In fact I knew several highly TGM educated friends that scratched their heads over this for a long time before the bulb lit bright.
And now it looks so easy to understand.
I scrubbed the TGM sites years before we started this one and there weren't any clues. I hope y'all appreciate the straight forward explanations to tough concepts.
Guys and Gals- this stuff is golden.
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Bagger
1-H "Because of questions of all kinds, reams of additional detail must be made available - but separately, and probably endlessly." Homer Kelly
YODA thank you!
really helping me to get it, I'm going over this carefully...and again...
Amen Corner also started a thread on the Alternate Target Line which has been a great thread so far related
thanks again - and thanks Mike for your reply to my original post
I'm blown away by you guys
woodandcoal
incubating...
YODA thank you!
really helping me to get it, I'm going over this carefully...and again...
Amen Corner also started a thread on the Alternate Target Line which has been a great thread so far related
thanks again - and thanks Mike for your reply to my original post
I'm blown away by you guys
woodandcoal
incubating...
Hey wood,
Yoda made a very important point about the finite length of the club. Given that information, I'll tell you one of the ways that I explain this concept to my students.
Visual equivalents are exactly as stated. They are the player's VISUAL perspectives of on plane motions.
If you're facing the face of a clock, you see the second hand moving in a circle. If you're viewing the clock from the side, you see the second hand moving in a straight line. So, is it moving in a circle or on a straight line? Yes and yes, depending on perspective.
Your #3 pressure point is tracing the straight baseline of the plane. But, your eyes are not in your #3pp. Your eyes are slightly above the plane (the clock) on which the club travels. So, the #3pp feels the straight line and the eyes see the clubhead moving in a curve.
Hey wood,
Yoda made a very important point about the finite length of the club. Given that information, I'll tell you one of the ways that I explain this concept to my students.
Visual equivalents are exactly as stated. They are the player's VISUAL perspectives of on plane motions.
If you're facing the face of a clock, you see the second hand moving in a circle. If you're viewing the clock from the side, you see the second hand moving in a straight line. So, is it moving in a circle or on a straight line? Yes and yes, depending on perspective.
Your #3 pressure point is tracing the straight baseline of the plane. But, your eyes are not in your #3pp. Your eyes are slightly above the plane (the clock) on which the club travels. So, the #3pp feels the straight line and the eyes see the clubhead moving in a curve.
Hall of Fame Post there Fortknocks!!!
Sorting Through the Golf Nut's Catalog.
B-Ray
__________________
I have the best job in the world, I get to teach golf for a living!!!
Catch ya on the lesson tee.