LynnBlakeGolf Forums - View Single Post - Ernest Jones Versus Ben Hogan Thread: Ernest Jones Versus Ben Hogan View Single Post #9 03-06-2009, 10:53 PM Yoda Administrator Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: Atlanta, Georgia Posts: 10,681 Swinging From the Wrist Originally Posted by O.B.Left DG Are you saying swinging from the wrists is in TGM, as a method not a fault? Originally Posted by Delaware Golf 10-24-E Wrist Throw. Component Variation 10-24-E is the Automatic Snap Release. It may or may not be actuated by the Wrist Throw Release Trigger (10-20-E). These two Variations are often paired (especially for Swingers), but they are not the same. In any event, by definition, the Wrist Throw Release Trigger is executed at Release, not during the Start Down. In contrast, "Swinging from the Wrist" (6-H-0-B / Hand Action Imperatives / First three editions) is the Hand Throw Release Trigger (10-20-A) which is executing the Release of the Left Wristcock (#2 Accumulator) immediately during the Start Down. This early Action produces too long a Release Interval -- "big" pulley wheel per Sketch 2-K-#6 and 7-23 -- and as a result, the Clubhead passes the Hands prior to Impact. This the classic Throwaway Sequence of Wrist Action, Overacceleration and Quitting (6-D-0/1/2/3). In the first three editions, the Throwaway sequence was listed in a different order: Overacceleration, Wrist Action and Quitting. These mirrored the Three Hand Action Imperatives of 6-H-0 (which Homer wrote in 'All caps' for emphasis): A. ALLOW NOT THE SLIGHTEST UNINTENTIONAL CHANGE OF PRESSURE POINT PRESSURE. B. ALLOW NOT THE SLIGHTEST MOVE TO SWING THE CLUB FROM THE WRIST; C. ALLOW NOT THE SLIGHTEST PREPARATION TO BRING THE HANDS TO A STOP. In other words, the slightest 'pushing away' (7-19) with the right forefinger (#3 Pressure Point) from the Top triggers the early Release of the Left Wristcock and ultimately, Quitting. This is what is so insidious about an incorrect concept of 'Swing the Clubhead': Almost all golfers slow or stop their Hands during Release and flip the Clubhead past them through Impact. They "flip and swish the club around haphazardly" (3-F-6). They do it on short shots; they do it on long shots; and they do it from the Practice Tee to the 19th Hole. That is why they don't improve. The correct concept is found in 6-G-0 (Hand Motion): All motion is focused on driving the Hands -- NOT THE CLUB -- toward the BALL. This may, with habit, seem to become reversed. But this is where and how a player's game "comes apart". The cure is to return to the original primary concen -- the Hands and their Clubhead Lag, Flat Left Wrist and Plane Line. . . . Learn to hit the Ball with Hand manipulation rather than with Clubhead manipulation and your game is less likely to keep falling apart. __________________ Yoda Yoda View Public Profile Send a private message to Yoda Visit Yoda's homepage! Find all posts by Yoda