Uploader Comments (jritter5)
All Comments (37)
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is this swing not very flat?
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Thanks. Makes perfect sense to me
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@silowhore Jeff writes about this concept too - go to jeffrittergolf. dot com
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Jeff is referring to plane - and that can mean parallel planes (for those of you who are suggesting that the club comes off plane at the top) - It's still on a parallel plane. Jeff is simply reminding us that you don't get steep. Stay on plane - or at least parallel planes, in accordance to your shaft lie at address.
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what about natural two planers :D
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okay, i've been hitting the ball either on or very near the hosel coming though. I've been told by a supposedly PGA pro that i'm coming too far from the inside, his advise? open my stance and learn to hit the ball on the toe, 15 minutes, $55.00 so i'm asking you what can i do to stop coming from the inside too much?
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@nuckster94 That is not very helpful to anyone at all. People turn a certain amount based on their personal flexibility. Not everyone can swing like the pros.
The video never says "same line" nor is it insinuated that they do. It just says same angle which can move up and down. The plane floats up and down from address to the top and back to the ball which of course would make it impossible to be the same line. The video is intended to help golfers see that the swing is not on a "straight line" to the target, but actually moves on a considerable arc. This is instrumental in helping golfers who slice due to a straight line action.
jritter5 11 months ago
the swing plane is not one line. your hands and club do not stay on the same line through the entire swing. This is Hank Haney's way of teaching which ruined Tiger.
TheDTM1125 11 months ago
@TheDTM1125 The video never says "same line" nor is it insinuated that they do. It just says same angle which can move up and down. The plane floats up and down from address to the top and back to the ball which of course would make it impossible to be the same line. The video is intended to help golfers see that the swing is not on a "straight line" to the target, but actually moves on a considerable arc. This is instrumental in helping golfers who slice due to a straight line action.
jritter5 11 months ago