Does the hitter play the ball slightly further back than the swinger? If this is correct, why so? where would I play a pw, 7 and driver? Is the stance the same width when compared to a swinger also? thank you. thank you.
For a long time instructors taught students to have the feeling you were “sitting” on a bar stool. I always believed we should have been teaching people to feel as though you were “leaning” back on a stool. The last thing you would ever want to do is sit in golf. Sitting will cause the golf club to swing too level to the ground in the downswing, and you will have a tendency to hit the ground behind the golf ball. w w w (dot) golferbreak80 (dot) c0m
question: is the take away to much inside? and if he were to continue more to the top on the back swing would it be across the line? I think you bring a lot of good info. thanks
If one uses a right forearm takeaway, then the takeaway should not be too-inside if one avoids turning the pelvis too much in the early backswing. A hitter should never take the club back to a position beyond parallel. Scott does cross the line slightly because his takeaway is too-inside - by my standards (see my review paper on "arm, wrist and hand movements in the golf swing".
Does the hitter play the ball slightly further back than the swinger? If this is correct, why so? where would I play a pw, 7 and driver? Is the stance the same width when compared to a swinger also? thank you. thank you.
BirdieBlues 1 year ago
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For a long time instructors taught students to have the feeling you were “sitting” on a bar stool. I always believed we should have been teaching people to feel as though you were “leaning” back on a stool. The last thing you would ever want to do is sit in golf. Sitting will cause the golf club to swing too level to the ground in the downswing, and you will have a tendency to hit the ground behind the golf ball. w w w (dot) golferbreak80 (dot) c0m
aaron6842 2 years ago
question: is the take away to much inside? and if he were to continue more to the top on the back swing would it be across the line? I think you bring a lot of good info. thanks
Tulsagolfomatic 2 years ago
If one uses a right forearm takeaway, then the takeaway should not be too-inside if one avoids turning the pelvis too much in the early backswing. A hitter should never take the club back to a position beyond parallel. Scott does cross the line slightly because his takeaway is too-inside - by my standards (see my review paper on "arm, wrist and hand movements in the golf swing".
Jeff.
ImperfectGolfer 2 years ago
Comment removed
skharger 3 years ago