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Right Forearm Plane
Why should the right forearm be on plane in the set-up? By not setting the right forearm on plan what corrections will have to be made? Do most tour pros have the right forearm on plane in their set-up? It appears Brian Gay does and he is a very straight hitter! Per the pictures available in this web-site it does not appear as thought Jay Williamson has his on plane.
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The most important thing is to have the right forearm on plane at impact fix. You have to know where you want it at impact, and that is on plane. Getting it on plane at set up requires fewer compensations in getting it back there at impact. Just a simplified procedure, in my opinion. If you look closely, Steve Stricker, another great ball striker also has his right forearm on plane, or at least very close to it. Steve Elkington is another who has it on plane depending on the pattern of the week. :) One of my all time favorite swings no matter what he is experimenting with! Good question about Jay Williamson, one of YODA's students. Hopefully YODA will have time to reply. Lots of ways to get er done. Setting up with the right forearm on plane just makes it far easier for me, very solid structure... Looking forward to hearing other thoughts on this subject! Kevin |
Jay Williamson, PGA TOUR Journeyman
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Jay has a great Pivot and Arm Swing that delivers his Right Forearm on Plane during the Release Interval. Ideally, he would be closer to that alignment at Address, but all that is absolutely necessary is that the Forearm be On Plane at Impact. Jay's Clubhead Feel (Lag Pressure) and sense of Plane gets that job done. In fact, the stats tell us he is one of the best ball strikers on the PGA TOUR. His Greens in Regulation percentage is 70.49, ranking him 5th. His Driving Accuracy (fairways hit) percentage is 69.61, ranking him 26th. Considering that his competitors are the best players in the world, those are pretty high marks. :smile: Unfortunately, his Putting stats are 30.31 per round, ranking him 182nd. :( Jay's results this year tell us is that professional golf can be a cruel game. Compare his Scoring Average the past three years against money won: 2009 / 70.97 / $240,574 2008 / 71.52 / $758,862 2007 / 70.64 / $835,515 Bottom line: To succeed on the PGA TOUR, you've got to be able to do a lot more than just score well. As Jay's record proves, you've got to be able to: (1) Play in enough events. Given the pecking order on the PGA TOUR and the periodic 'reshuffles', that is not as easy as the public thinks. A poor start in the spring, and a Q-School or Nationwide Tour qualifier will be lucky to tee it up in twenty events; (2) Play in at least a few of the really big money, limited field events (especially those with no cut), such as the World Golf Championships, FedEx Cup Series, The Masters, and ideally, even the SBS at Kapalua (prior year Champions only); and finally . . . (3) Play really well in at least one or two of those events -- the bigger the purse, the better -- and get one or more really high, big money finishes. To that end, and to help make Item (2) a 'clean sweep' reality, a win is especially useful. Especially, a 'full FedEx Cup points' win, i.e., no 'opposite' or Fall Series events. Jay has once again survived (for the 5th time) the Q-School wars and earned his 2010 PGA TOUR card. Good luck next year, Jay; you deserve it. See you in Honolulu at The Sony. Aloha! :salut: |
Whats interesting is there are some guys who play so inconsistent yet have the ability to string it together and play 4 rounds at the top level, JB Holmes comes to mind.
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