I really improved my ball striking today by using my pivot in such a way so as to not let my right arm straighten until past the ball. That may not be what is actually happening, but that is how I am perceiving it. In so doing, the following results are noted:
More distance.
Better accuracy.
A sense of free-wheeling with effortless power.
I don't have to think about anything else.
Not sure why this one thing delivers so many benefits, but it does. Maybe this will help someone else, too.
I really improved my ball striking today by using my pivot in such a way so as to not let my right arm straighten until past the ball. That may not be what is actually happening, but that is how I am perceiving it. In so doing, the following results are noted:
More distance.
Better accuracy.
A sense of free-wheeling with effortless power.
I don't have to think about anything else.
Not sure why this one thing delivers so many benefits, but it does. Maybe this will help someone else, too.
I really improved my ball striking today by using my pivot in such a way so as to not let my right arm straighten until past the ball. .
Bob,
Have you been exploring the nuances between hitting and swinging?
For me, swinging feels like everything releases much later due to the automatic nature of the procedure. I don't get to both arms straight until well into follow through. Hitting is deliberate and the feel of the right arm extension "may" feel closer to impact.
My "lights out" pattern is swinging, but I"ve experimented with deliberate hitting and its just sooo darn good I've been tempted to adopt it. Kinda like the two Angels sitting on your shoulder...In this case both are good ones.
__________________
Bagger
1-H "Because of questions of all kinds, reams of additional detail must be made available - but separately, and probably endlessly." Homer Kelly
For me, swinging feels like everything releases much later due to the automatic nature of the procedure. I don't get to both arms straight until well into follow through.
Actually, my feeling is that the right arm doesn't begin to straighten until after the ball. I must have been really messed up.
I agree that having more than one angel with you is good. Johnny Miller said he had three swings he could use: his own for a straight ball; Lee Trevino's for a fade; and, Chi Chi Rodriquez for a draw. He felt confident that one of those three would be playing good that day.
Actually, my feeling is that the right arm doesn't begin to straighten until after the ball.
To have an "on plane" right forearm at impact, the right elbow will be bent. Even Mo Norman with his outstretched arms had a bent right elbow at impact. How much depends on a lot of factors.
The key is that it is bent "just enough" to be on plane.
__________________
Bagger
1-H "Because of questions of all kinds, reams of additional detail must be made available - but separately, and probably endlessly." Homer Kelly
To have an "on plane" right forearm at impact, the right elbow will be bent.
You are right, of course. But I didn't "own" a feel that leads to those correct alignments.
I believe I was having some serious downstroke sequencing problems (6-M-1) in that release was initiating before my arms, right elbow and left hand passed line-of-sight-to-the-ball (6-B-1-C).
So, I had book knowledge, but I had not translated it to a feel that leads that leads to ownership and ability to repeat the swing. The feel that the right arm doesn’t straighten until past the ball appears to have corrected that (for me).
I really improved my ball striking today by using my pivot in such a way so as to not let my right arm straighten until past the ball. That may not be what is actually happening, but that is how I am perceiving it. In so doing, the following results are noted:
More distance.
Better accuracy.
A sense of free-wheeling with effortless power.
I don't have to think about anything else.
Not sure why this one thing delivers so many benefits, but it does. Maybe this will help someone else, too.
"using my pivot in such a way so as to not let my right arm straighten until past the ball."
In stead of "Releasing", you "Sustain the Lag", which doesn't "let the right arm straighten until past the ball".
"More distance."
Because the clubhead is still accelerating at impact, due to "Lag".
"Better accuracy."
Because the movements of the body and club are stablized and smoothened by "Lag".
"A sense of free-wheeling with effortless power."
With "Lag" sustained, the "effort" (or tension) is evenly distributed throughout the body and felt "effortless" (or tension free).
That's why it's the "Secret", which is usually too simple for the general public to believe.
__________________ Yani Tseng, Go! Go! Go! Yani Tseng Did It Again! YOU load and sustain the "LAG", during which the "LAW" releases it, ideally beyond impact.
"Sustain (Yang/陽) the lag (Yin/陰)" is "the unification of Ying and Yang" (陰陽合一).
The "LAW" creates the "effect", which is the "motion" or "feel", with the "cause", which is the "intent" or "command".
"Lag" is the secret of golf, passion is the secret of life.
Think as a golfer, execute like a robot.
Rotate, twist, spin, turn. Bend the shaft.
I was thumbing through an old book and read Sam Snead's advice to return the right elbow to the right side early in the downswing. I worked on this in my range session today and found that it perfectly supplements my "major" feel, which is to let my pivot transport a bent right arm past the ball. Pretty good antidote for over the top, too. I felt like I could really go after the driver and not worry about over the top.