You didn't 'over rotate'. You reached wide. Then when you pull across your body it makes the disc to to the right. The reach back position is a mirror of the throw line. Reach back point should be on the throw line.
I picked up the gyro box last year, made most of my money back by selling the discs individually. Can’t say I found a lot of value, which is why I sold a lot of them.
The big thing I notice is that as you plant your heel is contacting the ground first and that makes it basically impossible to plant closed off to the target. Your forefoot behind your big toe should be first to contact and one cue to work on that is to internally rotate your knee in during your final stride. It should feel like your pointing your knee towards the back of the tee pad -- it'll feel very weird if you've never done this. That along with you're standing very upright from the waist down, which makes it so there's not much for your plant leg to push against the ground with to rotate your hip around.
@@micdavey thanks I’ve seen pros do this and I’ve tried to work on it it’s very weird feeling for sure I can do it in practice when I walk through my form but can’t put into practice when speeding up
Just an observation, whether its good or bad I don't know... but it looks awkward... As you move into the throw (pre reach-back), you lean backwards and it appears also toward the camera... and seem to enter the action weighted on the back leg... then lean forward slightly as your pulling the disc through (after reach-back). this may be a good thing.. dunno... just thought it may be worth looking at.
You didn't 'over rotate'.
You reached wide. Then when you pull across your body it makes the disc to to the right.
The reach back position is a mirror of the throw line.
Reach back point should be on the throw line.
I picked up the gyro box last year, made most of my money back by selling the discs individually. Can’t say I found a lot of value, which is why I sold a lot of them.
I’m certainly excited to get the box and see what’s all inside with the 8 mystery discs and give them a toss
Honest input
Simon uploaded a video today showing off a couple of boxes. One of them had an r2 pixel that looked sweet!
@@Stale_Donutz I seen the video right after uploading this and they look pretty sweet, can’t wait to get them in my hands
The eagle thrill
@ I can’t wait to throw it if I get the box it’s in
The big thing I notice is that as you plant your heel is contacting the ground first and that makes it basically impossible to plant closed off to the target. Your forefoot behind your big toe should be first to contact and one cue to work on that is to internally rotate your knee in during your final stride. It should feel like your pointing your knee towards the back of the tee pad -- it'll feel very weird if you've never done this. That along with you're standing very upright from the waist down, which makes it so there's not much for your plant leg to push against the ground with to rotate your hip around.
@@micdavey thanks I’ve seen pros do this and I’ve tried to work on it it’s very weird feeling for sure I can do it in practice when I walk through my form but can’t put into practice when speeding up
@@DiscManiac28 yeah I struggle with it also, especially on the course when my silly little brain is thinking about where I want the disc to go!
@ yea that’s it for sure
Just an observation, whether its good or bad I don't know... but it looks awkward...
As you move into the throw (pre reach-back), you lean backwards and it appears also toward the camera... and seem to enter the action weighted on the back leg...
then lean forward slightly as your pulling the disc through (after reach-back).
this may be a good thing.. dunno... just thought it may be worth looking at.
Maybe frame your shot a little more side view
It's hard to see what you are doing and the disc flight
@@JohnnyFairway definitely a great idea I need to do in future videos