yea it was the short iron shot I was looking at too that appeared to be angled.
I always get #2 and #3 confused. Is #2 the left wrist throwing out or swiveling back up plane?
thanks
My apologies; I was using shorthand and should've been more specific. When I was referring to #2, I was referencing what a lot of people call "accumulator lag" and what you and Johnny Miller were referencing in regards to Stricker's seemingly never cocked/uncocked left wrist.
So #1,2,3, and 4 all reference a power accumulator and a corresponding pressure point. The 2 we've referenced are 1 and 2, and they are somewhat related.
#1 accumulator is the amount of bend in the right arm (for a righty), and the pressure point is the right heel pad pressing against the left thumb. For a swinger this is passive, as the right arm straightens but isn't consciously driven straight.
#2 accumulator is the angle between the left arm and the top of the left hand (cocked vs. level wrist). This is most easily seen by the angle between the left arm and the club shaft, or simply by looking at accumulator #1. Assuming a level right wrist, if the right arm is bent more than it was at impact fix, then there is some amount of #2 accumulator established. This is what most talking heads refer to when they say "lag" and is what guys like Hogan, Sergio, and Boo Weekly all max out then release very late in their swings. The #2 pressure point is the last 2 fingers in the left hand, and you really feel this when the club 'throws out' and that angle between the left arm and shaft gets inline.
I gotcha, I know about #1 and #4, thanks for clarifying #2...
One more question, when you say "further indicating he's established an out-of-line condition" what are you referring to?
flying wedge out of wack?
thanks
All 4 power accumulators are out-of-line conditions that are trying to get inline or straight - eg. a bent right arm, cocked left wrist, angle between your hands and the club shaft (this one is a little confusing, as the angle doesn't really increase during the swing), and your left arm across the chest. Every power accumulator is loaded by increasing the angle and the power is released when that angle is straightened or seeks an inline condition. Each accumulator is felt and monitored through a corresponding pressure point. More angle doesn't necessarily mean more power, but more pressure does.
What I was saying in my previous post is that you can usually identify left wrist cock by looking at the wrist or the right arm bend. I say "usually" because this depends on a flat right wrist, or as you put it a non-"out of whack right arm flying wedge". Since the bending right arm also cocks the left wrist, the two accumulators are closely related, although one of the two is usually passive depending on whether you're hitting or swinging.