Did you find your BRW turning into a Flat one doing it right handed only to begin with? Most do, then they work out its the right arm moving a BRW which that gets the job done.
Little, gentle impact bag thumps work the same way. Left and then right handed, then both, then to the chipping green. Loads of fun.
Did you find your BRW turning into a Flat one doing it right handed only to begin with? Most do, then they work out its the right arm moving a BRW which that gets the job done.
Little, gentle impact bag thumps work the same way. Left and then right handed, then both, then to the chipping green. Loads of fun.
Actually Guru I did,flattened out for sure,also found that i was using more V/hinge with R/hand,prob something to do with flattening out,not too sure.
On reading your first reply,the old light bulub thingo came to pass again.........The R/arm is always pushing!!!!!!!!
The L/arm or hand turned out easier,GRAVITY.....ALIGHNMENTS....FLAIL all come into play,its a real good drill for full swinging IMO..after all chip is mini swing........Got any more "good thoughts"
I've been doing cricket batting coaching for District level junior players. I used the same drills with an impact bag with cricket bats - heavy things for you American readers Small biffs to begin with and then let them do Happy Gilmores at the bag to get footwork happening.
What always amazes me is how far a golfers lead foot slay open doing that, even with a step drill vs a standard foot position. Many end up with a light bulb that in their standard set up routine that they need more to keep a better balanced finish.
Needless to say, the cricket coaching fraternity pooh poohs "The Cricket Machine" but I've kids in the State Development team punching above their age weight. Thanks Homer!
If you look very close, there is a "cricket bat" which extends from PP#3 through the sweet spot. It can only make contact with one particular dimple of the golf ball for any given setup position...I wouldn't swing OR chip until I knew which dimple it was.
99.9% of cricket coaches view of the bottom hands roles is a head shakingly amusing. Lots of similarities between high profile golf coaches and cricket coaches. Just too much seems as if without regard to alignments in motion or learning to feel what is really going on. More money in golf coaching though!