I Had an Amazing Practice today!!!! But I still have a quesetion.
The Golfing Machine - Advanced
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09-10-2006, 09:09 PM
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No Left Shoulder Drive
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Originally Posted by jim_0068
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To get people to move their right shoulder downplane correctly one of the greatest sayings ever is to get your LEFT SHOULDER "up and back."
Because if you can do that, the right shoulder will go down and out.
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I agree that, in practice and drill, players should be aware of the return of the Left Shoulder to its Impact Fix Location. But...
Do you drive the Left Arm (and Club) by pulling the Left Shoulder back to its Fix Location?
Or do you drive it by thrusting the Right Shoulder -- against the Left Arm and its #4 Pressure Point -- toward the Ball?
In my forty years of golf, I have never heard or read of a great Champion describing the Left Shoulder as his Driving Force into Impact.
Right Knee.
Yes.
Right Hip.
Yes.
Left Hip.
Yes.
Right Shoulder.
Yes.
Right Arm.
Yes.
Right Hand.
Yes.
But never...
Left Shoulder.
The Secret of Golf -- Clubhead Lag (6-C-2-0/A) -- is all about 'Dragging the Wet Mop' -- unrelenting, inert Clubhead Lag Pressure -- through Impact.
And despite the fact that the 'Wet Mop' -- the Left Arm, Club and its Dead Weight Inertia -- hangs off the Left Shoulder, you don't Drag it 'back-handed' with your Left Shoulder and Arm. Instead, the uncoiling Left Side is led by Hip Action (7-15) that "throws" the Right Shoulder Down Plane. This welds the Left Arm against the side of the chest -- the #4 Pressure Point -- and Delivers the Assembled and Loaded Power Package into Release.
Swingers use Centrifugal Force Body Power -- rotational Momentum Transfer -- to sustain this Clubhead Drive through Impact. Hitters use Right Triceps Muscle Power.
__________________
Yoda
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09-10-2006, 09:40 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 98
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Originally Posted by Yoda
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I agree that, in practice and drill, players should be aware of the return of the Left Shoulder to its Impact Fix Location. But...
Do you drive the Left Arm (and Club) by pulling the Left Shoulder back to its Fix Location?
Or do you drive it by thrusting the Right Shoulder -- against the Left Arm and its #4 Pressure Point -- toward the Ball?
In my forty years of golf, I have never heard or read of a great Champion discussing the Left Shoulder as his Driving Force into Impact.
Right Knee.
Yes.
Right Hip.
Yes.
Left Hip.
Yes.
Right Shoulder.
Yes.
Right Arm.
Yes.
Right Hand.
Yes.
But never...
Left Shoulder.
The Secret of Golf -- Clubhead Lag (6-C-2-0/A) -- is all about 'Dragging the Wet Mop' -- unrelenting, inert Clubhead Lag Pressure -- through Impact.
And despite the fact that the 'Wet Mop' -- the Left Arm, Club and its Dead Weight Inertia -- hangs off the Left Shoulder, you don't Drag it 'back-handed' with your Left Shoulder and Arm. Instead, the uncoiling Left Side is led by Hip Action (7-15) that "throws" the Right Shoulder Down Plane. This welds the Left Arm against the side of the chest -- the #4 Pressure Point -- and Delivers the Assembled and Loaded Power Package into Release.
Swingers use Centrifugal Force Body Power -- rotational Momentum Transfer -- to sustain this Clubhead Drive through Impact. Hitters use Right Triceps Muscle Power.
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Yoda I do agree with you. It was like my left shoulder just kept getting put into the perfect spot, but my right shoulder was causing it. For some reason I was just picking up on the feeling, of where my left shoulder was going to.
After studying TGM more and more, I have changed my setup, my tripod is finally centered, no more tilted head. I also now setup at a true impact fix and then move into the adjusted address position with centered tripod bent left and flat right. I think switching to this has allowed me to get a feel for impact more and my alignments are much better now.
My biggest misunderstanding is plane now. I really don't know what to look for in a video, I filmed today, and on my backswing about waist high the club was under the shaft plane (slighty) that scares me. I guess I need more right forearm pick up and less flanning.
But the one that really is getting me is the sweet spot plane, I saw where hunter put up the swinging stick man and I tried to draw those lines on the computer today. My sweet spot didn't stay on that line on the way down (It was under it) but at impact I was money babe, nice small draw.
I will be calling in the next month or so to come see you again, and we will get squared away.
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09-10-2006, 10:28 PM
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Return To the Swamp
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Originally Posted by ndwolfe81
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I will be calling in the next month or so to come see you again, and we will get squared away.
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Great, Nathan.
See you then!
__________________
Yoda
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09-11-2006, 05:44 PM
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I like using "left shoulder up and back" but left hip I think can be a good key too.
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09-12-2006, 10:43 PM
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Posts: 432
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Left shoulder thingie.
Pardon my shallow knowledge of TGM and my english.
Right shoulder and left shoulder thing, I read alot of post here and another site. I personally think , left shoulder up is a Band Aid. This is why.
Lets leave TGM on one side and NO TGM. and do not think golf. put them aside.
If you throw a ball or anything forward , Would u throw more accurately , powerfully and further if u throw them;
1. Forehand Pitching
2. Backhand flat wrist disc throw?
Would you think of
1. your hand and right arms.
2. your right shoulder
3. Your left shoulder
So when you throw something forward for instance , you think about your left shoulder clearing so that your right shoulder so that your right hand can do the work? You can ! But do you prefer to think like that, and is it a better way to think like that?
Or your would think of your right hand and arm, and the rest will provide the best support and momentum to do the job? And your Body will Naturally tilt so that your right shoulder provide the best support. Thats how your body will react to power. Do you think about it? Maybe yes maybe not.
back to TGM mode;
Since golf involved 2 arms. One can argue is different, but if one could never understand the role of the right shoulder, would not it be harder to have Out 4ward down 3 dimensional impact? I find it harder. And I notice something, I easily lose Extensor Action on the throughswing if i concentrate on the left shoulder up .
I too gained alot of yardage s just by understanding about the right shoulder. I think the keyword here is potential and efficiency here. Not just hitting straight and hitting balls everybody can do that.
Thats why 5-0 2-H is there for us to understand. One chapter alone do not really make sense. I think you need at least 2 chapters . Therefore, I stand behind Masters of LGB on this one firmly!
From a Jedi Wannabe.
__________________
God :God is love.
Latest incubator: Finally appreciate why Hogan wrote 19 pages on GRIP. I bet he could write another 40 pages.
Last edited by nuke99 : 09-12-2006 at 11:05 PM.
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09-13-2006, 01:00 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: the cold midwest
Posts: 675
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Originally Posted by nuke99
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Pardon my shallow knowledge of TGM and my english.
Right shoulder and left shoulder thing, I read alot of post here and another site. I personally think , left shoulder up is a Band Aid. This is why.
Lets leave TGM on one side and NO TGM. and do not think golf. put them aside.
If you throw a ball or anything forward , Would u throw more accurately , powerfully and further if u throw them;
1. Forehand Pitching
2. Backhand flat wrist disc throw?
Would you think of
1. your hand and right arms.
2. your right shoulder
3. Your left shoulder
So when you throw something forward for instance , you think about your left shoulder clearing so that your right shoulder so that your right hand can do the work? You can ! But do you prefer to think like that, and is it a better way to think like that?
Or your would think of your right hand and arm, and the rest will provide the best support and momentum to do the job? And your Body will Naturally tilt so that your right shoulder provide the best support. Thats how your body will react to power. Do you think about it? Maybe yes maybe not.
back to TGM mode;
Since golf involved 2 arms. One can argue is different, but if one could never understand the role of the right shoulder, would not it be harder to have Out 4ward down 3 dimensional impact? I find it harder. And I notice something, I easily lose Extensor Action on the throughswing if i concentrate on the left shoulder up .
I too gained alot of yardage s just by understanding about the right shoulder. I think the keyword here is potential and efficiency here. Not just hitting straight and hitting balls everybody can do that.
Thats why 5-0 2-H is there for us to understand. One chapter alone do not really make sense. I think you need at least 2 chapters . Therefore, I stand behind Masters of LGB on this one firmly!
From a Jedi Wannabe.
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Answer me this ONE QUESTION, please.
If you REALLY REALLY wanted to throw a frisbee as far as you could, which shoulder would predominately think about? The lead shoulder or the trail shoulder.
The fact of the matter is this:
If the right shoulder is moving DOWNPLANE it is moving down/out/foward which makes the left shoulder do what? The left shoulder moves UP/IN/BACK.
__________________
I'm not a TGM or PGA certified Pro, but I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night
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09-13-2006, 01:08 AM
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Administrator
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The Gyroscope
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Originally Posted by jim_0068
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Answer me this ONE QUESTION, please.
If you REALLY REALLY wanted to throw a frisbee as far as you could, which shoulder would predominately think about? The lead shoulder or the trail shoulder.

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Personally...
If I was thinking about a body part at all, I would be thinking about my spinning Hips.
And once I got that Pivot activity relegated to subconscious control, I would focus on creating (and sensing) maximum Lag Pressure in my Left Hand.
And once I sensed Lag...
My focus would be on slinging that dadgum disc as far as I possibly could!

__________________
Yoda
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09-12-2006, 07:12 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Madison, WI
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I've read both Ernie Els and Nick Faldo say the left shoulder is the primary driver of their downswing. I'm sure they've said and felt other things at times, but Faldo is in his book and Els is in a Golf Digest article. Whether they were being truthful or not. . .
Matt
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Originally Posted by Yoda
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I agree that, in practice and drill, players should be aware of the return of the Left Shoulder to its Impact Fix Location. But...
Do you drive the Left Arm (and Club) by pulling the Left Shoulder back to its Fix Location?
Or do you drive it by thrusting the Right Shoulder -- against the Left Arm and its #4 Pressure Point -- toward the Ball?
In my forty years of golf, I have never heard or read of a great Champion describing the Left Shoulder as his Driving Force into Impact.
Right Knee.
Yes.
Right Hip.
Yes.
Left Hip.
Yes.
Right Shoulder.
Yes.
Right Arm.
Yes.
Right Hand.
Yes.
But never...
Left Shoulder.
The Secret of Golf -- Clubhead Lag (6-C-2-0/A) -- is all about 'Dragging the Wet Mop' -- unrelenting, inert Clubhead Lag Pressure -- through Impact.
And despite the fact that the 'Wet Mop' -- the Left Arm, Club and its Dead Weight Inertia -- hangs off the Left Shoulder, you don't Drag it 'back-handed' with your Left Shoulder and Arm. Instead, the uncoiling Left Side is led by Hip Action (7-15) that "throws" the Right Shoulder Down Plane. This welds the Left Arm against the side of the chest -- the #4 Pressure Point -- and Delivers the Assembled and Loaded Power Package into Release.
Swingers use Centrifugal Force Body Power -- rotational Momentum Transfer -- to sustain this Clubhead Drive through Impact. Hitters use Right Triceps Muscle Power.
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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)
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09-12-2006, 10:14 AM
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#4 Power Accumulator Power -- Feel And Real
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Originally Posted by mrodock
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I've read both Ernie Els and Nick Faldo say the left shoulder is the primary driver of their downswing. I'm sure they've said and felt other things at times, but Faldo is in his book and Els is in a Golf Digest article.
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In my post you've quoted, I said that, in practice and drill, the player should be aware of the return of the Left Shoulder to its Impact Fix Location. In fact, establishing the Stroke's Radius and the precision Left Shoulder-to-Ball Location is the primary purpose of the Address Routine of 2-J-1. If the Feel of that return assists the player in his Expanded Translation (of precision Mechanics to Feel per 3-E) -- that is, if it becomes a "key factor" in producing a "simplified Feel" of his Total Motion -- then, by all means, he should use it. But...
Regardless of Feel, it is the Start-Down Thrust of the Lagging Right Shoulder -- the "fastest and farthest moving component of the Pivot" that "actually transmits the Pivot motion to the Arms" (7-13). It is the Lagging Right Shoulder that reconciles both Pivot and Power Package by "moving with great precision of thrust, speed, direction and distance (2-H). It is the Lagging Right Shoulder that is "thrown" by the Hip Action (7-15) and thus "supplies the initial acceleration of the Downstroke" and the drive of the Left Arm and Club toward Impact. This is the very basic #4 Power Accumulator of 6-B-4-0/A/B/C.
And its Maximum Power and Maximum Trigger Delay are produced by using the Hip Action (7-15) of either the Standard or Delayed Pivot. This Action increases the Right Shoulder Turn's Pivot Lag, thus enabling its Maximum Thrust against Pressure Point #4 (where the Left Arm contacts the side of the Chest).
It is this last #4 Pressure Point that the good player Feels as he unwinds into the Ball. You mention Nick Faldo. Just recently he was featured on The Golf Channel in their program Playing Lessons With the Pros. I heard him repeatedly talk of "turning his chest" through the Ball. Now, whether he felt he was actuating this Rotation (Body Power per 2-M-4) with his Left Shoulder or his Right -- or with his Feet or his Knees or his Hips -- matters little...as long as that Rotation is accomplished. But the last thing to move in that Pivot Train (6-M-1) is the Right Shoulder, and that is what is producing the Pressure he is 'Feeling' when its 'from behind' Thrust welds his Left Arm against his Chest.
So, it is this #4 Pressure Point (10-11-0-4) that constitutes the Active Direct Drive of the Left Arm and Club, and it is Loaded by the Right Shoulder Turn's Thrust -- not the Left's -- per 6-B-4 and 7-19-3. In fact, in earlier editions, Homer Kelley specifically advised players seeking Maximum Power and Trigger Delay (of the #4 Accumulator) to "discourage any tendency toward an Arm Swing by either inactivating the muscles of the Left Shoulder or by temporarily overpowering them with the Thrust of the [right] Shoulder Turn." [Bold emphasis added.]
Now, Matt, you have stated that both Faldo (in his book) and Els (in a Golf Digest article) "say the left shoulder is the primary driver of their downswing." I am always interested in what the great players Feel in their Golf Strokes, and I would very much appreciate it if you would supply those specific references.
__________________
Yoda
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09-12-2006, 11:24 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Posts: 244
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Pulling left shoulder back
Don't get me wrong. I certainly do not disagree with what
has been said. What I would like to present is a lesson that
I once took from a leading Instructor with TGM insight.
We were trying to determine which would be better for me,
Hitting or Swinging. The idea was that in either Hitting or
Swinging, that the right shoulder should be closer to the
target than the left shoulder at follow through. First, I was
to try hitting and see if I could get the right shoulder
closer to the target. I had trouble. Then the second step
was to try and get the right shoulder closer to the target
by pulling the left shoulder back to pull the right shoulder
through. This worked and I hit the ball 20 yards further.
Interest lesson.
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