Thursday, July 13, 2006

Lob Chip to Putting to Hammer

The title of this section is not indicative of its importance in the total realm of the golf swing. You must consider the mechanics employed here as the same mechanics for the full swing. Having said that, let us start.

The lob chip is so difficult to execute that if the mechanics are not recognized correctly, it cannot be done consistently accurate. The main secret is the grip, which the hub of the little swing (vs. neck for full swing), and the direction of the break of the right wrist.

Let us talk about the hub of the chip (or putting). If the neck will sway or bob while you are executing your full swing, you will never hit a straight shot consistently. You may even entirely whif the ball. That is the very reason why all golf instructions emphasizes the stillness of the head on the golf swing. Now, bring the concept to the chip and putting. You cannot make the hub of both these little movements be the neck also, should you? I know this goes contrary to what I have been saying from the very start but this revelation only got started because of what I learned from Carlos France (see GHO section).

With the chip and putting, the golf plane is really a small wheel with the hub as the clasp hands. The object of that little swing is keep that hub or the hands very still. Of course, not to the point of restricting the movement.

If you do this, you will notice that to move the club head or putter head away from the ball, you naturally will have to break your wrist backward. Upon a lot of repetitions of this movement- the breaking of the wrist and while keeping the hands almost dangling over the ball - you will notice that the effective and consistent flip of the right wrist is like a small cocking (as in full swing) which effective moves the right clasp hands throwing the club to the 2:00 o'clock position (hey, this was mentioned in the full swing way back in some chapters of this blog!).

Now, here is the important effect of this method in putting: You do not have to control the direction of the backswing and forward motion of the putter - it is automatic. The only thing you have to worry about is the direction and the distance. Again, this is the secret to putting. If you noticed in the other chapter, I referred to this as Tiger's secret. At that time, I was not able to really comprehend why it was working (sometimes). It was really keeping the center of the little swing or plane as immobile as possible.

Here is the putting mechanics that work for me now. Remember the object is to keep the hub as close as possible where it started - dangling under your chin.
  1. At address (which is very open for me), align the club perpendicular to the line of target.
  2. The right thumb must rest on top of the flat portion of the grip and must be welded tightly together with the forefinger.
  3. Break the right wrist backwards, like hammering a nail, towards the 2:00 o'clock position or towards the center of the bound two fingers above. In other words, towards where it will normally break if you are hammering a nail.
  4. While executing the above, make sure that the clasped hands (hub or center) stay as much as possible to the same spot, intentionally making that perimeter (club head) of the little circle (plane) as small as possible.
  5. The downswing is done by the left hands.
  6. After the ball, ensure a smooth follow through without regard to the hub any longer.
What am I saying here - that a hammer swing or putting is the correct way? Unbelievably, I must eat my words. The hammer is a part of the small wheel of the plane. There is a big wheel and small wheel and the hammering motion is done by the small wheel. Mea culpa, mea culpa.

Watch out, you may cry out of joy! This will make you a very accurate putter. Ten footers will be nothing after this. The chip is executed the same way.