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My Swing (ajw426)


ajw426
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Just start by making swings at like 20-30% speed. Giving yourself some more space at address would help. I would also recommend you soften the lower back and feel like your right arm is under your left at address. So before you stand further away from it I'd take out the arch in the lower back, raise the handle a little and "soften" that right arm under your left.

I tried to make those changes to my setup alongside the effort to swing my left arm out to the right of the target on the downswing. To my untrained eyes it looks like my arm is less "pinned" to my side, but it still doesn't look like that picture or Rory/Tiger when i watch them. My mental swing speed was about 75% on this one. [VIDEO]https://youtu.be/mGio5RTH-io[/VIDEO] I am relieved to hear that my position is not laid off or too flat, because when i try to steepen it to mimic others, it gets ugly.

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Good changes you're making in your posture. Your back will thank you. ;-)

Yours in earnest, Jason.
Call me Ernest, or EJ or Ernie.

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  • 9 months later...

 

Striking the ball pretty well.  Misses are either slightly fat or mild-moderate hook. My swing plane seems flat as usual to me, but not sure if that is something I should change or not.  Any recommendations?  Thanks!

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Hmm I can't go to deep into this because your working on other various things so the best I can do is offer a few tips that wont conflict with what your doing. First off heel hits are caused by lack of hip rotation through the shot along with poor knee flex through the ball and standing to close to the ball. The golf swing might look pretty on your backswing your centered making a huge coil practicing that aspect hard but will see your main misses from improperly firing though also known as the second half of the swing and it's far more important than the first part. A good drill is to take a golf shaft without a head and swing it to a full finish. It will be hard at first but over timer you will develop a full finish hear a swoosh and stop clearing early and holding back which will cause heel hits. 

 

 

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4 hours ago, ajw426 said:

 

Striking the ball pretty well.  Misses are either slightly fat or mild-moderate hook. My swing plane seems flat as usual to me, but not sure if that is something I should change or not.  Any recommendations?  Thanks!

Yes, definitely too flat (a significant change from your older videos). The camera angle makes it look a bit worse than it actually is but you have to change your plane a lot on the downswing to hit the ball.
 

Firefox_Screenshot_2016-03-13T06-07-40.9Firefox_Screenshot_2016-03-13T06-08-01.5

Look at Tiger's club in roughly the same positions and you can see he doesn't have to make a huge move to get the club to line up with the ball at impact.
tigerwoodsswingplane.jpg

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Looks much better to my eyes?  This isn't the first time over the past two years that I have tried to make similar swing changes.  The only problem is that my ball striking has gotten drastically worse every time I have tried to upright my swing plane to normal.  I think I'll give it another go, because I know that top golfers just don't take the club away like what feels natural to me.

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After 30 minutes of working at it, I managed to go from striking 80% of my shots very well (the other 20% being slight mis-hits) to only about 30% being struck well with the others being all different types of misses including a few shanks.  

 

I know that good changes in your swing can make things worse before it makes them better, but dang... this is frustrating.

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8 minutes ago, ajw426 said:

After 30 minutes of working at it, I managed to go from striking 80% of my shots very well (the other 20% being slight mis-hits) to only about 30% being struck well with the others being all different types of misses including a few shanks.  

 

I know that good changes in your swing can make things worse before it makes them better, but dang... this is frustrating.

Yeah, I would imagine fixing your backswing would make the over the top move worse in the short term.

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  • 2 weeks later...

I've spent a lot of time working on changing the club path on my backswing.  It looks better to me, but still pretty inconsistent.  I am hitting a fade with the driver and a draw with longer irons.  Although fat shots are now much less common, my directional control has worsened.  Any clue where to go from here?

 

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Check on the posture a bit. More knee flex than normal, and arms that hang "inward" slightly from down the line.

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17 hours ago, iacas said:

Check on the posture a bit. More knee flex than normal, and arms that hang "inward" slightly from down the line.

Yeah, I should be able to tweak those easy enough.  

 

I noticed a bit of lateral head movement from the FO view.  I know that a small amount can be acceptable, but I am wondering if I should work to eliminate it, or be okay with it.

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    • My notes… 0:17 — Joaquin Niemann and Mito Pereira are mentioned as great or beautiful swings. Let's just post this for later. 0:33 — A low "RoR" (rate of rotation) is mentioned. There's been no correlation shown between rate of closure (or rotation) and any of the following: player skill, driving distance, accuracy. There are combos of both with high and low "RoR." 2:10 — As he demonstrates the golf club riding slightly above the plane to slightly under the plane, you'll note how little he's doing this with his rib cage and how much he's doing it with his forearms and maybe up to the shoulder (more as a result, IMO, of how he's using his forearms). 2:17 — "it [the shaft] would simply go around that spine angle," which I guess we can say we see in the above two players… depending on what angle from that huge arc we wish to count as "the spine angle." 2:32 — "Our preferred players" hints at a bit of a model for how you should swing the club. And, in general, I think this is a model I really don't like very much. 2:45 — The "main engine" is the rib complex, spine, and pelvis. Your torso, basically. This ignores your limbs — your legs and arms. Now, it does say the main engine, not the sole engine, and clearly the players above use their limbs… though I'd argue they don't use their arms much, given how bent the right elbow is at impact. 3:22 — Three-step process: 1) ribs rotate, 2) pelvis will drop, 3) ribs rotate. Why do we really need the second part? What does that give us? Besides the heads of JN and MP dropping a foot from where the two small green lines are, which I placed on the top of their hats at early backswing, how does "dropping" the pelvis help us in the golf swing? Don't get me wrong — I teach a small pelvis "fall" (forward and down) as part of the transition in order to get weight/pressure forward and create some axis tilt. They aren't doing that here. They mean almost entirely downward, not forward. The brief demonstration at 3:34 shows almost no weight or force/pressure shifts. It's demonstrated as he said: rotation, dropping, rotation. This isn't what we see from most of the game's best players. 4:09 — Spiral lines. Fascia is partly a connective tissue, partly a lubricant, partly a mildly elastic component to the body. However, the existence of an actual "spiral line," treated as absolute fact by this video, isn't even necessarily so. I'll quote most of the Conclusion from this paper: https://www.anatomytrains.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/wilke-pdf.pdf Although the concept of myofascial meridians is widely used in exercise therapy and osteopathic medicine, the scientific basis for the proposed connections is still a matter of debate. The present review provides first systematic evidence based on cadaveric dissection studies. Although there is strong empirical support for the existence of the superficial back line, back functional line, and front functional line, evidence is ambivalent with regard to the spiral line and lateral line [and] respectively poor for the superficial front line. At 4:38 he says "if we elongate that rubber band, that spiral line," but dude, fascia is least like a rubber band of its three functions, and even then, it's often more for, to quote Wikipedia: "Due to its viscoelastic properties, superficial fascia can stretch to accommodate the deposition of adipose that accompanies both ordinary and prenatal weight gain. After pregnancy and weight loss, the superficial fascia slowly reverts to its original level of tension." In other words, it's not so much a rubber band that can be stretched and quickly snap back into place, it's more what allows our body to stretch and return to shape to accommodate gains in size. 5:45 — I teach people to "spiral" their rib cage very similarly to what he's talking about here, in the backswings. It's an extension of the "stretch/bend" we've been talking about for 15+ years now. The trail side stretches, the lead side bends. Fine. I have no problem with that. And if you want to pretend there's a spiral going around your body, that's cool by me. But your muscles aren't oriented along the mythical "spiral line" and even if they were, stretching the spiral line isn't how muscles work: muscles contract, they "pull," they can't "push" outward. This feels like bad science to back up what is, for now, a decent way to make a backswing. 6:00 — He pitches the rotation of the pelvis as a result of the chest pulling on it. This would or could make sense as a feel, but in truth a good golfer generally uses his legs to do more than he's demonstrating, and the legs will move the pelvis. He calls the pelvis movement "passive," and I don't know that they could really prove that to be true. To be clear, I don't really have much issue with the way they actually make backswings (light use of the legs aside). I just find their explanation of it to be, at best, murky scientifically. 8:00 — The pelvis drops. Why? Why do we want our heads to drop a foot? If we did drop like this, the vertical GRF would really show something, and we don't see that in many swings from great players, especially in combination with what we would see from the lateral forces. 9:26 — The Joaquin Niemann video I used… his impact picture appears in the video here. He calls it a "beautiful C shape in the spine." "Some amount of side bend is completely healthy, and we don't need to overcook it". He says that in other sports, we see side bend: swimming, baseball, hockey… and we don't hear about back injuries in those (paraphrased). 10:40 — "as long as we have it in the right area of the spine" we can avoid injury. This is starting to get to my single biggest issue with this general model for the swing. "There's no health implications as long as we're in a pretty good general system based on spiral movement mind you." What? Dude, no. Will Zalatoris has moved away from this for the health of his back. Tiger has moved away from this for the health of his back (too late). Jason Day has moved away from this. Xander has moved away from this. I call these types of swings "Right Side Bend" swings, and I think it's obvious as to why: Comments made when those swings are shown in slow-motion on television all talk about how "ouch, he's not going to be doing that when he's 40" or "that makes my back hurt" or "he must have a jelly spine". Compare (as best as you can looking at what is a 3D world in 2D) that spine tilt to: "There's no health implication there from this type of movement." Thanks, doctor! Oh, wait, you're just a golf instructor? At least I have a degree in medicinal chemistry, man. 😀 It gets better. 11:15 — "When we're talking about back injuries with golfers, we're talking about lower spine, L-spine injury." He demonstrates for a bit, and then… 12:50 — The "rotation" of the pelvis (which previously just "dropped" but which is now rotating, too, I guess) is demonstrated as: Very, very few good players look like that. This has the center of the pelvis moving AWAY from the target, and I don't think I have a single professional golfer, male or female, who does this in GEARS. 13:50 — "This is a way to create the proper trail side bend:" Ummmm… 14:21 — "You'll notice where the bend in my spine appears." The "bad" way of doing right side bend is then demonstrated at 14:30 and… look, I'll be pretty direct here: I don't want the guy to take off his shirt, and get an X-Ray while he's doing these things, but your back moves the way it moves. Sure, if you actively try to move only your cervical spine, you can do it. If you actively try to move only your lumbar spine, you can kinda do it. Your lumbar spine isn't going to move, generally, more than it wants to. Your spine is going to move, when it is concerned about the two end-points (the pelvis and the base of your head or at least the base of your neck) the way it wants to move. You can't definitively say "the left image has no lumbar lateral flexion and the right is a ton more lumbar lateral flexion." I'd guess, adjusting for the amount of actual side bend, they're almost exactly the same. And I agree that the left image doesn't look like an "extreme" amount of side bend (while stopping short of prognosticating injury potential). 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No. 16:00 — They talk about Tiger and his injuries, and there's a lot here I can't say owing to some friendships and my general personal view to keep things shared between the parties actually in the conversation, but… gee whiz, man. Yes, Tiger moved his pelvis forward, but there's also a case to be made that he did a little more of this "hip flexion/RSB" swing, too (but does less of it now than in, say, 2000). 16:24 — "This is a preference of ours, and the reason it is a preference of ours is primarily because of health." 17:27 — "If you look at history, there are more injuries in the excessive side bend lateral movers than the opposite." (paraphrased) Okay, two problems with that. First, it's not 50/50 on the PGA Tour. If the lateral movers make up 95% of the Tour swings, but they have two injuries and the 5% have one injury per year, his statement could be true, while being a complete sham as a percentage. Second, how is he classifying all of these things? 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    • Ah, face on, not DL. Anyway, I do not want to hijack the thread, so I will take a bit of time and prolly post further in my swing thread. 
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    • V, axis tilt is a mostly vertical line. If your spine is pretty vertical from face-on, it's 90°. If the hips are 12° toward the target more than the chest, it's like 102°. But, to the question I asked you, if the chest is forward of the pelvis, it'd be in the 80s, and what we see from the game's best players is…  
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