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winter training
Hi Lynn
Being a Canadian golf nut, I spend the long winter months working on my game at the indoor golf domes up here. The one I frequent is about 85 yards in length so its perfect for short game work. Although I have enjoyed a tremendous improvement in my game thanks to LBG I'm thinking of taking it back to basics with a regimen of some kind. I dont care if I stay in basic or acquired motion for four months. I dont care if I only use one arm, stand on one foot etc, etc. What would you recommend to me for a "basic training" regimen. Thanks O.B. PS I have become stellar at hitting and swinging chips and pitches with just my right arm on the club. But my left arm alone is totally uneducated. Is it advisable to swing with just the left arm given that it would require a start up other that RFT? The left arm pull down is not advisable either I believe. |
Here come the Judge
Just steal the Judge's copy of Alignment Golf until your copy comes in. Just don't get caught. As you know, he is a Big Guy. Just ask Paul Smith.
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See you down the fairway OB |
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I'm just curious to see if my interpretation of "pulling" vs "swinging" the left arm maybe faulty, or my swing/procedure is faulty. :confused1 |
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OB |
"I'm Swing in My Brain"
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However, the difference between Feel and Real are like the difference between ice hockey and tennis. Using a Hand Control Pivot (5-0) can provide the missing link, where the Pivot respondes to the Hands. You may have a PP#4 and just not realize it, because your Hands are so well Educated or you are trying to Educate them. Still alot of meat on this bone. |
At the Top Down Under
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To quote bts from this thread
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Back on topic, although I seem to be impervious to extensor action drills... I'd love to have some stuff to work on over the winter that can help move that left arm swing toward right forearm, shoulder control. I certainly don't have any trouble with right forearm control while hitting, it's just that swinging is a flail, and intimately tied to the left side/pivot. |
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So much to think about here, concise though it is. " A gentle turn" can save the novice experimenting with "the on plane right shoulder" much time and grief. The single word "train" is a distillation of an immense and perhaps somewhat controversial concept. "Feel and real" can explain why some of the greats, Sam Snead for instance felt like they did pull their left arms down in a "ring the bell" manner. Great, great stuff |
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