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Posted

I'm just looking for general critique here. I know there is something wrong but I need an objective view to see it.


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Posted
I no expert here but it looks like you have too big of a back swing and on your follow through your hands are too high. Maybe opening the club face a little early on the back swing. I hope this helps maybe someone with a little more knowledge will chim in.

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Posted
rotate your top hand anticlockwise 10 deg. its too strong a position

work on hitting the ball with body turn, not your arms....

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Posted
rotate your top hand anticlockwise 10 deg. its too strong a position

Shooter,

I'm not sure what you mean regarding the top hand. Is it the right hand or left, also, rotate at top of swing or at address. Thanks
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Posted
I agree with points from both responses above...on the camera angle from the back, you can see that your club goes slightly past parallel at the top of your back swing (you can see the club head peak out from behind your head). If you shorten up your back swing a little you will be able to stay on plane through the downswing. Also on the rear view camera angle, you can see as your hands follow through the ball, your hips are still square. This means that your hands/club/arms are ahead of your hips (stop the video at 10 sec for visual). So Shooters suggestion of working on body turn is correct. Your hips need to start the swing and your hands and arms will follow and that will create more power without having to swing noticeably harder. Hope this helps!

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Posted
Is a help, thank you. I could use help on how to get hips turning ahead of my arms.
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    • Haiduk - Archdevil        
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    • I'm currently recuperating from surgery, so no golf, but have been thinking about this quite a bit. This and the don't overbend the right arm thing. It's hard for me to even pose the position, so I'm not 100% sure, but I feel like it's impossible to have the right humerus along the shirt seam and not overbend your right arm, unless your hands are down near your hips. If the left arm is up at or above the shoulder plane and your right arm is bent less than 90 degrees, then your right humerus has to raise or your hands will get pulled apart. Your left hand can't reach your right hand unless either the right upper arm is up or the right arm is overbent. Is that right? If it is, then focusing on not overbending the right arm would force you to raise the humerus. And actually thinking further on it, if you do overbend your right arm, then you're basically forcing your upper arm down or forcing your left arm to bend. Since (for me at least) bending the left arm too much is not something I think I need to worry about, it means that the bend in the trail arm is really the driving force behind what happens to the right humerus. 
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