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Learning to hit
I've been experimenting with what I think is a hitting procedure -- a long story is in my transition to TGM and I'll post it later. I am focusing on a couple of things: keeping the clubface looking at the ball longer, the right-forearm takeaway and pushing with the right.
The early success is that my chronic overswing is kept in check and my contact is pretty good. I think I am doing a bit of horizontal hinging at times because I pull and hook now and then. Overall, I'm happy with my progress. Except that my distances haven't been picking up to where I think they should be. Short irons (SW-8-iron) are pretty good. After that, I seem to hit a plateau. One thing that I don't feel that I am doing is pushing hard enough or properly. I don't seem to quite understand this whole right-shoulder-as-a-backstop concept. |
Ted is the one to see but in the meantime prepare for these things:
How you load pp3 determines whether you Hit or Swing. Do you release the accumulators sequentiality, sweeping down like a cascading waterfall - a Swinger. Or like a Hitter, do you wait and dump them all with the straightening right arm? The Hitters pp3 is located on the back of the shaft- for all intend purposes - it is the clubhead. PP1 is driving the arm- pp3 at release is the clubhead. Swingers have pp3 at the top of the shaft due to the chance in hand position (it is the same location- different position at top) as it pulls the shaft in a straight line and whirls the clubhead. Pp3becomes more passive as accumulators 2 and 3 uncock and roll. A flirt with throwaway so don’t stop the pivot and hand swivel. The back stop? Lets see- A swinger’s pivot whirls and unleashes Newton out of the clubhead. A Hitter uses the pivot as a wall and drives the right arm out of it. You can see why the hands control the pivot- how could the body know which power source to use? I think I wrote too much. ... :) See Ted |
Quote:
If you have, then the ground is your backstop. Because the hitter uses the angle of approach procedure, the right shoulder does not act like a fly wheel in the case of a swinger...it acts like a backstop. The feeling is that the right arm blasts off against the backstop that the right shoulder provides. |
Here's a good thread about the backstop and right arm thrust:
http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/showthread.php?t=457 |
Thanks for pointing me to that other thread.
So if I'm interpreting this correctly, during a swinging procedure the left arm is pulling the right through. During a hitting procedure the right arm is thrusting down and out toward the ball; meanwhile, the right shoulder is pretty much staying put, so that the arm has something to act against. |
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