downswing

So you have been told your shoulder plane is too flat and not steep enough? Chill out!! Don’t you worry about it for one second as we will put you on a simple task that will take care of that perky over the top-flat shoulder-round house-out of balance action for good!

 

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00:00 Shawn Clement introduces the golf lesson w/ Sav & Mu

01:04 Shawn Clement: How the shoulders come through impact in golf swing

04:34 Shawn Clement: How to find the proper shoulder plane w/ Sav

07:43 Shawn Clement: Task to help achieve a healthy shoulder plane w/ Mu

10:20 Shawn Clement concludes the golf lesson

 

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Author:  Eckhart Diestel

Date: April 13, 2021

This blog was adapted for personal use and can be utilized by any student Golf as a referral as to how the grip works in golf swing.

Key Notes:

  • TAKE DEAD AIM
  • the head ALIGNS
  • the body ALIGNS
  • the forearms ALIGN
  • the wrists ALIGN
  • the hands ALIGN
  • TARGET
  • COLLECT
  • RELEASE
  • ALIGN

Using A Hammer

                                                  

Examine how we use a hammer to drive a nail. Realize how the anatomy aligns with the direction of the blow. If you hit vertically downwards, the head and upper body will be right over the nail. The radius and the ulnar of the forearm will be in a stacked position on top of each other. The anatomical snuff box will be aligned with the free downward motion of the wrists and the base of the index finger will be on top of the shaft to support the downward motion.

          If you hammer sideways, – imagine a nail in a door frame -, your entire anatomy will move to stay behind the blow and support the delivery of energy in the intended direction. The head and upper body tilt sideways. The radius and the ulnar of the forearm will still be stacked, now in the plane of
the blow. The anatomical snuff box and base of the index finger will remain aligned in that same target related plane.

Top Spin InTennis

                                                                    

Notice that you grab the racket in a closed position to facilitate a strike with top spin. The racket is not brought into this position by a manipulation of the wrist, because the player wants to keep everything optimally aligned to delivery energy. Thus the wrist stays in the ’hammer’ orientation, while the racket is turned closed.

 

Bat With A Baseball

                                  

 

               Hold the golf club just like you would hold a baseball bat be-cause this allows you to apply the maximum force. Again, the radius and ulnar are stacked in the plane of the hit direction. This may give the appearance of a cupped wrist at the top of the backswing. However, this is the anatomically correct position, because the wrist can hinge over the tabati ́ere anatomique ofboth hands. A cupped wrist position has the trail hand wrist flattened.

          The orientation of the club face will determine how you feel the balance of the club in your hand. In a closed position the leading edge would appear in a picture in a horizontal position, in an open position the leading edge would point towards the ground. Thus, when you change you grip you will experience a difference in feel. Closing the club face moves the feel of the weight of the club head more unto your lead forearm. At the top of the backswing, the open position may feel more balanced and natural. This would be too open in relation to the target as the ball would be hit with that open face.

            If you close the face about 45 degrees and swing it analogy to a base ball bat, you will see that the leading edge will be square to the path at impact. If your perceived task is to release the club to the target, the kinetic sequence will occur correctly. If the target is the ball, there will be no perceived need for a release towards a distant target and it will therefor not be performed.
We are releasing the club towards a target and are collecting the ball while we do so.

           Just as much as a baseball players swings towards a target such as the fence at the end of the field; he will hit and compress the ball with the bat during that targeted motion. Hold the club in your lead hand with a grip that feels super tight and secure. When applying the trail hand, the index finger is placed correctly in a relation to the shaft that reminds you of holding a kitchen knife while pushing down on a cutting board

Extremely Important Is The Rotational Aspect.Extremely important is the rotational aspect of the release. Whether you apply a baseball swing or a tennis serve or a golf swing. Imagine to swing a golf club in a horizontally plane in front of you, letting forearms rotate naturally or ’turn over’ – the trail hand will turn over the lead hand.

 

The Movement Of The Hands And The
Direction Of Force

                                                 

                    Inspect the movement of the hands and body position when you apply power in a direction. You will see that you will bring your body behind that blow. If you hammer straight down, your body will be entirely upright. If you blow an axe into the stem of a tree your body will bend to find a position that supports the direction of that blow. In this position you will see that the grip as well as the body are anatomically properly aligned.

       Apply this to a golf club. If your target is the ball right in front of you, the blow will be directed straight down and your grip and body position will reflect that movement. If you task ist the release of a baseball bat to a distant target somewhere in the field, your body as well as your forearms as well as your wrist will line up behind the direction of that blow to apply maximum directed energy in that direction.

     Care has to be taken of the leading edge of the club face now. If you start with a square position at the set up, the tilting to get behind the blow will dynamically bring the club face into an open position at impact. Therefor, the club face has to be held closed at setup to dynamically return it square at impact.

 

30 Yards  – Between the release at the ball with a neutral grip and the release at the distant target with the correspondingly aligned anatomy accounts for a 30 yards difference in carry.

 

 The Grip Is Too Strong

                                                                         

Now this is very important: if you bring the club face back to square with a twisting of your wirsts and tension in your forearms, you will notice that your body is still vertically upright, your radius and your ulnar are not stacked up and your tension, too strong 3 wrists can not move freely and conjunctly over the anatomical boxes. This is a too strong grip ! If you release and you relax from this position your club face will return too closed and you will hook the ball too much.

             This will especially be the case if you release at the ball and not at the target. In a correctly alignment of the anatomy there will be a body tilt and no tension in the forearms. Early extension and casting both reflect a neutral grip and a release at the ball.

 

Take Dead Aim (Harvey Penick)

                                                                        

If you line up your anatomy ’behind’ your ’baseball’ blow with a specific distant target:

  •  your head will be in a specific position 20/20
  • your body will tilt to stay behind the blow to apply its mass at impact
  • the radius and ulna of both forearm will stack up in the plane of the swing
  • the anatomical snuffboxes will be properly aligned and allow the wrist to hinge jointly and freely
  • your trail hand will align to support the blow; the pressure point is at the base of your trail hand index.
  • you collect
  • after impact release your club just as a bat towards the distant target
  • your forearms will be twisted over 180 degrees until their radius and the ulna reach a stacked position again at the top of the finish.

To facilitate the understanding: hold the club in front of you. Swing to hit an imaginary nail at chest height with the club face square. Hit the nail out of the park. There you go. Hit another nail at the side bottom of a door frame. Hit it out of the park as well. There is your golf swing.

 

 

 

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Congratulation to Hideki Matsuyama for winning the greatest golf prize on this great green earth! We observe his awesome technique of bracing through the ball and into his flight plans to his targets to achieve big distance and accuracy and contrary to what people think, he hits his irons very high despite looking like we are ready to hit it low! This technique is what you would use to compress the ball as solidly as possible on all irons and woods. This video will show you so many advantages to this technique and get you the information you need to implement the very next time you get to the range or golf course. Enjoy!

 

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00:00 Shawn Clement Introduces the golf lesson w/ Sav & Mu

01:10 Shawn Clement: How to stay braced on the lead side with iron golf shots

04:57 Shawn Clement: How to stay braced on the lead side with hybrid golf shots

09:00 Shawn Clement: How to stay braced on the lead side with your driver golf shots

12:39 How Hideki Matsuyama maintains his tempo being braced on the lead side

13:45 Shawn Clement concludes the golf lesson

 

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Golf’s Perfect Imperfection Podcast Episode: Speed release patterns and restriction removals for the best golf of your life

 

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You have lined up to go to your TARGET, you have confirmed your ball position, your distance to ball, your grip and your club face relationship, and now you are ready. THEN YOU STARE AT THE BALL AND TRY TO HIT IT?? What happened to your target? You need a system and you need it now! We will give you your “means by which” you will get your golf ball from where it lies, into the flight plan that will take it to where you want it to go!

 

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00:00 Savvy Throwing the Golf Club

00:31 Shawn Clement introduces the golf lesson w/ Sav & Mu

02:41 Hammering into the doorframe drill with Mu

08:16 Shawn Clement: How to throw the golf club with Savvy

13:54 Shawn Clement cutting grass with your golf club

17:17 Shawn Clement concludes the lessons

 

Golf’s Perfect Imperfections Episode: Starting the outdoor season with minimal damage

 

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Have you been wondering about how to release the body or how to release the club or hands, this is the video for you! When you consider that we do this kind or releasing in all sports such as Ping Pong, Baseball, Tennis serving, football throwing and so much more, you will be very happy to see that plugging that release that you already know into your golf swing will be way easier than you think because you have been there already!

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00:00 Shawn Clement introduces the lesson w/ Sav & Mu

01:50 Shawn Clement how to release the club in the golf swing

05:45 Shawn Clement how to grip the golf club or the driver

07:53 Shawn Clement hits an Apex 21 7-iron on the GCQ

08:45 Shawn Clement hits the Epic Speed Driver on the GCQ

10:33 How to release the driver w/ Sav (tennis racquet analogy)

14:02 Mu hitting the driver

15:27 Shawn Clement concludes the lesson

 

Check out Wisdom in Golf Legacy’s latest! Wisdom in Golf Legacy: Fred Couples Effortless Power

 

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Shawn Clement Head Director of Development at The Royal Quebec Golf Club/ Shawn Clement Directeur Général du Développement Au Club de Golf Royal Québec: Royal Quebec Golf Club

 

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