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Posted

This  is something that I did for years, then for some reason I got away from it.  Starting again this season I began hovering the driver and I immediately started hitting longer, more consistent, and more accurate drives.  Then yesterday I get the weekly email from Colorado Avid Golfer and they had included this video, which confirms my findings:

Just wondering if anyone else does this, or has tried it without the positive results that I have found.

Rick

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Posted

I think it can cause some people to be handsy. One of those things that effects people differently.

  • Upvote 2

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Posted

I hover with my driver, don't like to hover with my 5w/3w for some reason.

I find when I hover I tend to brace the left side of my neck better when I drive through the ball.


Posted

I've always hovered the driver, no idea how or why I started.  From time to time I get comments about it but it's just a normal set-up for me.

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Posted

I've never done it. it just doesn't feel comfortable to me.

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Posted

I don't tee my driver up too high so hovering wouldn't be good.  

Tony  


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Posted
14 minutes ago, jamo said:

I've never done it. it just doesn't feel comfortable to me.

It's funny, because it feels odd to me too, yet I hit the driver better that way.  I also hit some of my best iron shots from fairway bunkers when I can't ground the club, yet I can't talk myself into hovering my irons when I'm in the fairway. :hmm:

Rick

"He who has the fastest cart will never have a bad lie."

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Posted

I hover my driver. Just seems like it's easier to stay on plane. When I don't hover it, It feels like I have to pick up the clubhead to start the swing. 

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Posted

I hover Driver. I hover everything. I think it can engage more of larger muscles especially upper torso at takeaway. Good thing I think. 

Only time it works against is if you freeze over the ball for more than a few seconds. Then it is worse than if you ground before you take away since you develop more tension in grip and forearms. Small waggle suggested. Anyway my personal experience.  

Vishal S.

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Posted (edited)

My assumption is that a waggle is not hovering -  it is a waggle, although the club is in the air.

I assume hovering is picking it up, leaving the club at one location in the air, taking a look at some target, and letting it go. My instructor doesn't like it - tension - so I am trying to stop from doing it, or discover if a waggle works to reduce tension but not foul up my tempo/swing.

Tough game, this golf...

Edited by Mr. Desmond

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Posted
1 hour ago, Gunther said:

I've always hovered the driver, no idea how or why I started.  From time to time I get comments about it but it's just a normal set-up for me.

Same here, except not always.  It's completely natural to me at this point, and resting it on the ground would be super awkward, but i have no idea when I started trying it and when it became comfortable.

No comments, though ... I've not paid attention but I thought this was more common than not at this point.  Now I gotta start paying attention. :)

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Posted
45 minutes ago, Fourputt said:

It's funny, because it feels odd to me too, yet I hit the driver better that way.  I also hit some of my best iron shots from fairway bunkers when I can't ground the club, yet I can't talk myself into hovering my irons when I'm in the fairway. :hmm:

Interesting. I've never been that great out of fairway bunkers, so maybe that's the deciding factor right there.

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Posted
34 minutes ago, Mr. Desmond said:

My assumption is that a waggle is not hovering -  it is a waggle, although the club is in the air.

I assume hovering is picking it up, leaving the club at one location in the air, taking a look at some target, and letting it go. My instructor doesn't like it - tension - so I am trying to stop from doing it, or discover if a waggle works to reduce tension but not foul up my tempo/swing.

Tough game, this golf...

The last thing I do before starting the swing is set the driver behind the ball.  I don't look at any target except my spot a couple of feet in front of the ball after I set my feet.  I waggle, hover, then swing.

  • Upvote 1

Rick

"He who has the fastest cart will never have a bad lie."

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Posted

Something that Erik pointed out to me during a lesson... when you hover the driver at the sweet spot and let it fall to the ground, you'll notice that the driver is lined up more to the toe (I hope I got that right). So, I did this and never did the hover thing. Just recently, I started to hover and felt like I was more prepared to move smoothly into the backswing. However, I am currently working on the mechanics of the swing.

Dave

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Posted

You should hover as long as it's static for a split second before the takeaway. With the head on the ground you tend to pick it up a bit and can be hitchy.


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    • Please see this topic for updated information:
    • Please see this topic for updated information:
    • When you've been teaching golf as long as I have, you're going to find that you can teach some things better than you previously had, and you're probably going to find some things that you taught incorrectly. I don't see that as a bad thing — what would be worse is refusing to adapt and grow given new information. I've always said that my goal with my instruction isn't to be right, but it's to get things right. To that end, I'm about five years late in issuing a public proclamation on something… When I first got my GEARS system, I immediately looked at the golf swings of the dozens and dozens of Tour players for which I suddenly had full 3D data. I created a huge spreadsheet showing how their bodies moved, how the club moved, at various points in the swing. I mapped knee and elbow angles, hand speeds, shoulder turns and pelvis turns… etc. I re-considered what I thought I knew about the golf swing as performed by the best players. One of those things dated back to the earliest days: that you extend (I never taught "straighten" and would avoid using that word unless in the context of saying "don't fully straighten") the trail knee/leg in the backswing. I was mislead by 2D photos from less-than-ideal camera angles — the trail leg rotates a bit during the backswing, and so when observing trail knee flex should also use a camera that moves to stay perpendicular to the plane of the ankle/knee/hip joint. We have at least two topics here on this (here and here; both of which I'll be updating after publishing this) where @mvmac and I advise golfers to extend the trail knee. Learning that this was not right is one of the reasons I'm glad to have a 3D system, as most golfers generally preserve the trail knee flex throughout the backswing. Data Here's a video showing an iron and a driver of someone who has won the career slam: Here's what the graph of his right knee flex looks like. 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