Super info! When setting up into the braced tilt and we no longer want to pre-turn I am having trouble as I brace and tilt I still seem to still get closed as in the pre-turn. Do I need to brace more left a bit? I have a little bit of trouble rotating through the swing.
Hi Robert! It is time to tilt with purpose! 😀
see “tilt mile markers” and see the “goldie locks series” and use the goldie locks principle to determine the low point of the swing. Also, see the latest “unstoppable momentum” video using the divot to determine low point when tilting.
I am new member. I have been playing for over 20 years (12 HCL) and have gone through several swing changes. For the past several years, I have been working through Clay Ballard’s method where he teaches forearm rotation in the backswing, the right palm pointing to the sky, a bowed wrist at the top, a tucked elbow coming down. This will produced a very laid off club just before the downswing. Clay’s method seams to work as long as there is rotation to square the face. However, I was never able to master all the movements. And I very inconsistent with direction and power. Hence, I am here.
I seems your swing is very steep and not shallow at all. Is this by design? I have seen various pro swings (via V1 Golf) were it appears (on the down swing) that the shaft is parallel with the forearm. According to Clay, this is the ideal position. I am not seeing that in your swing. Please explain.
Hi Gregg, and welcome!
if you look at our “task trumps everything” and “top 3 tasks” videos, you will realize we are already Pinocchio without the strings and don’t need to THINK about all these positions to accomplish the swing. You can master a task but you can’t master a hornet’s nest of swing positions. This has been scientifically proven over and over again in sport science and many teachers have missed the boat.
Now the shallowing of the club HAPPENS, when you deliver the club towards the target; if you want to stay steep, just deliver towards the ball! 😝 See “throw the club” and “the throwing series” as well as the “grass whip training” videos and for the squaring of the club face, see the first few videos of the “consistency series” and “draw fine tuning” and the “goldie locks series”
Take your time as you will get a lot of AHA moments along the way; Enjoy!
Hi Shawn, I’ve been struggling with my grip for years. My coach says it’s fine but the club always wiggled in my hand. I’d also wear a hole in my golf glove in a couple rounds. Also I always had lead thumb pain if I release the club aggressively.
I checked out the video and realized I play with my lead thumb off to the side of the grip instead of on top. I was able to fix that and get the club more in my fingers; however, I’ve noticed that I feel a LOT of tension in my thumb pad joint (palm side of the snuff box). And after a few of those perpetual swings I start to feel pain/fatigue in that part of my hand. I play with jumbo grips and thought that might be the problem but I even feel it with standard grips. I’ve also experimented with a short vs long lead hand thumb. I don’t know what I’m doing wrong.
Hi Jeremy! You are close! The thumb looks a tad long and the grip does look a tad big; maybe Mid size would be better; My hand is Men’s Large and my grip size is standard plus 4 wraps under. Midsize is too big for me and fatigues the hands. See a couple youtube videos I made for this called “stop letting go of your grip shawn clement” and “stop destroying your golf glove shawn clement” and there is another one that should pop up along the same lines; there is a good acid test with the lead hand in there.
On premium, see the latest off season training series where the first 2 or 3 videos are about “leverage in the grip and release”
Shawn,
As I watched Shav hit the ball left with the face open for the fade and then the amount of face she had overly closed for the draw I could see the contrast. Then when she hit her normal shot I couldn’t tell how much she had her face closed for her normal shot which I assume is a draw. In the next video can you have her show how much she has it closed in relationship to the face being neutral.
Thanks,
I think I am finally getting it.
Mike
Good stuff Mike!
when she had it too closed it was only 10 degrees more than what she uses; that is it for her. For most, it’s 45 degrees more closed for draw and 30 degrees more closed for the fade; yes, you heard those right! 😝👍
Hi Shawn–this is not about the grip, but a question on the video about how to use the site. I couldn’t find a place to comment there. Your work is…excellent–I don’t have enough time to write enough flowery comments right now–but imagine I did, and will later. Here is the question–when you say “find a proper task” I interpret that as meaning find whatever task does the best job for you as an individual in getting you to think about and “feel” the golf swing in the correct way that produces the best results for you. Is that accurate. BTW–just bought a grass whip, I can use one, and looked like a good practice aid!
Awesome William! Yes, that is spot on! My favourites are the “task update” where this can be done with “throwing the club” with the “prediction” that the stem of the dandelion is in the way of that throw which gets ball position, distance to ball, levels, and grip and club face all in line with the task. The videos for that are “task trumps everything”, “Top 3 tasks”, “task update”, “the throwing series”, “the goldielocks series” and then deeper with “pre-motor cortex series” and “target confirmation series”
Take your time, there is so much good stuff to digest and it is a blast to discover!
I can’t tell you how important practicing with “extremes” is. Shawn, you started me on this path years ago, and it’s the single most important thing that hastens my improvement. It enhances awareness of the clubface, of the grip, setup and alignment, and swing mechanics. Every aspect of learning the golf swing can be improved upon and in a shorter period of time using “extremes” (aka “goldilocks”).
Training the brain to “predict” is one of the most underrated topics in golf in my opinion. Through this process I can now slice, push, pull, hook, top, skull, fat, thin, and, yes, even shank, a ball at will. Of course, though this process I can now make the necessary adjustments to hit the correct trajectory as well. And that’s where that flight plan is soooo important. Giving your brain the flight plan helps it to make a prediction much faster and more accurately. The brain compares the flight plan to the reality of the setup and predicts an outcome. Without the flight plan, the prediction works but not nearly as sharply and nor as immediate. But, as this lesson shows, you also have to have those other “feels” in your database to compare against. Those missed feels are so important to the process of predicting.
Thanks again, Shawn, Sav and Mu for another terrific lesson. Keep peeling that onion and talking about the things that others don’t. Cheers!
Man, you guys are on FIRE with these posts; BRILLIANT FEEDBACK MARK! 👌👍💪😀
Your practice sessions must be like mine now, just pure meditations that are relaxing and enjoyable because of the ability to PREDICT. Boom! Mic drop!
I agree with Mark. Goldilocks is a key element in refining the golf swing. Recently the driver has been hitting design draws but sometimes too far left. Ball too far forward. Ball position coming back a tad corrects and nice momentum compression with low effort. With the irons ball too far back produces fat shots- reaching back and ‘ hanging back’ or skulls. Thanks for these sessions.
Instinctively, I’ve known that torquing the body to get power(distance) didn’t make sense. But I kept trying, thinking something was wrong with me.
After watching a number of your videos where you threw the golf ball right with the left hand and left with the right—getting the body out of the way so the arms could swing freely—the light went on. What a difference it makes “tossing” the club on the backswing then on the down/forward swing and naturally turning to keep he arms from hitting the rib cage n both directions. The path HAS to be straight, and the clubhead whips through the hitting area, like it’s soft butter, with so little effort and so much speed and power. THANK YOU!!!!!!
Please come to Arizona to give a clinic during your course snowbound days this winter. Your body will thank you.
I LOVE THESE AHA MOMENTS!! Way to go Charlie! And we are looking forward to coming back down eventually to all my old Hubs in the US after this pandemic is officially over. We just invested in 4 simulators for our winter academy and will be very busy ironing out all the kinks this winter but I think we will be able to finally start traveling with our RV next year and do a huge tour next May and October. Shawn
Brilliant insight behind your Wisdom in Golf approach. Wonderful content. It has made the game much, much more fun, and my handicap is dropping. Often when I do miss a shot, I’ve lost my intermediate point. I don’t play the most lush courses, but often there are no weeds, blemishes, etc. within 2-3 feet in front of the ball. I try to maintain focus on a spot or indistinguishable blade of grass, but apparently my orientation shifts. It is an even larger issue for long putts when I use the intermediate point to line up but then lose it when looking at the flag/hole to confirm distance. Any tips for finding / keeping an intermediate point when no landmarks are present? Keep up the great work. Thanks.
Hey Gary! You bet! Use the practice swing next to the ball to make a couple scuffs back and through to establish a nice arc shape along the grass; then back off and look down the line to see the orientation of the arc and use that to deliver your next arc! See “blur of club” and all the “arc-blur” videos!
Hi Shawn, I have started putting about 60 to 65% weight on the front (left) leg at the address. Then during the backswing, I get to 50-50 weight distribution, and then at impact, my weight is again mainly on the front leg. Is that acceptable? I feel impact is better, but there is some fade, which is likely due to a different reason.
Yes, this is very much how it should happen; I would say 70-30 on the inside of the back leg in the backswing; does not mean a sway by any means; just the weight of the arms and some arm-swing weight; then when the kinetic chain engages in the downswing, the pressure comes right back into and against the lead side. See “kinetic chain series” and “kinetic chain facilitation series”
Hi Shawn,
I caught that with Mu’s first utlra closed face swing. He essentially re-gripped the club. I’ve seen that video somewhere….. 😉 A habit that I had to break also, negating my closed face. Fantastic video. I’ve embraced the “closed face” lifestyle.
Scott
good content thanks. i have been following the videos in sequence and you refer to target, intermediate point, play a fade, or draw. my issue is, at this pint you dont cover these topics and there maybe a missing piece of the puzzle of instruction.
Did you see “fade fine tuning” and “draw fine tuning”
You will find that series like the “consistency series” and the latest one going on now called “unstoppable momentum series” will fit the bill. Keep asking your questions in the comment sections, I am here! 😀👍
Hi Shawn,I follow your model of hunter with a high powered riffle during my stance with weight shifting on the back foot during back swing and then coming forward again at impact. Should I just follow the hunter model here too with the driver?
You bet! We are still bracing that driver against the target but with a different ball position and a bit more tilt to whip the top of the tee on the way up into the picture. See “the throwing series” which shows you throwing all the different lengths of clubs towards the flight plan! 😀👍
I have been doing your grip with the club more in the fingers lead hand and heal pad above the grip. Lately my pinky finger deals like it’s taking too much strain and deals sore or almost strained. Any thoughts, is the club too much in the fingers and the club should be more in contact with the heal pad. Can’t keep doing what I am doing. Glove size XL cadet for reference.
Thanks Shaun
Hi Craig! Definitely not stay at the expense of strain. The key is to feel a SECURE grip and if you applied the walking drill or the “kinetic chain facilitation series” #6 to it, that it would feel great during the whole activity without moving. So worry way less about positioning and way more about the feel of security and compression.
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