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As for me
Yoda,
I am only answering #2 on a CP model (hitting) Fade. 45DEG LEFT HAND AND 20DEG RIGHT. angles change if the hands raise through impact. WHICH WILL CHANGE THE ASPECT OF THE GRIP. But not loss of Prpoints. However baseline changes will promate this movement. I am a hitter however most of the time. Well its late and thanks for all the good reading guys. You all are holding the golf world on your shoulder keep it up just noticed the question change a little. ill get to it later thanks guys |
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I think that the 45 degree grip is an animal that lives in the space between the B-Grip and the D-Grip. |
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Curious, very curious and probably sufficient cause for me to holler out for Mike O's assistance!:pale: |
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I just want to confirm...if the left is 45 and the right is 20, then in this grip the palms are not parallel to each other? sorry if this is a dumb question. It's just that I hear from so many people that they "should" be parallel to each other. thanks |
The grip
Check the pres.point to the left thumb. And how it is going to work with the (trigger finger-simple terms) to the hitting model. It helps to keep it intact passing the through the ball.
That is what makes a good ball strikers. hope that was as easy as I can put it. |
As far as I'm concerned, the Plane of the Left Wristcock (or Left Arm Flying Wedge) is always perpendicular to the Plane of the Right Wrist Bend (or the Right Forearm Flying Wedge).
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Yep Yep.My right arm would be closed 12degrees at set up for this, thanks Tongzilla
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This is the precision alignment -- Left Arm to Right -- of the Flying Wedges. CP, to what plane is your right arm "closed 12 degrees?" And, can you tell 12 degrees from, say, 11 or 13 degrees? Especially... Under the gun? |
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