Wisdom in Golf Premium

  • From [email protected] on HIGH SHOTS PREMIUM DANDELION CUTS

    Shawn, great video. Watched a video from you a while back. It’s where you were indoors hitting the ball and then a penny in front with the same swing to ingrain hitting toward target. Do you recall the name of that video.
    Thanks

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    • From Shawn Clement on HIGH SHOTS PREMIUM DANDELION CUTS

      Could be ‘early extension‘ or ‘fishing and golf”

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    • From [email protected] on HIGH SHOTS PREMIUM DANDELION CUTS

      That’s it. Thanks a bunch. I saw a drill to stop early extension. Basically was to use a chair and keep your butt in contact with the chair from back swing to finish. However after studying your teaching this drill is probably not needed if I keep my focus on the correct target (where I wanted to send the ball). I.e. if I do that it’s impossible to early extend. Agree??

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    • From Shawn Clement on HIGH SHOTS PREMIUM DANDELION CUTS

      Exactly! Drills And videos to perform the proper swing without loosing posture: “feet together drill” and “dynamic posture” as well as “ball below feet” uphill shots” and “bolted and centred”
      All on premium!
      Shawn

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  • From [email protected] on Trust Your Swing

    Hi, thank you for your advices. Realy helpful, straigh-forward, simple and insightful.
    As a high handicaper I am facing the following problem and I would like to hear your opinion.
    When I make practice swings everything looks and feels alright. But if I put a ball down, muscles start contracting, body stops turning, hand are rushing and the stoke is poor. It seems like a primal fear of impact. The brain knows that impact with the ball might hurt and it does everything it can to avoid it. No matter how slowly I try to swing, if there is a ball there, I rush it and get out of sync. Do you have any insight on how should this kind of problem (which I am sure many beginners have) may be addresed. Thank you!

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    • From Shawn Clement on Trust Your Swing

      This is where you need to get a good hold of a strong task; see “task trumps everything” and “top 3 tasks” first;

      Then get yourself a grass whip; either a cheap one at home hardware or another company; they sell them online for about 20 dollars; then see “grass whip training series shawn clement” on youtube. You need to feel and see this drill and then the ball will be way easier to do…DO NOT OVERLOOK THIS DRILL!!

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  • From [email protected] on Working the Ball

    Shawn, I think I have full understanding on how to work the ball now, except for one question; when you FADE the ball, during the setup do you get “behind the ball” like you do when you DRAW the ball?
    Thank you, Ron.
    P.S. Your methods support the feels I have when I hit a great shot.

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    • From Shawn Clement on Working the Ball

      Good stuff!
      And no, not like in the draw because in the fade, you are already behind the ball since it is already slightly forward of center. When you play the ball back of center for the draw, you then need to get a bit more behind it. Shawn

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  • From [email protected] on Making Consistent Contact

    Hi shawn, do you close your club face at adress and when you take your grip or do you leave it square?

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    • From Shawn Clement on Making Consistent Contact

      Hi Craig!
      Depends on the shot at hand!
      Bottom line is that when you release in the direction you want to start the ball, that the ball flies and curves the way you want it to; and what you see at address with my set up from the camera point of view looks very different from the point of view of the person holding the club. Lots of perception issues in this game and this is why you always want to do the adjustments DYNAMICALLY.

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  • From [email protected] on PREMIUM WOOD SHAVING FOR TOUGH LIES

    Great video, Shawn. I know the focus was on difficult lies, but I’m thinking the mental image of wood shaving would also work very well for fairway woods on good surfaces. Can’t wait to try my 3 wood!

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  • From Shawn Clement on PREMIUM WOOD SHAVING FOR TOUGH LIES

    Well exactly!! Well done!!

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  • From Tyrone Williams on HIGH SHOTS PREMIUM DANDELION CUTS

    For fairway shots, where is the dandelion stem; below the equator of the ball, at/above the surface of the ground…? Does it matter?

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    • From Shawn Clement on HIGH SHOTS PREMIUM DANDELION CUTS

      You bet it matters! 😀
      Right in the center of the ball at ground level. If you place a ball against a door frame, then in slow motion, try to cut through the stem of the dandelion; you will notice that the ball HAS TO MEET THE FACE of the club BEFORE the stem is cut. Which of course is VERY CONVENIENT!😀👍

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    • From Tyrone Williams on HIGH SHOTS PREMIUM DANDELION CUTS

      Thanks!

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  • From [email protected] on PREMIUM WOOD SHAVING FOR TOUGH LIES

    Well appears the golf season is over in Michigan. Based on your recommendation I bought a set of Super Speed Sticks and plan to do the training program over the winter. I also bought a 2lb hammer and an 8lb sledge hammer. For inside drills with these hammers does it make sense to make mini swings with the (say from 9 o’clock to 3 o’clock with an emphasis on “getting out of the way going back and forward”. Work on that on that drill over summer and don’t want to lose any ground.

    Thanks for all the wonderful instruction. Has really made a difference in my game, still fall back to making the ball my target but making progress.

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  • From Jon R on Backswing Series

    Let’s see if I have this right: Watching the student’s hands I could tell when he hit a good shot because his fingers had ‘levitated’ to the top of the Henderson poster on the wall. (you could hear the difference in the ball compression) Against Bubba’s poster, the top of the student’s head also levitated from Bubba’s mid-section (at address) to above his chin (at the top of the swing). Then it drops back down for contact followed by a similar climb of the head and hands on the follow through.

    So for a complete swing, this means that the orbit of the head is shaped like a ” U “. The bottom of the ” U” on the downswing is a head drop in a natural move to garner ground forces. The old style thinking was to hold the head rock steady. Strictly interpreting that concept messed up a lot of people over the years. I share the fear of the student in reaching for the sky since you feel your head and torso pulling off the ball on the backswing. Getting older I have lost flexibility so I have been fiddling with this to regain some distance. I have been getting mixed results. The ball does go straight with good distance but half the time it is chunky.

    What keeps you from topping the daylights out of the ball or sticking the club straight into the ground? Is the best way to learn this is by incorporating high hands into the perpetual motion drill?

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    • From Shawn Clement on Backswing Series

      Hey Jon! You have the general understanding of how this works; however, you must understand that your fat shots have nothing to do with “the probability of a mistake” as we are not defective machines at all! The original task you hold in your mind just before you swing is the key and of course it must be associated with the proper task or “means by which” you deliver the shot to the target.

      We are actually designed to do what you described beautifully! As “BY LATERAL MACHINES”, we walk this way, swing on a swing this way, ski, skate, you name it; you are made for this! So what you want to focus on is a task to get you through your shot and into the flight plan you determined you need to get to your end target. See “the walking drill” and combine this with “pumping up the swing” and have a blast with the “kinetic chain series” which is a great view.

      Then you can get into the “off season training series” or the “consistency series” for some nice practice.
      Let me know how things go!
      Shawn

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  • From [email protected] on Student Lesson with Ray

    Should the lead elbow bend at top of backswing or should we try to keep it as straight as possible?

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    • From Shawn Clement on Student Lesson with Ray

      Hi Craig!
      You will see as you go along in the videos that the width in the swing is more important and the only way to achieve this width is by getting a nice complete turn in the backswing. The idea is to strive for something that has structure and that does not feel “collapsed”
      This is a major field of expertise for us and the videos you would want to review right here in premium are:
      -Arm swing vs body turn
      -Battering ram
      -Rope drill
      -lead hand release
      -Arm motion fine tuning.
      Then I would do the off season training series for this winter if you are in the north and are being forced to indoor golf. (which by the way can be a big advantage to acquire better swing actions!!)😀👍

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  • From Sam DeDominicis on The Grip - Part 2

    As you say, it’s time to get that grip down pat!

    I notice your trail hand is significantly weaker than mine. Is this closer to where I need to be. I’m thinking a strong right grip promotes a bigger block or pull unless if you really have command of it.

    I’m going through the acid tests all month until I’m confident with your setup, seem ok?

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    • From Shawn Clement on The Grip - Part 2

      Hey Sam! Exactly; use “goldielocks” to your advantage and keep delivering through and out to the picture and observe flights influenced by each grip. Shawn

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    • From Sam DeDominicis on The Grip - Part 2

      Ty, sent you a note for a grip audit. but I understand! No need to reply unless you see a glaring issue.

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  • From [email protected] on Wisdom in Golf 1.0 - Part 3

    I would definitely work on that stinger with the driver ! What a cool and useful shot !

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  • From [email protected] on HOW TO STOP PUSHING WITH RIGHT HAND

    Hi Shawn, I defintely love this double overlap thing. I will try it on the range asap. Besides that I am always amazed to see your precise up and down leg motion and absolutely believe it helps boosting the swing but don’t you think that this precise leg move is maybe too challenging for us mortals?

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    • From Shawn Clement on HOW TO STOP PUSHING WITH RIGHT HAND

      If you have 2 arms and 2 legs and you are insurable, then you are good to go! You are officially superhuman compared to “be careful” and “watch out” and “hold on”!!!
      See “pumping up the swing” video as a nice back up and have fun with the drills!
      Shawn

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  • From [email protected] on HOW TO STOP PUSHING WITH RIGHT HAND

    Shawn I have been using this grip for my putter for a long time now. Would going to this grip as a “specialty” shot, say chipping or to take spin off pitch shots be advantageous? And does the ball position need to change a little bit?

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    • From Shawn Clement on HOW TO STOP PUSHING WITH RIGHT HAND

      Easy to implement on specialty shots; and it always starts with a flight plan!! You will simply need to close the face a bit more for low shots and let the weight flow in the direction of the shot. Enjoy!

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  • From William Crowe on HOW TO STOP PUSHING WITH RIGHT HAND

    Hey Shawn, Have you ever did a follow up video on Matt Wolff? Intriguing young fella

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