Just watched grip videos 1 and 2. Your examples and explanations are clear and concise. I have a lot of time here at home now and I’m gonna work on all of my fundamentals so when I return to the course, there will be no boogeyman or should I say Bogeyman sneaking into my golf game:p
Shawn,
I’m enjoying all of the premium videos. The language you’re speaking seems to really put things out there in a manner that makes sense. I’m a left handed golfer that’s always been a 0-5 handicap. I did break my right (lead) elbow a year ago and didn’t play much golf last season.
I feel like things are starting to come back. I’m starting to be able to work the ball a little both fade and draw. I just can’t seem to get the clubhead speed or distance back with the driver.
PW is 145-150 carry. Driver is averaging 250 carry with 100-105 clubhead speed on my launch monitor. Contact is nice and consistent and centered.
I’m not sure what I’m missing. I’ve always fought a little bit of a sway in the backswing. Not sure if this is impacting driver speed more than shorter clubs. I also feel like I have a high level of strain to get the clubhead speed up. If I try to swing with minimum effort and high velocity I just can’t get much more than 102 mph.
I’m physically fit, flexible and fairly strong. Just feels like something is missing with getting the pop back.
One thing I see often with the driver is the lack of THROUGH THE BALL focus and attention. Make sure you see “target confirmation series” and the “throwing series” where the driver is the “hammer throw”
The last video we put out on premium ties things together quite nicely with the “tee tips delivery” to the target! Keep me posted!
On my perpetual motion drill, I do not brush the grass as consistently as you do. A little above the grass; a little thick. Not constant. Is this a sign of a larger issue?
Noo!! Not at all!! Did you not know that you ARE NOT DEFECTIVE?! 😀
See “throwing the club” then see “predict contact” and “the goldie locks series”
Then try this drill again! 😀👍
We have it in several of our videos; trying to remember which ones but all our “early extension” videos on youtube Have this drill like this one https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6z3AMO-TeA&t=312s and also see “top 3 tasks” video on premium for the “carrot peel” analogy! 😀👍
Hi Shawn, when I’m out playing on the golf course, competitively in our local comp., I often hit to the left I feel like my top half has gone past my legs. Could you tell me some videos to watch to feel the sensation of staying behind the ball after impact.
Really enjoy all the videos, maybe watch to many to over fill my head!! I think I’m looking for the fix to my golf swing, maybe this or maybe that. Cheers Mandy
Hey Mandy! The best drill for this is the throwing of the club!
See “throw the club” and then see “predict contact” so that the ball does not distract you when throwing!
Deepen this with “target confirmation series” and “pre motor cortex series”
Happy throwing!! Be safe!!
I got an incredible insight. I have to admit; I never thought I had any hang ups about my set up to the ball. My problem? Consistency. Hmmmm. In my swing set up, my shoulders/upper back were highly rounded, like an old man with a cane. Why? It is not comfortable. I stand straight up. Could it be…wait for it….that I am defaulting to the ball? B-I-N-G-O. Enter: ball on a swing and battering ram lessons!!
No, not at all like a driver; the tee height on an iron is almost flush with the ground and the purpose is to give you the perfect lie in the fairway; so you would prepare to collect and release through the dandelion stem exactly the same way as a regular iron shot.
Towards the end of video, you told one (Mo?) that the grip was getting less strong due to improvements from recent drills. Question – does Sav use a very strong grip or does it just look that way on the video?
Yes, Munashe, Mu for short, has been improving his “abandoning to gravity” and his release is getting more efficient. The grip should have a little bit of ebb and flow to it as you react to the ball flight after a nice deep release towards the target.
Savy does not, like most women, have the same muscular density as men, and especially Mu so she simply stays with her very strong grip which suits her so well! We still have to tweak the intensity of it depending on the shot, it is simply on a different part of the scale.
Great video. I want to ask, the ideal golf shot will be on target and right distance. And we get this from square face and flush contact.
When I play, I try to keep my lead wrist flat at the top of the swing as I feel this makes the hands more “quiet” and gives me a better chance for flush contact.
When I do the PWD – I can’t help but feel my wrist cupping at the top.
Should I then do the PWD and keep the wrist consciously flat at the top?
No, feel how natural that wrist hinge is when doing PMD?? Same for grass whipping, axe swinging, baseball swinging, fishing, sword slashing, you name it!! The flat wrist at the top is FAKE CONTROL.
The key after the full load os the full release in the direction you want to start the ball so “lead hand release” and “trail hand release” and next week we use PMD to dial that in so get versed nicely on it this week! 😉😎
“Th re-hinge is what guaranteed that I stayed with the picture”. This is an amazing insight for me, to take off “the ball as a default”. Today during my practice session, I hit 10 drives towards the toe. I watched your YouTube on “Stop toeing your shots” and I know that at some point, I was defaulting to the ball. My last thought was throw the club when I started the back swing. But my mind went blank (overload?) by the time I got to the top. By throwing the club to the re-hinge, I immediately made centre contact. Great stuff!!
That is what staying with the shot means; anchor the brain to a solid task and stay with it till the task is done. Great on you for seeing it through! 💪😀👍
Hi Shawn. I want to make an important observation (for me and maybe those trying to repeat your moves in the downswing) about your motion in this video. Specifically, the downswing part. For me this is critical. I’ve watched ALL your videos. I’ve slowed the slow motion down to the frames! On every video of your downswing to include the ones from this video, you begin AND FINISH the “squat” down, WHILE YOUR CHEST, PELVIS, ARM-CLUB UNIT are still facing backwards or away from the target.! Hence your famous video on Utube of 10+ years ago “Best Downswing Weight Shift” and your comment in that video that, “the weight shift in the downswing happens from “behind you.” No more important words have ever been said in golf instruction IMHO. If people watching this current video are going to get the ground as their chest is “facing” the ball, they are swinging “in front” of themselves and that old video addresses that too. They are “late”. Very late. I know you don’t necessarily break down the swing into frames but to me it helps reveal how these moves feel. Once accomplished correctly it’s not something I need to think about in the swing. While not really the subject of this video, as folks out there are trying to emulate your moves, they might find this observation helpful. Doug D. (6 hdcp have played golf for 50 years.)
Hey Doug – thank you SO MUCH for this post! It’s the missing link that ties together the perpetual motion, kettlebell, weighted ax, elephant walk, etc. drills. I’ve practiced them all and achieved great consistency, but low club-head speeds and 230 yard drives involving high effort. Your visualization really helped me start the kinetic chain correctly. To be honest, it’s a bit uncomfortable to keep my shoulders pointed away from the target while I’m squatting, but it works – I’m hitting my drives 280 yards with ZERO effort, with a MASSIVE whip of the club, powered only by gravity. Yay! Thanks for this forum, Shawn!
Thanks for the observation, DougD and dogfishbird. I’ve been stuck at the 230 yard drive with lots of effort and strain and wear and tear on my body for way too many years.
The walk and cut grass drill, sending divots in the direction of the intended ball flight (Kinetic Chain Facilitation #6) has given me a number of feels for the swing that are novel to me, including the one you note: a squat with back to the target.
I’ll find out soon if I can successfully start to translate these new feels into 280 yard drives :-).
Hi Doug, great comment and totally agree with you. How do you manage to get frame by frame? I have also attempted this but without success. We still can’t play or practise at the club, maybe changing soon here in the U.K. Have a great season and stay safe. Barry
Hi Barry. Well I can’t do frame by frame either but I get the same effect if, during the slow motion Video, I click play and stop very quickly. I just keep doing that in looking at Shawn’s motion. Ha. It’s good enough to see what’s going on there. Doug
Start with the “feet together drill” to feel the swivel of the butt towards the target; then start stepping into “the walking drill”. Both videos are right here in detail on premium.
Thanks Sean, I use both those great drills. I asked the question because this is how my brain works when I’m trying to learn something new, I learn faster when I can analyse the video in real frame by frame. I realise that your frame by frame is unique to you. You recently said that you wish you had Sav’s swing. Yes it looks different but of course it’s not about the look, we are all physiologically different. Take care. Barry
Hey Doug! Thank you for taking the time to write down your experience and feedback; it will no doubt help clear things up with many! Having different ways to drive home the content is very important and I really appreciate you chiming in! 👍😀🤛💪
How do you determine how far out the intermediate point should be. Is it different and determined by club length, or does it not matter? It makes sense that if the intermediate point is too close or a long ways away, the blur pattern will create a different set up (Goldilocks). Please clarify 🙂
When you are playing, tops 1 foot in front of the ball; on par 3s, I often place the tee right at the back of a divot and simply use that divot to confirm my prediction on contact and direction. For the driver, I set up behind a divot and will place the divot to the right or left depending on fade or draw choice. No more than a foot in front of the ball.
In a dynamic sense yes.
The walking drill video on premium has the proper ingredients as to the timing of the weight shift into the backswing and then into the target. See “off season training series” on premium. Videos 7 to 9 have some really good combos of walking the action to target through the ball.
Thank you. You know, every time that I watch a video, I find at least one nugget. A nugget is not a “tip”. “Tips” – I can say almost universally – contain some piece of information about body position to hit the ball. Your nuggets refer to eliminating an incorrect thought pattern to allow the boy to be a ball on a string. Very refreshing, and dare I say, enjoyable. Way to go!!!!
So l played yesterday and one of the things I like to do is replay the round in my head, see where I had trouble, and watch videos that correspond. My course is in the midst of re-doing all of our bunkers and the fairway bunkers now have very soft, deep sand. This video will help as I never would have thought to hit an intentional thin shot. The other caveat is that I wouldn’t be in the fairway bunkers if my driver distance transferred from my irons. I hit my irons longer than most ( 9 iron 145/ 7 iron 175/5 iron 200), but, my driver distance stalls at 270. My clubs are ping as well as the driver all fit at club champion.
From [email protected] on BEGINNER SERIES PART 1-GRIP IT SOLIDLY!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on BEGINNER SERIES PART 1-GRIP IT SOLIDLY!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on DRIVER SENDING TEE TIPS TO TARGET With PMD!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Head and Hip Swivel
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on Head and Hip Swivel
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Ball Position & Distance to Ball
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on Ball Position & Distance to Ball
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Ball Position & Distance to Ball
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on 2 TEE DRILL WITH PERPETUAL MOTION
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on 2 TEE DRILL WITH PERPETUAL MOTION
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Troubleshooting
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on Troubleshooting
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Distance to Ball - Part 2
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on Distance to Ball - Part 2
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Sandy Chan on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Target Focus Confirmation Series
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on Target Focus Confirmation Series
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Whitelock on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Philip Peek on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on PUMP UP THE VOLUME!
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on BLUR OF ARC-IMMOVABLE LOW POINT-UNSTOPPABLE MOMENTUM
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on BLUR OF ARC-IMMOVABLE LOW POINT-UNSTOPPABLE MOMENTUM
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Balance & Center of Gravity
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on Balance & Center of Gravity
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Balance & Center of Gravity
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Balance & Center of Gravity
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on Balance & Center of Gravity
Go to commentFrom [email protected] on Fairway Bunkers
Go to commentFrom Shawn Clement on Fairway Bunkers
Go to comment