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Both shoulders are definately not onplane...at any point of the golf stroke... |
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Thanks |
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Maybe from your pic you think I'm suggesting a backward curve of the shoulders, but I'm not, I'm suggesting a forward curve (that was what I saw in your diagram by the way - sometimes hard to tell with stick figures!) And stop picking on Tongzilla! His list was really good!:) Chris |
Banging my head against the proverbial brick wall...
I crushed the idea of an onplane shoulder at followthrough and you both know it.... yet find yourselves unable to admit it. Of course both of you would let hell freeze over before that would happen. But your arguements are absolutely pathetically absurd!
Now your plan is to make Tongzilla, the bully act the victim. It kinda like the kid that beats up on other kids and eventually goes against one that beats his brains out and then wants sympathy. |
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yours in crushed-ness, Chris |
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How about ![]() booyakasha Would that satisfy ? |
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If you observe Hunters stickman drawing at low point here - you can see that they are on a parallel angle as the plane yet still above the plane. This parallel above the plane is a reasonable approximation at this point for the dimensions of this stickman diagram (and in real life the center I think would be further above plane).. because the right shoulder and the left are in the transition of swapping over as to say... Note that again the shoulder flexability will be stretched by extensor action towards the plane line - and not being stretched directly backwards. As an analogy, if those shoulders where a bow and the arms the string - the shoulders would not be pulled backwards (or forwards :rolleyes: ...lol) so that they would touch the inclined plane.... |
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Just a quickie. How would a really good horizontal hinge action effect the shoulders after this paralell to the plane moment? |
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Hinge action is something completely seperate. Ask the same questions. Does hinge action stop the left arm becoming inline at followthrough... it doesn't. Does hinge action stop the pivot center from being above the plane... it doesn't. Does hinge action stop extensor action pulling the shoulder flexability towards the plane line...it doesn't... So regardless what Hinge action you employ it makes no difference to the fact that the left shoulder is onplane at followthrough and not the right shoulder. |
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An uncompensated swing - Smack a ball without quitting, lunging, jerking, steering, hacking and feeling bad. |
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