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There are actually two ways that I teach the Cut Shot. The first is with the Cut Shot Therapy per 3-F-7-A using a 10-5-E plane line. This is usually taught to students with a Bent Left Wrist and Clubhead Throwaway. The Student will be made to trace the plane line first with a shaft, then a regular club and finally with the club and ball. The focus as always is to monitor the Hands and identify a feel that the mechanical exercise gives to the Hands. All the student needs to do to replicate the mechanics is to reproduce the feel that the Hands went through. The other cut shot that I teach is per 2-C-2..."a cut shot is any Stroke using Vertical Hinging (10-10) through Impact regardless of Plane Line (10-5) or the preceding Wrist Action (10-18 )." Please note that this shot has the same underlying principle as that of the Cut Shot Therapy. I teach this exclusively as a special application of the Acquired Motion (12-5-2) although it can also be applied to the Basic Motion (12-5-1) and Total Motion (12-5-3) Procedure: 1. Aim the clubface at intended target and then grip the club. 2. Without taking the hands off the grip, rotate the grip clockwise so that the grip becomes a 10-2-D grip, "which is very compatible with Cut Shot procedures." 3. Now the target line is way right while the plane line and stance line is still square to the original target line. 4. Rotate the target, stance and plane lines to the left until the target line is pointing back at the intended target. You now have a 10-5-D Open Open Plane Line. 5. Simply trace the new plane line with a vertical hinge - while swinging or hitting. Use this shot around the greens in place of the more risky Lob Shot per 2-C-3 and see if you don't save strokes around the green. Some students of mine love the results and the simplicity so much that they use this as their main short game stroke. |
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There are 3 lines...The Plane Line, Stance Line and the Target Line. Per 1-L-19: "Stance Line, Plane Line and Flight Line are normally parallel." That is your 10-5-A Square Square Plane Line. I would like to direct your attention to the pictures. The one closest to Diane is the Stance Line. The next closest is the Inclined Plane Line and the farthest is the Target Line. The target line can and must be rotated to be in line with your intended target. It is moveable. I believe this should clarify your doubts. But remember, the Plane Line and Stance Line must be rotated in tandem with the Target Line otherwise a new plane line (10-5) will be established. The Inclined Plane Line is the line that you trace and per 3-F-5, the "Plane Line (10-5) must be verified before every shot as long as the game is played." |
Doh!
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http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/s...26&postcount=8 what is the third point to define the inclined plane?...it's the bottom of the shaft!...THANKS! -hcw |
Wonderful 'executive summaries'.
These should be made a sticky at the top of the drills section ;) Great information and a wonderful 'map' to improvement! Quote:
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The Fixed Target Line
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Stance Line and Plane Line are moveable and can be aligned (in relation to the fixed Target Line) to produce any one of the nine Plane Line - Stance Line Combinations (three Stance Lines to each of the three Plane Lines per 10-5-0). The Plane Line - Stance Line Combination selected will reflect the player's Basic Stroke Pattern or its Variation, psychological preference, the intended Ball Behavior (Flight Path) or all three. As a special note to those who have gone nuts trying to crack the code of CCW and CW in 10-5-0, the terms mean Counter Clockwise and Clockwise. :cool: |
The jet lag must be over
The slinger is back to his old self and starting to sling.=D>
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Great thread guys....really.
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