Fybrid 3 Wood
Idea Tech A4OS 3&4 hybrids
Idea Tech A4 Forged 5-LW
588 DSG 56 wedge Carolyne putter Grom bag


Posted
haha i used to try this when i was first learning to play and thought i had found the holy grail. well that happened with every new swing idea but this was one of em. check yourself in a mirror or on video. you're not locking your wrists i bet. when i thought i was i was actually putting the club in a pretty good spot at the top. just not parallel to the ground. dunno, go with it for a while or forever if it works

Posted
I essentially do this to varying degrees with all my clubs. There's a video on the Golf Channel YouTube Channel The Golf Fix - "Wrist or Reward". He basically says that because of the way the hands and wrists attach to the club in the set-up position, there is already wrist hinge so you don't need to add any more. Added a lot of consistency to my game.

What's in my Eagles & Birdies Bag:
taylormade.gif R9 SuperTri Stiff 10.5˚
mizuno.gif MX-700 15˚ 3W Stiff
mizuno.gif MX-700 20˚ & 23˚ Hybrid Stiff
mizuno.gif MP 52 4-PW Nippon 950 Stiffmizuno.gif MP - T 10 52˚/07˚ & 58˚/10˚ping.gif Redwood Anser 34"titleist.gif Pro V1x FJD   


Note: This thread is 5684 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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