💯. Exactly. The only wrist postion that matters (and it matters tons) is that the trail wrist must be cupped/extended by impact. And this goes for any school you come from (body or hands release). The greatest book I've ever come across on this subject was one by Joe Dante way back in the 60s. In short, like you've laid out here the lead wrist can be flexed or extended, your choice and a byproduct of the trail wrist which absolutely must be extended into impact for proper contact. Oh and also the most common injury in golf is due to this misplaced emphasis on a bowed lead wrist. If your lead wrist happens to bow as a result of your trail properly extending, fine, but do not deliberately put any emphasis on bowing it. Anyway great tutorial, subscribed!
Super explanation. Thank you for clearing this up.
Glad it was helpful!
💯. Exactly. The only wrist postion that matters (and it matters tons) is that the trail wrist must be cupped/extended by impact. And this goes for any school you come from (body or hands release). The greatest book I've ever come across on this subject was one by Joe Dante way back in the 60s. In short, like you've laid out here the lead wrist can be flexed or extended, your choice and a byproduct of the trail wrist which absolutely must be extended into impact for proper contact.
Oh and also the most common injury in golf is due to this misplaced emphasis on a bowed lead wrist. If your lead wrist happens to bow as a result of your trail properly extending, fine, but do not deliberately put any emphasis on bowing it. Anyway great tutorial, subscribed!
Great video, thank you friend
I always wondered how they got into that bowed position at the top. Thanks for the explanation.
My pleasure Ken, thanks for your comment. Is there anything else you’d like to see on the channel?
@GarethWinslowGolf - Yes, for a right-handed golfer, I'd like to see an explanation of where the club should sit in the left hand. Thanks.
@@theunclepatriotHave you seen this video? th-cam.com/video/wXvRmnW44Xg/w-d-xo.htmlsi=3sUOAU3-yY9pOqLn
@@GarethWinslowGolf - This is a great explanation! Thank you!
Bowed left wrist is the most dominant position in golf. Compression guaranteed!