I believe the point I was trying to make is in the book. You refer to 2-L so I get the impression that you believe I'm talking about steering. But that's not what I'm talking about.
I don't see my line of reasoning here as an attack on TGM but if that's how it appears I'll step back from the discussion.
I believe the point I was trying to make is in the book. You refer to 2-L so I get the impression that you believe I'm talking about steering. But that's not what I'm talking about.
I don't see my line of reasoning here as an attack on TGM but if that's how it appears I'll step back from the discussion.
PS: Congrats on your student.
It's not my place to say, but it sounds like "mentoring", not "criticism".
I don't see my line of reasoning here as an attack on TGM but if that's how it appears I'll step back from the discussion.
I wasn't referring to you, Bernt.
It's one thing to seek a deeper understanding of TGM and even to question its core principles. I welcome questions of all kinds and have almost 9,000 posts over the past seven years to prove it. Whatever conclusions one draws from those earnest pursuits are fine with me. That has been your approach, and I respect it.
But, it's quite another to insult Homer Kelley and deride his monumental work as "junk science", all the while proclaiming yourself to be the "greatest" golf instructor of our time and of all time. Particularly when the work served well as you awaited enlightened nirvana. As did the helping hands of the many whose knowledge you sought along the way and who now have been discarded as so much bilge water in your own personal destroyer. That is happening now in another quarter, and quite frankly, it stinks.
"How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is
To have a thankless child!"
-- Shakespeare / King Lear
Meanwhile, we best serve ourselves and others by getting our facts right -- those in the book and those in its underlying science. I noticed in your post that you had your "centrifugals" and "centripetals" mixed up. That's why I gave you the information you needed to straighten them out.