Jump to content
IGNORED

What is the best way to get forward shaft lean through impact?


Note: This thread is 3928 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!

Recommended Posts

I've seen the Tour Striker infomercial, and I don't know if I like the whole idea. On it, they said that you're supposed to hold the wrist angle longer through impact so your hands are in front of the ball. They even had a scratch golfer(or better) on there saying that all he thinks about is keeping the shaft forward through impact. And they had Kevin Streelman on there saying how cool the tour striker is.

I always thought the forward shaft lean would happen automatically if you turned through the shot properly. But they're saying to be a good ball striker you need to hold that wrist angle and keep the shaft leaning forward with a conscious effort.

Edit:  Do you hold the wrist angle longer / lean the shaft forward on purpose, or do you get the proper shaft lean from using your lower body correctly?

Drugs are bad. M'kay.
 
I change my swing every time I don't shoot par for the course.

Best Round: 89 at Lake Park Golf Course, Lewisville, TX   66.5/102

Link to comment
Share on other sites


It happens automatically for me, the faster I swing the more lean it has it seems, not by much though.

And honestly... I think that whoever is doing the marketing for golf products needs to be fired.

It's some of the worst infomercial / commercial / marketing I have seen so far.

Plus those tour pros they hired to do the commercials, should not have happened.

So I don't buy the products, unless I can demo the product myself and make my own decision if it's cool or not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites




Originally Posted by PaulMVR

I've seen the Tour Striker infomercial, and I don't know if I like the whole idea. On it, they said that you're supposed to hold the wrist angle longer through impact so your hands are in front of the ball. They even had a scratch golfer(or better) on there saying that all he thinks about is keeping the shaft forward through impact. And they had Kevin Streelman on there saying how cool the tour striker is.

I always thought the forward shaft lean would happen automatically if you turned through the shot properly. But they're saying to be a good ball striker you need to hold that wrist angle and keep the shaft leaning forward with a conscious effort.

What's the real deal?

That's the real deal.  Hit the ball first, then the ground.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


The hands must swing faster than the club. Weight more forward also helps. It is impossible to describe, except by using pressure points perhaps. You just have to find the feeling for yourself.

For me, it took some time finding the correct feeling. What really made the difference was speeding up the hands on the downswing without flipping.

  • Upvote 1

Ogio Grom | Callaway X Hot Pro | Callaway X-Utility 3i | Mizuno MX-700 23º | Titleist Vokey SM 52.08, 58.12 | Mizuno MX-700 15º | Titleist 910 D2 9,5º | Scotty Cameron Newport 2 | Titleist Pro V1x and Taylormade Penta | Leupold GX-1

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades



Originally Posted by Zeph

The hands must swing faster than the club. Weight more forward also helps. It is impossible to describe, except by using pressure points perhaps. You just have to find the feeling for yourself.

For me, it took some time finding the correct feeling. What really made the difference was speeding up the hands on the downswing without flipping.



No, the hands do not more faster than the club.

Mizuno MP600 driver, Cleveland '09 Launcher 3-wood, Callaway FTiz 18 degree hybrid, Cleveland TA1 3-9, Scratch SS8620 47, 53, 58, Cleveland Classic 2 mid-mallet, Bridgestone B330S, Sun Mountain four5.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Moderator

Yeah it's not the hands that move faster, not even close. When the hands are behind the shaft at impact, its more likely to top the ball or hit the ground first.  That's a cause of leaning back on the downswing or improper hip turn, most likely from trying to kill the ball.  Keeping the shaft forward allows you to hit ball first and ground second, and more pure contact.  Like they said trying to keep that wrist, shaft angle as long as possible before releasing helps keep shaft forward as well as build more power.  A major problem with people trying this is they start to lean back trying to kill it, so you need to really keep your head still as you do this.

Philip Kohnken, PGA
Director of Instruction, Lake Padden GC, Bellingham, WA

Srixon/Cleveland Club Fitter; PGA Modern Coach; Certified in Dr Kwon’s Golf Biomechanics Levels 1 & 2; Certified in SAM Putting; Certified in TPI
 
Team :srixon:!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Not faster in terms of mph perhaps, but fast enough to keep the club trailing behind. The clubhead will obviously move faster since it covers a larger distance.

Ogio Grom | Callaway X Hot Pro | Callaway X-Utility 3i | Mizuno MX-700 23º | Titleist Vokey SM 52.08, 58.12 | Mizuno MX-700 15º | Titleist 910 D2 9,5º | Scotty Cameron Newport 2 | Titleist Pro V1x and Taylormade Penta | Leupold GX-1

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades



Originally Posted by PaulMVR

I've seen the Tour Striker infomercial, and I don't know if I like the whole idea. On it, they said that you're supposed to hold the wrist angle longer through impact so your hands are in front of the ball. They even had a scratch golfer(or better) on there saying that all he thinks about is keeping the shaft forward through impact. And they had Kevin Streelman on there saying how cool the tour striker is.

I always thought the forward shaft lean would happen automatically if you turned through the shot properly. But they're saying to be a good ball striker you need to hold that wrist angle and keep the shaft leaning forward with a conscious effort.

What's the real deal?



This should help

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Sai-Jin, that's what I always thought also, but I feel like I need to swing out of my shoes to keep the shaft leaned right.

Does anyone think my swing looks flippy?  I'm thinking it does a little bit, but the contact and distance on this shot was pretty good. I definitely am not thinking about keeping the shaft forward because I never thought you should have to concentrate on that.

Would the tour striker help my game?.... or hurt it?...

And thanks John, i'll have to try that

Drugs are bad. M'kay.
 
I change my swing every time I don't shoot par for the course.

Best Round: 89 at Lake Park Golf Course, Lewisville, TX   66.5/102

Link to comment
Share on other sites


For me, it comes from ball placement.  If I have the ball in the middle of my stance theres no way for me to not hit the ball with the shaft leaning foreward.

Whats in my :sunmountain: C-130 cart bag?

Woods: :mizuno: JPX 850 9.5*, :mizuno: JPX 850 15*, :mizuno: JPX-850 19*, :mizuno: JPX Fli-Hi #4, :mizuno: JPX 800 Pro 5-PW, :mizuno: MP T-4 50-06, 54-09 58-10, :cleveland: Smart Square Blade and :bridgestone: B330-S

Link to comment
Share on other sites




Originally Posted by PaulMVR

Sai-Jin, that's what I always thought also, but I feel like I need to swing out of my shoes to keep the shaft leaned right.

Does anyone think my swing looks flippy?  I'm thinking it does a little bit, but the contact and distance on this shot was pretty good. I definitely am not thinking about keeping the shaft forward because I never thought you should have to concentrate on that.

Would the tour striker help my game?.... or hurt it?...

And thanks John, i'll have to try that


Also with Mike Breed tip that was inserted by john, the wrist action or release that he recommends is way to early.Example Dustin release his wrist  quarter above  waist high.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


As Bobby Clampett says in his book "The Impact Zone", there is no concious effort to unhinge the left wrist during the forward swing. Your hands should be opposite your left leg at impact. A teaching tool I use frequently is the swingyde....it works very well

www.swingyde.com

PB
Canadian PGA Life Member
Peter Boyce Golf Academy
Strathroy, Ontario
:tmade:

Link to comment
Share on other sites


This topic is the first thing my pro touched on when I started up a series of lessons with him recently (am still in the middle of it).  I noted to him my irons were typically high and short, and he took a look at my swing and noted I was casting the club.  First thing he did was have me slowly swing the club from top and guided the shaft through release to have me feel how different the correct swing felt - hands much closer to my thighs at impact, forward shaft lean and much different feeling of position of both wrists.  He had me do the "pump" drill as well.

After several weeks and about 1200 range balls (~400 a week), lag now feels to me to be as much a function of correct tempo.  Swinging too forced and fast destroys my ability to "crack the whip" in terms of acceleration through the impact zone.  The sense of "not flipping early" or whatever you call it isn't so much a conscious swing thought as keeping my overall tempo smooth.  The "three balls on tees" drill to get my tempo correct seems to have done at least as much toward promoting better iron contact (divots in front of ball, lower boring flight, more distance) as the earlier stuff he originally showed me.  And the "balls on tees" thing also straightened out my driving, as Tourspoon also suggested in the thread I posted a few weeks ago.

Just my 0.0002 on the subject as I'm working on this very thing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


In the book "The Physics of Golf," the claim is made (and I'm inclined to believe it, though I haven't thought too hard about that particular point) that pretty much anything you do with your muscles to encourage or hold off unhinging of your wrist is going to cost you club head speed compared to keeping those particular muscles passive and letting the club head take care of itself.  That's not at all to say that there's nothing you can do to control the hinge, but that you can't do it just by holding off release.  You have to do it by setting things up with the rest of the swing so that the natural unhinge occurs in the right place.

In the bag:
FT-iQ 10° driver, FT 21° neutral 3H
T-Zoid Forged 15° 3W, MX-23 4-PW
Harmonized 52° GW, Tom Watson 56° SW, X-Forged Vintage 60° LW
White Hot XG #1 Putter, 33"

Link to comment
Share on other sites




Originally Posted by zeg

In the book "The Physics of Golf," the claim is made (and I'm inclined to believe it, though I haven't thought too hard about that particular point) that pretty much anything you do with your muscles to encourage or hold off unhinging of your wrist is going to cost you club head speed compared to keeping those particular muscles passive and letting the club head take care of itself.  That's not at all to say that there's nothing you can do to control the hinge, but that you can't do it just by holding off release.  You have to do it by setting things up with the rest of the swing so that the natural unhinge occurs in the right place.


wow, I think this stuff is gonna drive me nuts

Drugs are bad. M'kay.
 
I change my swing every time I don't shoot par for the course.

Best Round: 89 at Lake Park Golf Course, Lewisville, TX   66.5/102

Link to comment
Share on other sites




Originally Posted by zeg

In the book "The Physics of Golf," the claim is made (and I'm inclined to believe it, though I haven't thought too hard about that particular point) that pretty much anything you do with your muscles to encourage or hold off unhinging of your wrist is going to cost you club head speed compared to keeping those particular muscles passive and letting the club head take care of itself.  That's not at all to say that there's nothing you can do to control the hinge, but that you can't do it just by holding off release.  You have to do it by setting things up with the rest of the swing so that the natural unhinge occurs in the right place.


I don't totally believe that claim, but I think it's a good point.  Not that anyone was mentioning Stack and Tilt in this thread, but this is the only part about Stack and Tilt that I am not personally a believer in.  Stack and Tilt says you should hold the wedge all the way through to the finish position, so that from a down the line view the shaft is leaning to the right on the follow through.  I don't think it's possible to do this while swinging with full power.  I've yet to see video of someone making a powerful swing without losing the flying wedge and unhinging the wrist at some point after impact, and I have seen video of Mike Bennett's swing in which he loses the wedge (you can tell because his shaft pops into frame above his left shoulder and leaning to the left from the down the line view) and then he quickly regains the wedge and tilts the shaft to the right.  Video is in this thread: http://thesandtrap.com/forum/thread/40806/mike-bennett-swing

I don't think anyone should be taught to try to hold the wedge all the way through to the finish (if holding the wedge is even the correct term- but you know what I mean - maintain wrist angles that are required for a forward shaft lean).  I simply think it's impossible to do if you swing with full power.  I understand the argument that if you tell someone to try to hold the wedge through to the finish, then maybe they will be likely to release their lag later, but I think people should just be taught that the wedge should be held until after impact but that after that into the finish it's not possible to keep it in place.  The goal is to be actively engaging the power accumulators through impact.

Stack and Tilt tells the truth about physics in the rest of the swing, but I don't think it tells the truth in claiming that the wedge should (or can) be held all the way to the finish in a powerful golf swing.

If someone has a video showing otherwise then I could be convinced.

Scott T

G5 9° V2 75 X / 909F2 15.5° V2 85 X / 909H 19° V2 100 X / MP-33 #3-PW X100 / X-Forged Chrome 54.15 60.10 X100 / FGP Black 34" / Penta TP

Handicap is a guess because I haven't established one yet.Best score so far is a 71 on a 6,509 yard 70.3/121 par 72 muni, during a glorious...
Link to comment
Share on other sites




Originally Posted by canadianpro

As Bobby Clampett says in his book "The Impact Zone", there is no concious effort to unhinge the left wrist during the forward swing. Your hands should be opposite your left leg at impact. A teaching tool I use frequently is the swingyde....it works very well

www.swingyde.com



I'm working through this book right now. Best golf money I ever spent. Rather than trying to direct the clubhead to the ball, which is what most of us hackers do, Clampett says you need to learn to direct your hands to an aim point 4 inches in front of the ball ("The mind is in the hands"). The more I practice Clampett's drills the better my ball striking becomes. After years of struggling with lack of lag in my swing and coming over the top I am finally getting the hang of loading my lag and releasing it very late in my swing. My short and mid iron and wedge game improved by leaps and bounds almost immediately. Now my long irons, woods and driver are beginning to follow suit. I would highly recommend "The Impact Zone" to anyone who feels the need to build more lag into his/her swing.

In the Bag:
Driver: Cleveland Launcher Ultralight XL 270

FW: Taylor Made 300 17 degree 
3-PW: Mizuno MX-23

AW: Mizuno TP-T11 52/07 (Bent to 50)
SW: Mizuno TP-T11 56/10

LW: Mizuno TP-T11 60/05

Putter: Original Ping Zing

Ball: Wilson Staff FG Tour

Link to comment
Share on other sites


If you keep your left arm fairly straight and your right arm tight to the body (think elbow against belt - just above right pocket for righties) on the way down, I'm not sure how it's possible to swing without lag, forward shaft lean, and ultimately, power. Not sure how a person can make full swing, where their hands don't lead the club head, without hurting their wrists!?!? You have to release that right arm after impact to generate any power. Seriously. Anything else is contrived and/or weak.

Mizuno MP600 driver, Cleveland '09 Launcher 3-wood, Callaway FTiz 18 degree hybrid, Cleveland TA1 3-9, Scratch SS8620 47, 53, 58, Cleveland Classic 2 mid-mallet, Bridgestone B330S, Sun Mountain four5.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Note: This thread is 3928 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!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-15%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope.
  • Posts

    • Wordle 1,080 3/6 🟩⬛🟩🟨⬛ 🟩🟩🟩⬛🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
    • Part 2 made Part 1 better. There was a lot in Part 1 that I appreciated more after watching 2
    • As I mentioned to @StuM, that’s definitely a destination I would be interested in, but it would probably be a smaller outing due to it’s price and location, and completely different than the annual thing this outing in Ohio has become.
    • Thanks guys - I’ve been absentee here for a while and I don’t like it. 
    • Let's recap how things have been going lately now that the tournaments/events I had in May are done. Overall I'm satisfied with how I've played so far this year. Not ecstatic about it, but not disappointed either. Certainly have some things to tighten up, but I've also made some good strides and hit a ton of high quality shots. Breaking it down by section  Driving - This has been quite solid when I remember my swing thought and fully commit to a very specific target rather than just aiming at the fairway and hoping. Distance and quality of strike have been good. The new U505 3 iron I put in the bag has become an absolute weapon. I hit 5/5 fairways with it at Virtues yesterday averaging 250yds over 4 shots (Removing the one outlier where I hit it 299 with a severely downhill tee shot to a downslope fairway) I need to rely on this more and stop trying to force driver when I don't have to.  Approach - When I focus on and remember my priority piece, irons are solid. When I don't, they aren't. Go figure. Fell into some old habits over the past few rounds due to mostly playing with not much practice lately. Will be changing that over the next few weeks prior to a few upcoming events towards the end of June.  Distances have gone up a bit, everything is about 7-10yds longer than I'm used to so that has taken a few months to fully trust on the course, but I'm getting there, I'd say like 95% of the way confident with fully trusting the yardages. Need to work on hitting partial yardages more, especially with longer irons. I'm decent at it with shorter irons but don't have the same feels and confidence with longer irons. Wedges of 50+ yds have been pretty solid, have good feels for yardages and have done a much better job of taking the extra club and hitting lower flighted wedges that hop and stop rather than rip back when they land. Short Game - Mixed bag here. Chipping and pitching from the fairway has been good, not quite as good out of the rough, worked on some technique yesterday with @iacas at Virtues and he thinks a thinner wedge sole should help too. I have been chipping with my 54 more lately instead of automatically grabbing my 58 and it has been good, I'm realizing I don't always need to go high and soft, mid trajectory and running works just fine most of the time. Putting - Pretty solid overall. Have done a good job implementing my setup changes from Evolvr and trusting those. Speed control has been good, short putts have been solid, biggest thing I need to work on is being very specific with where my aim point is, especially in that makeable 6-15 foot range.   Couple overall takeaways that I learned from watching some better players and that don't require any additional skill to implement My dispersion/shot zone with Driver and long irons is bigger than I think it is. I need to do a better job aiming away from trouble/hazards and don't be afraid to lay up on a par 5 from 200+ out when there's hazards near the green.  I need to do a better job reading the greens prior to chipping/pitching onto them. I've hit a number of solid chips and pitches that landed where I wanted, but my landing spot wasn't correct for the pin position based on the green slopes. Implement the feel I have for my priority piece (especially with irons) as part of my pre-shot routine and make sure I do it every single time.   I'm making plenty of birdies, in 2024 I'm averaging 2.4 per round, but I'm also making plenty of bogeys or worse, averaging 5.81 bogeys or worse per round. A lot of the bogeys are sloppy silly ones that could be avoided and that better players simply don't make. Better aiming on long approach shots and more attention around the greens should help quite a bit towards reducing the bogeys per round.   Main things to work on over the next few weeks Film iron swing and get back to mirror work at home/gym and more partial reps. When I was hitting my irons the best a month or so ago I was doing mirror work daily. Pick very specific targets with tee shots and rely on 3iron more often especially when I can hit it and still have a short wedge in my hand (which is most par 4s at the yardages I normally play). Figure out what wedge setup I want to go with to replace my 54 and 58, Vokeys and RTX are at the top of my list. Leaning towards Vokey 54-10S and 58-12D grinds at the moment, those seem like good fits for what I use each of those clubs for. Continue to practice chipping with my 54 and short game shots from the rough with both wedges.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.

The popup will be closed in 10 seconds...