![]() |
Visual Aids
4 Attachment(s)
Here's some pics of BG...does this help:)
|
hmm
I wonder why the guys in the amazing changes section are all more on the TSP?
Would they be better ball strikers if they shifted planes to the elbow plane a bit before impact? |
Quote:
2-H SHOULDER MOTIONS The point may be made that it is impossible to inscribe perfect circles while the center is in motion – that is the turning Shoulder. The straight line requirements of the Compression Point are satisfied as long as both the Vertical and Horizontal Centers move precisely in unison. Direction control remains stable because both Centers are also moving in a circle – that is, the circumference of the Shoulder Turn.Looks like this right here . . . ![]() |
Quote:
I didn't name names and I thought that it was obvious to anyone that your name doesn't belong on it.:laughing9 I give you 4 Yodas for your posts in this thread. ![]() |
Avoid running out of right arm
Quote:
Anyone know a reason to go lower than that? UPDATE: Trigger delay. |
Isn't the turned shoulder plane named because the right shoulder gets on plane at the top of the swing and goes down plane as far as possble into impact?
|
Quote:
Regarding the TSP angle, it's because Homer Kelley thought that the turned shoulder plane was far superior because "any plane shift is dangerous". He associated the elbow plane with pivot-controlled hands and warned against the shoulder turn takeaway as always too flat, or low making a plane shift mandatory, likely unintentional and unsuspected. It is for this reason the right forearm takeaway is preferred, described as mandatory. The turned shoulder plane is defined as "that reference point reached by the right shoulder after a flat backstroke shoulder turn. With whatever body position (accounting for waist bend) the plane passes through, the right shoulder and hands are precisely AT the right shoulder level at the Top (See Brian Gay's), regardless of plane angle or shoulder turn. But any other shoulder turn can also provide the acceptable reference point." Shoulder turn and plane angle are two different things. The plane angle is referenced by elbow, hands or various shoulder turns. The Standard shoulder turn is a flat backstroke and an on-plane downstroke. In the 7th edition the preferred variation was changed to Rotated shoulder turn, the normal path at right angles to the spine, which can locate a turned shoulder plane angle but doesn't have to. The downstroke may shift to whatever plane angle is chosen. That looks like what ndwolfe is using. I think we're struggling a bit with why your hands are too low at impact regardless of plane angle. Not enough axis tilt, right shoulder a little out instead of down. Check the clubshaft at parallel to the ground. It's slightly off plane there. Look to the pivot. Good looking swing, by the way. |
Quote:
O.B "Thank you Daryl, my gosh 4 Yodas, well I dont know what to ........ Kanye West " Excuse me O.B. , Im very happy for you and all and Ill let you talk all you want later BUT.............Beyonce had the best POST of ALL TIME" |
Quote:
Interesting. Brian Gay's shifts his plane angle (minimally) from the TSP to the Elbow Plane but his Right Shoulder continues moving down the TSP. Never thought about this before. So his "shoulder plane" doesnt shift in the down stroke but his plane of motion, the plane his pressure points ride, his sweet spot plane does shift. |
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:20 AM. |