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Hula like pivot

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Old 12-13-2008, 12:38 AM
Jeff Jeff is offline
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Yoda - I got stuck trying to draw those lines.

I have lost confidence in my ability to accurately locate the upper swing center.

I can see the right shoulder. Now, I have to mentally "picture" where the left shoulder is located - which depends on the degree of shoulder rotation and the angle of the shoulder turn relative to the ground. I cannot clearly "picture" where the left shoulder is located in this birds-eye view where the upper torso is so spiraled. Can you offer any advice?

Jeff.
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Old 12-13-2008, 12:56 AM
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Yoda Yoda is offline
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Drawing Assignment . . . No Creativity Required
Originally Posted by Jeff View Post

Yoda - I got stuck trying to draw those lines.

I have lost confidence in my ability to accurately locate the upper swing center.

I can see the right shoulder. Now, I have to mentally "picture" where the left shoulder is located - which depends on the degree of shoulder rotation and the angle of the shoulder turn relative to the ground. I cannot clearly "picture" where the left shoulder is located in this birds-eye view where the upper torso is so spiraled. Can you offer any advice?
Jeff,

I truly value your visual and textual additions to LBG. Thanks once again for your insights!



On this assignment -- thank you for your indulgence -- I gave you an explicit directive:
Draw a vertical line between either of Homer Kelley's recommended Pivot Centers, i.e., the Turned Head or the 'Point between the shoulders', and the ground. Take your choice . . . there's only a fraction of difference between the two (if that).
In other words, the pressure's off: I'm not looking for an assessment of your nouveau "Upper Swing Center" or its relation to the Left Shoulder's Rotation or the Spine's Spiral.
[Great stuff for a new thread, though. Have at it! BTW, with all due respect to your term "Upper Swing Center", Homer's term Pivot Center works better for me. There can be only ONE Central Axis in a Centered motion. Your term implies there are (at least) two: An Upper and a Lower. Now, that may well be your model (if so, please address that, too.]
For now . . .

Please just draw a vertical line between your preferred 'Homer Center' and the ground. Personally, since you've asked my advice, I'd start with a vertical line touching the left side of the Turned Head.



Thanks!
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Old 12-13-2008, 03:23 AM
Jeff Jeff is offline
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Yoda - here is a revised image with red lines drawn alongside the left side of the turned head.



I started to use the term lower swing center after reading the Golf Digest S&T article, where Bennett/Plummer used the term to indicate a point midway between the hip joints.

Jeff.
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Old 12-13-2008, 11:37 AM
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Yoda Yoda is offline
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Originally Posted by Jeff View Post

Yoda - here is a revised image with red lines drawn alongside the left side of the turned head.


Thanks for this work, Jeff.

Homer Kelley and his advocates (including me) have taken a lot of heat in some quarters for his teaching that the "true Swing Center ... is around a Hinge Pin ... precisely between the feet" (2-H / 7th edition). Your work provides ample proof that he was right . . .

Again.

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Old 12-14-2008, 11:58 AM
mb6606 mb6606 is offline
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It appears to me that Player is off plane at the top with a bent left wrist.
Palmer arched left wrist. Nicklaus and Souchak flat left wrists. What do others see?

I moved this post to another thread, "Clubshaft Alignment at the top".

Last edited by mb6606 : 12-14-2008 at 12:11 PM. Reason: Moved thread
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