c) 19JAN2016: At the top, there is no intention of the hands or arms actively moving to make the hit. Instead the lower body turns around to hit the ball bringing the upper body with the left arm extended on the right side, left wrist firm - around to hit the ball. Definitely, the ball is hit when the body is already facing the target - unusual but that is the way it is.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Double Cock Golf: Emphasis on the Swing Speed
c) 19JAN2016: At the top, there is no intention of the hands or arms actively moving to make the hit. Instead the lower body turns around to hit the ball bringing the upper body with the left arm extended on the right side, left wrist firm - around to hit the ball. Definitely, the ball is hit when the body is already facing the target - unusual but that is the way it is.
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Latest Golf Swing That Works
Grip (10SEP2015) and Pressure (16SEP2015)
Left Shoulder (11SEP2015)
Takeaway
At the top
One Fluid Move
Downswing / Right Waist
Observations
22Aug2015: Right now the swing is all left with fully cocked left wrist and the hit is done by the left hand. Bring the club inside and fully cock. Remember the swing is like the face of the clock - to help me remember. This clock should remind of of the weight shift and how the clubface pronates clockwise on the backswing and counterclockwise on the hit.
11SEP2015: Eureka Moment.
22SEP2015: INNOVATIVE DOLLAR BILL
27SEP2015: Power Swing With The Hips
09OCT2015: Jason Day Swing
Wednesday, June 03, 2015
Full Swing Template the Harmon Way (wrong)
3JUL2015: Found some good stuff in iGolfTV in YouTube. Exactly the same as I am exposing here - use of the big muscles to get a repeating swing.
How to become a PGA Tour Player (Complete) Total Swing Understanding
Basically, what I liked from the above is his teaching about the left shoulder bringing up the club - without the need for a wrist break at the top (cocking). That really is custom made for my type of swing. I went to the driving range and it worked for me.
Tuesday, June 02, 2015
The Chip - Unlocking the Secret of the Takeaway
The takeaway is the recent unsolved part of my swing. It is always and still that part of my swing that I do not own. Every outing there is always something new to tinker and something new to learn and something learned to swear by. But every outing seems to be a "new" outing. Well here I am again at it ready to swear by a new discovery!
Recently my game is very unstable. I am having a problem bringing my driver up again. It seems to be connected with topping the ball which leads to corrections to steepen up my takeaway which leads to changes on the grip which in turn leads to a meltdown of the swing. It is an interconnecting circle of bandaid solutions that exacerbate the problem.
But the solution may be right before my eyes and I have ignored it. How can I have solved the way to chip when I cannot do the same for a full swing - I asked myself? What am I doing in the takeaway in chipping that I am not doing in the full swing?
Well I learned in putting is just to bring my putter back and let the big muscles do the forward motion. I applied this to the chip and it worked so I retained the same technique to my entire swing. But while it works totally on my chips it is a work in progress with the full swing. When I started dissecting my chipping, I realized that I was just breaking my wrist backward on the takeaway while I was not consciously aware of this fact in the full swing. I was so engrossed with correcting the grip to steepen the plane when I should really just concentrate on breaking my right wrist backwards.
Topping the ball which started the merry-go-round corrections should really be secondary to the proper right-wrist-breaking takeaway. The topping can really be corrected by the alive grip.
I actually already found the solution but ignored the importance of it. "Another way of doing this using the left palm and pushing it downward while the right middle finger (alive grip) is used as a fulcrum." 16JUL2015: DO NOT FORGET THE PRECEDING!
Copied from a previous posting:
THE "FLICK". THE FLICK IS ACTUALLY JUST THE ALIVE GRIP WITH THE LEFT PALM PUSHING DOWN WHILE THE FULCRUM FINGER PULLS AND PANS THE CLUB UP ALONG THE PLANE. THE RIGHT HAND GRIP IS EXTREMELY WEAK AND THE LEFT HAND MUST CONTROL THE CLUB ON THE FORWARD SWING UP TO THE PICTURE PERFECT FINISH.
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
The Golfen Rule
While the above rule may be the culmination of a long search and seems simple enough, it does need some amplification.
When we say the head should be motionless, it is particular important on the upswing since even a slight movement of the head will divert the ball to the right of target. This actually results in all the body and parts of the swing to be unsynchronized resulting into different contortions of the body with unpredictable differing results.
When we say the upper body is responsible for the upswing, we are really being generally generous to the different body types of the golfing population. In my case, it is mostly the hands and the shoulders that takes the club up. At the top of the swing, all conscious thoughts should be diverted to the lower body to initiate the downswing.
As far as I execute it now... At address, while the club is set on the ground, I lift up the club using my right middle finger. Somewhere along the route to the top, while the shoulders are turning, my left hand will take over and cocks the club firmly at the top - the force felt at the top. Then my attention goes to the lower body.
Even the club is still moving up, I usually turn my attention to my hips. I feel the entire weight of the club with my waist but I consciously think the right hips into making the turn and bringing down the club towards the ball. My intent is to finish solidly and firmly on the ground with my picture perfect finish although it is still a work in progress.
The main point to remember here is the upswing is the upper body and the downswing is the lower body. This is very important because this rule applies to all shots, even the putter. If you can do this with the putter then the rest should be easy, e.g., chips and full shots.
Why is this better? I guess it simplifies the swing to the barest of essentials where once the club is pulled up, there needs to be no more other things to do but just bounce the club back to the same starting position. The works best when putting!
6May2015: Important clarification. One essential clarification for this topic is the centrifugal force. The main objective of the upswing is to create a tautness at the top and the objective of the downswing is to pull that force or tautness towards the ball and around. Without that feeling of the weight of the club at the top, the swing cannot be properly executed. By the way, the pull is not exactly just done by the right hip or the lower body. It seems that the whole body is involved in pulling that club down towards the ball and around to the picture perfect finish. The right hip just seems to just tag along for the ride.
Monday, April 20, 2015
THIS IS REALLY FUCKING IMPORTANT (April 20, 2015)
IMPORTANT (April 9, 2015)
YEAH RIGHT BUT HOW DO YOU BRING UP THE CLUB?
April 20, 2015: It is very important to note that what is to be pulled is not the weight of the club but the tightened left shoulder at the top. Let us start again on the ideal swing:
- The club is raised (figure out the best way to start the lifting, e.g., right middle finger lift the club) and when it reaches the plane, the left hand takes over and lifts up the club along the plane.
- The club is lifted up to the point the left shoulder should go for that shot. At the top, the LEFT SHOULDER is then hurled by the hips towards the target and in the process rotates to a picture perfect finish.
- Remember it is the left shoulder that is hurled and not the weight of the club. The reason is the shot might need that extra twist sometimes and it might throw the rhythm off is other parts are concentrated on. With the shoulders as the main thought of being hurled, it does not matter how small or big the shot is going to be.
- April 22, 2015: Include the cocking... When the club is raised along the plane by the left arm, the left wrist MUST ALSO cock the club fully until the whole weight of the left arm and club is felt wrapped around the shoulders. Feel the left shoulder and then execute the turn-around where the hips bring all towards the target - and a picture perfect finish. What will be felt is like the way Hogan described it in his book - the club will just be hurling itself towards the target.
- April 24, 2015: New interpretation of the pull. It is not really a pull but it is just a return of the club to the ball. Easier to explain when describing the putt - the left hand does the takeaway but the forward motion is really not forward but a reflex motion created by the right hip. For a full shot, take a full swing with full cocking, then just return the club using the right hip towards the ball. This promotes accuracy especially on chips and putts. Try it. Oh, the right hip is used because of no. 4 above - easier execution than explaining the turnaround.
Thursday, April 02, 2015
Flicking of the Right Wrist is Not That Simple
Here is another way to describe it. Start by flicking the wrist facing to the sky and at the same time starting the upswing. On small back swing as in putting, the cupping of the right wrist might completely pan away because of the short stroke but that is OK. As a matter of fact, the motion is like the forward motion of Mickelson - the forward press - except it does not need to go forward or be the start of the back swing.
THIS MOTION MUST START ALL THE GOLF SWING! HOWEVER, DO NOT FORGET THE VISUALIZATION OF THE PLANE ON THE BACK SWING! ALSO THE LEFT HAND MUST BE IN CONTROL ON THE FORWARD SWING.
This is really posted after the original date.
It is important to note that the flick of the wrist is started by the visualization of the plane. The club head is flicked and panned along the plane first before the shoulders starts their rotation.
Important Right Hand Path
And Yet Another Way to Visualize How the Club is Brought Up
Usually the problem lies only on the upswing for the driver (woods).- Let me state first that the first objective of the back swing is to launch the club head (not shaft) as strong as possible to the top most and pull the left side body muscle before the down swing is started.
- What has to be done is visualize the woods or any club like a short iron - where the face is used in contrast to the woods where only the plane and, therefore, a line or the plane line is visualized.
- The face of every club must be visualized because the main objective of the perfect swing is to fan the club face along the plane like a waiter carrying his tray.
- However, since the club face can easily be "squared" to the target (by weight shifting), the club face must be kept square to the target line as much as possible before it is fanned out along the plane (waiter pan).
Helicopter Takeaway
IMPORTANT (April 9, 2015)
Wednesday, April 01, 2015
Rhythmatic Powerful Swing
The posting is a memory jogger post.
- When things are getting awry and I feel as though I am lost again, I should go back to this posting to try to go back to my golf 101 template.
- When I am trying to learn something new and if I want to check if I am proceeding the correct path, then I have to read this posting again.
- When it is the beginning of the golf season, I should go back and read this posting again to remind to start with the basics.
- When my game is lost and different shots are performed with differing techniques, I should go back and read this posting to unify all again.
- When I am trying to make my shots powerful and long, I should go back to this posting and ensure that I have done it already - and here is the correct way.
- When my putting is having a problem, I should read this again and re-pattern the stroke to the chip stroke - in a very minimal way.
LONG DRIVE (the GOLF SWING in general)
IMPORTANT (April 9, 2015)
Monday, March 30, 2015
My God, I Accidentally Found the Slot! (REVISED)
So I wrote the previous posting. While I was trying to implement the pull and pull - or double pull technique, I found out about this slot. Let me explain, I was hitting balls at the driving range and I was having a problem trying to bring back the club. I remembered what I told Anthony about the proper takeaway before. I think I even posted something about it. I told him that the takeaway was just bending the right wrist backward. So I started it, a little like the alive grip but more of the wrist bending. More and more, my backswing was getting smoother and then, bingo - it happened. The backswing was perfect - so perfect that it matches what I was working on - which is the double pull technique
Well here is everything, not only the takeaway but the full swing.
The grip is a little bit the alive grip but the three right fingers are more holding the club. They are the one that flicks the club head and launches it like a satellite. Only the right wrists moves - until the momentum pulls the left shoulder in - then it (the left shoulder) joins the takeaway. Somewhere along the backswing, the slot materializes and the corresponding "plane" or the target slot appears. I guess the hips are also pulled but the attention at the top of the swing is already on the target slot where the butt of the club will be pulled in. That is the downswing - the butt of the club is pulled to the target slot and the body turns around to continue and power up the shot.
By the way, the action is a flick of the right wrist. Another way of doing this using the left palm and pushing it downward while the right middle finger (alive grip) is used as a fulcrum. Use whatever works.
Do not forget to use this for all shots including the putter. The right wrist must start and all the rest follows when pulled by the club.
Here we are April 4th 2014 and finally found the missing link that binds all the moves illustrated here. What is missing is SEEING THE BACK SWING PLANE WITH THE CLUB FACE BEING PANNED ALONG IT WITH THE "FLICK". THE FLICK IS ACTUALLY JUST THE ALIVE GRIP WITH THE LEFT PALM PUSHING DOWN WHILE THE FULCRUM FINGER PULLS AND PANS THE CLUB UP ALONG THE PLANE. THE RIGHT HAND GRIP IS EXTREMELY WEAK LIKE THE EXPLANATION IN THE FOLLOWING POST. THE LEFT HAND MUST CONTROL THE CLUB ON THE FORWARD SWING UP TO THE PICTURE PERFECT FINISH.
IMPORTANT (April 9, 2015)
Sunday, March 29, 2015
The Double Pull or the Essence of the Golf Swing
Essentially, the perfect golf swing is indeed a pull motion but the pull is done by two body parts - one starting the swing and the other one accelerating it further. What I mean is the upper body pulls the club towards the ball and the lower body then taking over and pulling it further to speed up the velocity. It is a swing where the body feels the weight of the club being pulled towards the ball and at a given split second, transfers the pulling force to the lower body - until it goes around to the perfect finish at the top. The swing is felt and the body reacts.
This reminds me of the billiard stroke. In the process of learning it, one eventually forgets the cue and just executes the shot. It is now possible to feel the golf shot and execute it without thinking.
So how should it be done? Well right now, I have only practice the shot in my bedroom but it does not seem to be impossible to transfer to the real thing. One thing I noticed is because I am trying to feel the club now, I felt that the upswing now has to be like a round-house kick motion where the weight of the club is thrown away like a launch of of satellite until it is felt to arrive at the top. Then the pull action by the "mostly" upper body towards the ball starts - the weight of the club being felt all the time. Somewhere and sometime, the lower body and the hips turns around to launch the club head further along its way. It is a two stage launch!
By the way, just to emphasize the technique - this is actually the implementation of the chip pulling spin action I have written about a couple of postings before. But now that I have further made it a two pull action, that chip technique must now also be revised to ensure that the body now pulls the club - upper body first and the turning hips afterwards. Of course, this is all done by feeling.
This new way must now find its way to all the shots - from putter to the driver.
IMPORTANT (April 9, 2015)
Friday, March 20, 2015
Alive grip, important or essential?
In addition, let me relate what happened to me today at the driving range. It is winter here and all my practice is done inside my bedroom. I just found out how to impart a spin on my chips on my carpet which actually led to my thinking of how the golf swing really works. What I found out is that the club is actually pulled to hit the ball - and in contrast - not hammering the ball.
To see if my bedroom discovery is correct I had to go to the driving range. Although, I validated my pull discovery, I lost my way of bringing up the club. I lost my skill to perform the takeaway - which I was doing in my bedroom just a couple of days ago. Well, I let it go since I was not there for practice but just to prove my theory.
At home, I went back and read what I have been writing about recently and I found the topic on the alive grip. I had forgotten - easy now since I am getting old - gripping my club at set-up with the alive grip. I went in my bedroom and used the alive grip. Well what a revelation!
Because of the pull technique of golf shot (with the alive grip), just turning the left shoulder in without starting the club with the right hand, is actually enough to make a complete turn automatically - the same every time! Could this be another Hogan secret?
Takeaway from this topic: FROM NOW ON, ALWAYS USE THE ALIVE GRIP AT SET-UP! JUST TURN THE THE LEFT SHOULDER IN AT THE SAME TIME COCKING THE CLUB WITH THE RIGHT MIDDLE FINGER FOR THAT EVER REPEATING BACKSWING! Of course, do not forget the extreme grip that I wrote about in the previous recent postings. It creates the divot.
IMPORTANT (April 9, 2015)
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
How to Slide the Clubhead Under the Ball Effortlessly
Let me just make this clear, when one is trying to hit the ball, which is 99% of the time, one is not trying to impart a spin on the ball intentionally. However, there is the 1% of the time that one really wants to put extraordinary backspin on the ball to make it stop or reverse.
In order to do this, the club face must slide under the ball, with the club head entering beneath the ball from the left edge and sliding around the ball until it leaves contact on the right edge. This movement cannot be done intentionally. It can only be done by centrifugal force - meaning the club is pulled and the head allowed to slice through the ball by the reaction to the pull.
Let me demonstrate how to execute a short pitch with the intent of stopping the ball abruptly.
Take an open stance and hold the club with the extreme style grip explained in the previous chapter. Hold the club to the metal part (this is not essential). The clubface must be at least slightly open to facilitate the clean slicing entry under the ball.
Raise the club with the right hand in a roller coaster motion where it leaves the ball and arcs upwards until the shaft is at least almost parallel to the plane and the butt of the club almost pointing to the target. When this position is reached, just pull the shaft towards the target until it passes through and around the ball. A slow motion hit make one feel this slicing motion better. This type of shot must be learned and experienced. It feels like one is slicing the butter.
The rule to remember here is the club must be brought back up to the point where the shaft is parallel to the target line and the butt is pulled along that line.
IMPORTANT (April 9, 2015)
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Divots - a better explanation
Now how do I delay the hit? Use a solid sky looking grip - like the chip grip described in the previous posting. This grip will promote a bigger turn of the shoulders. Bigger turn, enough time for the body to clear the ball before the hit.
Actually the bigger turn is not the real answer. It is hard to put into words. With the bigger turn, my feeling is as if I need to pull my body back to the ball - not just a turning feeling - but a physical pull back toward the ball... and of course, the turning around after that.
Well, after musing this big turn late hit scenario, what really happens by this type of grip - it actually promote a steeper plane and, therefore, it creates a divot or sort of digs in more. But wait, do not forget that the alive grip is essential, if not important!
Putts, Chips and Pitches - Always a Pull
The right hand can start it on the back swing but the for the forward swing, it is always the body pulling. It might be a very slight movement as in putts but it is still the body pulling.
In putting the middle finger pulls the putter away from the target like a arrow being pulled from the bow. The visualization is not only for putts but for all shots... up to the driver.
Now let us concentrate on chips and pitches...
It seems that standardizing the setup is important. From now on the grip is going to be important. The left hand must be almost flat with the backhand almost facing the sky. The right hand sits snugly on the left hand with the backhand also almost facing the sky. They form one solid sky facing grips - with the left hand really more pronounced. The left hand in this position promotes a cutting shot, if desired, thus sending the ball higher with a lot of spin. Of course, it can also drag the ball and not cut - when you want the chip to run. To go further in standardization, hold the club short with the middle right finger resting almost on the metal part of the club.
Sunday, March 08, 2015
Alive Grip Revisited
- It can be the reminder that the swing is started fully by the right hand.
- That a line can be imagined to be parallel to the target line.
- That in putting, the imagined line can be like an arrow being pulled with the bow.
- That the right hand pulls - but the forward energy is like a bounce back. It is bounce from the coiled energy created initially by the right hand and continued by the shoulders. There is no deliberate forward motion at all.
- On putts, this can just be as subtle as the rebound from the left stiffened forearm muscles!
The Golf Swing and the Divot
The divot is really the end part of the golf swing which is essentially a chip or a pitch if considered by itself and not part of the full swing. Let me say this, if a golfer does not know how to stop or put spin to his chips or pitches, he will never know how to make a divot perfectly.
So how do one correctly make a chip or pitch stop abruptly? Well it is the realization, the the chip or pitch is essential a "pull" of the club-head towards the ball. The hands are pulled past the ball and the club-head allowed to rebound back to the ball.
How the hands play with the rebound is essentially a different matter. On chips and pitches, the hands can make the ball roll further, stop on its tracks.
On full shots it can create a divot. AND THE MOVE CREATING A DIVOT IS THE FINISH OF THE GOLF SWING! It is the replacement to my "face the target" move. It is the delayed hit! IT IS THE SECRET OF THE PROS! It creates the spin that pulls the ball back. It is the part of the swing that adds the distance to the hit. It replaces my right hip move.
Monday, February 16, 2015
The Caddie Tip - The Secret to My Swing
If there is anything that I can call the secret to my swing, it should be the full cocking on every shot. It actually twist my shoulders automatically and at the same time makes an automatic full. When the downswing is automatically initiated, it is just a matter of twisting my right hips towards the target. I should remember that the right hips is really the game changer tip but I cannot execute it without the fully cocking left hand (and the ensuing shoulder twist).
The caddie also noticed my excessive waggle but I decided not to correct this as I am so attached to it already and it is not really a fault but maybe just a bad habit. He also showed me how to chip - making sure my weight is on my left foot and the ball position more on the right. I have to practice this still as I really have not found out the right way to do this.
Thursday, January 15, 2015
The Swing Imagined As a Closing Door
One of the things I work on is fully cocking the club with the left hand until it pulls my left shoulder. This works and the club really digs in but I tend not to do this full cocking every time. Another thing is full cocking is really not needed in every shot.
One of the things I have been tinkering on is imagining the swing like a door. Bring the club up along the open door (ala Nicklaus) and at the top, just slam the door shut. This means that the ball is hit while the body is already past the ball - which may be the correct way. We will see. Time will tell.
Well, here it is, day 2. This idea of a closing door has some merit but it does not feel natural to me. However, seeing a swing of Rory McIlroy on the TV commercial of Rolex watch, reminded me about his right hip being the engine of his swing. His right hip moves first and the upper body just follows.
To make the story short, if I bring up the club up to the point where the right forearm and biceps are fully anchored on my right side - like a door fully opened - I can actually bring my right hip forward and around, the club is pulled in automatically with that NATURAL feeling. In addition, the clubhead comes back to the ground on the same spot it was on setup. What else can I ask for? This discovery seems to be a natural progression to the one I was writing about in the previous posting - so this is how I should play right now - the Rory McIlroy's way.
Just remember, the important thing here is the upswing finishing with the right upper body (right side) feeling the arms (biceps) very tucked in on the right side and with a feeling of very well connection (like glued) to the body (and therefore, the right hip). So when the right hip starts, I can feel my arm, the club and everything being pulled by it - and bang - big hit and divot!
Thursday, January 01, 2015
Golf, Ready, Set, Go
Golf
Ready
Set
It is also noteworthy to mention that the takeaway is a smooth pronating movement of the clubhead from the ball to the cocking at the top - very connected feeling... all orchestrated by the left hand (pronating along the steep plane). THIS IS ACCOMPLISHED BECAUSE THE TAKEAWAY IS ALSO A PULLING FORCE. THE LEFT HAND STARTS ON THE GRIP GOING UP AND SMOOTHLY PULLS THE CLUBHEAD UP UNTIL IT REACHES THE TOP - SOMETHING LIKE A SLING ACTION BUT SMOOTHLY DONE.