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Posted

I started playing golf about a year ago because a ligament injury to my right knee caused me to stop playing football (soccer). I used to mess about up the driving range prior to that but never really played properly. I started taking it seriously about Sep 2010 and safe to say i am hooked, constantly trying to get better and get that handicap down and playing whenever i can (it rains alot where i live)

I thought i'd post my swing on here to see if i can ask some questions and get some constructive criticism about it.

I shorted my backswing on my irons to get some control and hit better iron shots, originally i was lighting fast on the back swing with a huge over swing. It worked perfectly and now i hit lovely clean irons (not all the time obviously) but on filming this i noticed that my driver swing is also shorter. In fact its probably shorter than my irons. Is this bad? i hit my driver pretty well about 260'ish with a cut because i come a little bit over the top on the start of the downswing.

and like i said any constructive points would be grately appreciated.

 909 D2 10.5º S-Flex   RBZ 3W 15º S-Flex

 909h 19º S-Flex

 G15 (4-6) i15 (7-PW) Project X Rifle 5.5  52º, 56º & 58º

  California Del Mar 34"     Pro-V1

 

"Golf is a lot of walking, broken up by disappointment and bad arithmetic"

 


Posted

 909 D2 10.5º S-Flex   RBZ 3W 15º S-Flex

 909h 19º S-Flex

 G15 (4-6) i15 (7-PW) Project X Rifle 5.5  52º, 56º & 58º

  California Del Mar 34"     Pro-V1

 

"Golf is a lot of walking, broken up by disappointment and bad arithmetic"

 


  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

tough to see from the camera angle, but IMHO you could definitely steepen your shoulder tilt.

Colin P.

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Note: This thread is 5378 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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  • Posts

    • Haiduk - Archdevil        
    • Probably since the golfer has to swing the club back and up. The hands have to move back and up. You can feel them go back and up just by turning the shoulders and bending the right arm, because it brings your hands towards your right shoulder.  The difference is if you maintain width or not. Less width means a shorter feeling swing path so the more you need to lift the arms. Being as someone who gets the right arm bend at 110+ degrees, it's 100% a timing issue. I am use to like a 1.5+ second backswing. It probably should be like 1 second at most. Half a second or more will feel like an eternity. I have had swings where I keep my right arm straighter and I am still trying to time the downswing based on the old tempo.  Ideally, for me, it is probably going to be a much quicker and shorter (in duration) backswing, while keeping the right elbow straighter. Which also means more hinging to get swing length without over swinging. 
    • Wordle 1,789 5/6 ⬜⬜⬜⬜⬜ ⬜⬜🟨⬜⬜ ⬜🟩⬜🟩🟩 ⬜🟩🟨🟩🟩 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
    • 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. 
    • I managed to knock off a 3, a 13, and a 15 a couple of weeks ago. The 3 was a 185 yard par 3 with a 6 iron to 12 feet. 13 was a 350 yard par 4, which was a 2 iron and a 9 iron to about a foot. 15 was a 560 yard par 5 with a driver in a bunker, 4 iron into the semi, gap wedge to 8 feet and a putt.
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