I had a new student today, and he was expertly throwing it away. I wanted to demonstrate good versus bad in order to add it to his take-home video. When I threw it away, his picture and my picture were strikingly similar.
He had some flexible shafts in his clubs, so I got some pretty cool pictures at Impact.
Check out the drooping club on the left side of the second pair of pictures.
When I get the student back for the second lesson, I'll add him to "Amazing Changes."
that is some amazing work and in a short time mr. fort how is the family doing
I'm sorry Collin; I was unclear. These are pictures of me. I was demonstrating for him to see good versus evil. I just thought the pictures of the shaft bending at Impact were entertaining. His pics look like the ones on the left, but I didn't include them. When he returns, I'll try to have him looking like my pictures on the right. Then, I'll do the 'before and after' in "Amazing Changes."
The boys are great. I'll have to import some pictures of my 2 year old, knocking a flat side in his plastic golf balls. He's already snapped the head off of one of the plastic clubs. I was so proud of his lag pressure.
Looks pitchie, you working on something new Ted? Really cool pics!
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"In my experience, if you stay with the essentials you WILL build a repeatable swing undoubtedly. If you can master the Imperatives you have a champion" (Vikram).
The reason you can't sustain the lag is because you are so eager to make the club move fast (a reaction to the intent of "hitting it far"). So on a full shot you throw it away too early, which doesn't happen for your short chip. (bts)