Originally Posted by 6bmike
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IMHO, Hula Hula allows for the hips to move first- gear train from the bottom up- and create a space for the Hands to attack the ball to Impact. The Delivery Paths are clear for the Hands to accomplish its task.
If you do not use Hula Hula, the INDEPENDENT movement of the hips from the shoulders (not merely a hip slide) and wait to use the left hip to rotate with the right arm through Impact – you are closer to Pivot control Hands then you think.
I got zero support on this part and I don’t care if I’m some kind of of joke around here but....
Hula Hula with Hands that monitor Delivery Lines with a load power package and ALL of the Imperatives intact can’t be dominated by a Pivot.
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I think you must get the hips out of the way/clear for the hands to have a path back, up, in...and a delivery path back down.
There is Hip Turn and there is Hip Action. In summary, Hip Turn permits a weight shift and accomodates other pivot functions. Hip Action leads the shoulders. You need both components. I could be wrong, but it sounds like you use 10-15-A Standard Hip Action to lead the shoulders in both directions.
If the hips are leading the shoulders in both directions, then by definition the hands will also be led. But this is not pivot controlled hands unless you are combining it with a shoulder turn takeway instead of the right forearm pickup. Even then I would argue it can be hands controlled for the rest of the stroke.
Lynn prefers a Delayed hip action which is a nice compliment to a right forearm pickup, but you can do it with either Hip Action.
In terms of hula hula, the hip motion is executed under a stationary head. Except for 10-14-E Zero Hip Motion, and 10-15-D Zero Hip Action you can't tilt the axis, clear the hips, and whollop the ball without a hula hula motion. Turn up the Polynesian music. It has nothing to do with pivot controlled hands as long as your hands "know" lag pressure, delivery line tracing, and delivery path aiming.
The weight is shifted targetward with a hip bump/slide motion. This motion loads lag pressure for the start down. Now the hands have a clear path down plane for aiming and delivering the loaded lag pressure to the ball. The Hip Action takes direction from the hands and facilitates turning the right shoulder downplane to deliver hands to their aiming point. That is hands controlled pivot. Geometry over Physics.
Pivot controlled hands via 10-24-F is Physics over Geometry...not that there's anything wrong with that.