Nothing to Turn to the Plane assuming you are using a full-blown 10-2-D.....i.e. Turned all the way to the Plane.....I don't think many ppl do this....."strong" (as thems common folk call it) grips are generally in between 10-2-B and 10-2-D.....as I'm sure you know.
Nothing to Turn to the Plane assuming you are using a full-blown 10-2-D.....i.e. Turned all the way to the Plane.....I don't think many ppl do this....."strong" (as thems common folk call it) grips are generally in between 10-2-B and 10-2-D.....as I'm sure you know.
Only when the both the B and D variations are understood will the degrees between be easy to see.....
seems it would be hard to execute horizontal hinging and NOT have finish swivel....its almost a continuation of the horizontal hinging, to me anyway.
Still, in some other post Yoda talked about turn and roll, turn and roll, turn and roll, to ingrain the feel of left arm rotating on the BS and rotating on the DS. Seems to me that turn and roll is at least minimized to almost nothing, (or simply not needed at all), with a strong grip.
You can produce a horizontal hinge and then simply allow the left wrist to bend instead of swiveling to the finish.
the problem is that you won't always do that because centrifugal force is trying to swivel it back on the plane and this is why most "strong grip" players play the fade because it's more predictable.
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I'm not a TGM or PGA certified Pro, but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night
Only when the both the B and D variations are understood will the degrees between be easy to see.....
theres is so much toalk these days of the 10-2-D grip, i was wondering, fooling around with it in the yard, is the shaft then in the cup of left hand rather than underneath the pad? it sure seems like it, kinda like zero acc3? is that a bad thing? are we losing power with this? i would think so if left hand is 10-2-B and holding shaft in cup that would be zero...with 10-2-D there is still an angle...hhmmm