Merci Franck pour cette video, je vis en Californie et je pratique tous les jours, tes vidéos sont d'une grande aide pour moi. J'espère en voir d'autres prochainement, sinon il faudra que tu viennes a Palm Springs....;-))
Hi,I used to swing exactly like you, thinking that the right arm/hand is just along "for the ride". You really have to"flip" the club at that bottom in order to try to square the clubface. That is very difficult to do consistantly.Especially under pressure.Slices and hooks resulted. I now apply right arm thrust (straightening the bent right arm) immediately AFTER the magic move.This squares the club more consistantly.It requires good tempo and timing but the reward is "effortles power".
That's a great thought, actually, right in line with how Faldo thought of it; for him, the release was from the elbows and forearms, not from a flip of the wrists. He (and Leadbetter) always talked about the straightening of the right arm with the back of the right wrist still bent all the way through impact and beyond.
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Merci Franck pour cette video, je vis en Californie et je pratique tous les jours, tes vidéos sont d'une grande aide pour moi. J'espère en voir d'autres prochainement, sinon il faudra que tu viennes a Palm Springs....;-))
montegnies1 2 months ago
Comment removed
montegnies1 2 months ago
super demonstration d'efficacite
Franck , vous devriez mettre d'autres videos en ligne
Bravo pour ces eplications claires et precises
stanislasZ 6 months ago
Hi,I used to swing exactly like you, thinking that the right arm/hand is just along "for the ride". You really have to"flip" the club at that bottom in order to try to square the clubface. That is very difficult to do consistantly.Especially under pressure.Slices and hooks resulted. I now apply right arm thrust (straightening the bent right arm) immediately AFTER the magic move.This squares the club more consistantly.It requires good tempo and timing but the reward is "effortles power".
TheNYgolfer 8 months ago
@TheNYgolfer
That's a great thought, actually, right in line with how Faldo thought of it; for him, the release was from the elbows and forearms, not from a flip of the wrists. He (and Leadbetter) always talked about the straightening of the right arm with the back of the right wrist still bent all the way through impact and beyond.
emncaity 7 months ago
Tres bien...this is a venerable and effective drill, but you really ought to credit Harvey Penick.
emncaity 8 months ago