Thursday, August 31, 2006

Swing Check Points - In the beginning...

  1. The flail, the flail.
  2. Club set-up: The club shaft points to the left shoulder and aligned with the left arm. Purpose: This simulates the clubface allignment at the moment of impact
  3. Grip: The thumb and foreginger pinches the shaft "actively" with the feeling that the club is to be taken initially by the hands toward the two o'clock position and eventually along the swing plane until the upper body is flexed. Purpose: To ensure that the hands start the swing and the clubface is not fanned open.
  4. Plane: The hands points at the bottom of the plane and takes the club head toward the two o'clock position and along the plane. Purpose: For fine targeting and accuracy.
  5. The left shoulder pushes the clubface along the target line at the start of the swing. Purpose: For accuracy - the proof is in the putt (use left shoulder also to bring the putter back).
  6. Coiled Upper Body - Upswing: The hands and arms bring the club up until the upper body is coiled to the maximum. Purpose: To make sure that shoulders are fully coiled and the power transferred to the upper body. This is the upswing of the flail technique so "feel" the flail with the left shoulder!
  7. Flat foot stance: Ensure that both feet are planted on the ground securely. The left sole and heel only lifts up when pulled by the upper body, else it stays down. Purpose: To ensure that the club comes back correctly and to maximize coiling of the upper body - for power.
  8. Stiff right knee: The relative position of the right knee stays at right angle to the target line at all times during the backswing. Purpose: The saem as no. 5 - accuracy and power.
  9. Coiled upper body - Downswing: Once the hands and arms have coiled the upper body, an entwined power is felt, and that coiled feeling is the one that hits the ball. Purpose: Delayed hit. This is the flail hitting the ball so "feel" the failing done by the left shoulder.
  10. Reverse C: The coiled feeling is imagined as going around and through the ball - which imparts more power. The right shoulder is way in front of the left shoulder at the finish position. Purpose: P-O-W-E-R.

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