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My Swing (guitman423)


guitman423
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I've been Playing Golf for: 25 Years

 

My current handicap index or average score is: 12.5
My typical ball flight is: Straight, medium/high loft.
The shot I hate or the "miss" I'm trying to reduce/eliminate is: Long iron sh**ks. I have a thread about this issue where I thought it may have been due to incorrect iron lie. Maybe though it is actually due to shallow swing plane, resulting in me throwing the hozzle at the ball.  Does not happen 5 iron and below, or with metals.


Videos: 

Video 1: My standard 3 iron setup and swing. Looks like I come in way too shallow, fanning even. The start of the downswing shows me pushing the club outside, which may be why I am throwing the heel at the ball? I really feel unbalanced and the long clubs feel heavy with this swing. I have tape on my clubs, and it showed marks of a heel hit.

Video 2: My standard 3 iron setup and swing, but with an exaggerated steeper plane. This looks somewhat better, right? The start of the downswing shows me coming inside with the club. The tape of the club showed a center hit.

Video 3: My standard 3 iron setup but choked down to the grip. Obviously I had to get closer to the ball. I can hit this no problem, the club feels very light and balanced this way, causing me to wonder if the clubs were too long or the lie was wrong (hence the forum post). For some reason I do not think I have a very shallow swing with this grip, and I do not have to force a steeper swing to make good contact. Tape shows center hit. At the range I can nail these.

Thanks for advice, I have never posted swing videos before.

Edited by guitman423
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Total disclaimer -- I am not a professional instructor. 

However, I wanted to hopefully clarify a thing or two, if nothing else.

Your "shallow plane -- heel hit" is actually incredibly steep

Screen Shot 2016-05-20 at 8.50.13 PM.png

Compare this to Adam Scott in a similar hand position

Adam Scott Iron DTL.jpg

After that you get into a position where you have no choice but to rake across it so hard that you actually just drag the hosel right into it. 

Screen Shot 2016-05-20 at 8.50.51 PM.png

The fact that you can hit the ball from this position is actually a testament to your skill, in my opinion. :) 

You get into a very laid off (flat) position at the top, and it would feel weird to come back the same way, unless your name is Matt Kuchar. 

Oddly enough, your video of "steep plane" is actually more shallow than the one where you weren't choking down. Here, you actually have the club intersecting more of your trail arm instead of right across your lead arm. So here you are in fact more shallow and not steeper (so your compensatory move does not have to be so severe):

Screen Shot 2016-05-20 at 8.51.24 PM.png

 

So that's the easy part -- showing you what's up. For the other part, as I say I'm not a professional instructor by any means. However, a feel for me when I have had this issue in the past is you have to make your arms/hands feel like they are working in the opposite way than they currently are -- that is, they need to feel like your left hand is working "flatter" and your right hand moves along with it, so you get the club feeling like you're laying it further behind you instead of getting it more vertical. Down and in, not out and over. 

Lastly, you really need to be hitting a ball of some kind. Practice swings really don't help as much as you think they might. Secondly, if you got some face on video it would help, too. Record it at hip height, face on. Hitting a ball. :D 

My two cents -- as I said, not a pro instructor so take it for what it's worth, but I hope  it gives you an idea or two. :) 

Andrew.

Edited by amoline

Andrew M.

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Post video with better camera angles. Also, I recommend just posting your normal swing to start with. 

https://thesandtrap.com/b/playing_tips/filming_your_swing

 

Matt Dougherty, P.E.
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What's in My Bag
Driver; :pxg: 0311 Gen 5,  3-Wood: 
:titleist: 917h3 ,  Hybrid:  :titleist: 915 2-Hybrid,  Irons: Sub 70 TAIII Fordged
Wedges: :edel: (52, 56, 60),  Putter: :edel:,  Ball: :snell: MTB,  Shoe: :true_linkswear:,  Rangfinder: :leupold:
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1 minute ago, saevel25 said:

Post video with better camera angles. Also, I recommend just posting your normal swing to start with. 

https://thesandtrap.com/b/playing_tips/filming_your_swing

 

Son of a gun, that's the thread I was looking for. Look at that. :) Thanks for finding the link and covering for those of us less able in finding things. 

Andrew M.

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On 5/21/2016 at 11:13 PM, amoline said:

Son of a gun, that's the thread I was looking for. Look at that. :) Thanks for finding the link and covering for those of us less able in finding things. 

Thanks for that link, I do have a high speed SLR so I will get much better videos posted this week.

Also, thank you for taking the time to look at my swing. Very interesting to see the comparison with Adam Scott, and yes indeed it looks like my downswing is very steep especially in comparison with his!

I guess when I posted I was mainly thinking about my back-swing though. I think you will notice that in the first video, my takeaway is very shallow. This is when I then cast the club out in my downswing and come in very steep. So, I was curious if my back-swing was the core of my issue.

Here are screenshots of two positions, takeaway and top, with each swing. The heel-hit swing at takeaway is perhaps too far inside and possibly even fanned? At the top it is below my shoulder. The center hit swing the takeaway is forced outside, and at top it is in line with my shoulder. Granted, as you have pointed out, the downswing introduces some other issues.

 

 

Pos 1 - 1.jpg

Pos 1 - 2.jpg

Pos 2 - 1.jpg

Pos 2 - 2.jpg

On 5/21/2016 at 11:02 PM, amoline said:

Oddly enough, your video of "steep plane" is actually more shallow than the one where you weren't choking down. Here, you actually have the club intersecting more of your trail arm instead of right across your lead arm. So here you are in fact more shallow and not steeper (so your compensatory move does not have to be so severe):

 

Additionally, I think this is the what I was hoping to achieve actually. By steep plane, I was referring to my backswing and not my downswing. I should have probably made that clearer in my original post.

My steeper backswing seems to promote a shallower inside-out downswing (good) as you pointed out. My shallow backswing seems to promote steeper and outside-in downswing (bad).

 

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Note: This thread is 3055 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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    • 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. 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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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