More brilliant info. Just fantastic stuff. A dude in his garage unloading better info than every golf lab combined. Do NOT delete these videos and please repost the pivot video because I think I’ve got this figured out. The pivot compresses as well, into the arm. I think. I can’t thank you enough.
Yes it does. It recruits more efficiently and generates more power than a jump, rocking, sliding, etc. I have to figure out how to explain what the femur and pelvis is really doing in a way that people can understand and actually do it. In person it’s much easier to explain.
Hmm torsion of the right arm towards the ball coming into impact. You are saying that’s the correct action. Ok, it would be great if you could clarify this a bit more for new viewers like myself. It reminds me of a video involving Pete Cowen and Danny Maude, same action but no explanation again as to why one would do it, anyhow thanks for your efforts 👍
You would do it to correctly to add angular momentum, which is done only through stable shape change with mass recruitment. I’ve got a few other video that go into it. Golfers do not conserve angular momentum, they need to increase it. We can’t add to our mass and we can’t use external forces so we are stuck with shape change and mass recruitment behind the change. It’s not a forearm spin, like I think Cowen talks about. Although I think there is intentional omission going on there. It is a business to some.
Would I be right in thinking that your coming into the ball with the heel? face open? . And then you do this move down at the ball? I have had pretty good success coming into the ball with the heel as the club feels like it naturally squares up at impact because of the design of the club. My struggle is hitting thin of the ground due to lack of compression, your explanation of this down move is what I think I’ve been missing. I’m glad I’ve found your videos, thanks for the help. I’ve watched Lee C for a long time but couldn’t really understand him very well. He seems to have deleted all his videos now which is a shame
You’ve got it and it sounds like all you need is that torsion arm for compression. Lee is great. I’m sure he will post again. The problem is trolls who intentionally ruin threads and posts. But Lee knows his stuff and tells the truth. Many others don’t.
Thanks for this. I think I get it... mostly. Now to execute. BTW, I see your video on the artificial green is down. You said it's good in Minnesota winters. It's 95 today. How is it in high heat? Does it get super soft?
It doesn’t change at all and should be good to 150+. A heat gun at 120 didn’t melt it. It’s still raining but it’s hotter today. Last summer it was great and I cleared it in the winter a few times and played it and it played like a summer green. It reacted at -10 like it does at 72. I am going to re-do the video while on the green when it clears up. The tee box has held up and I’m assuming the fairway will as well. I’ve hacked the hell out of the tee box and haven’t damaged it at all.
@@goathumper111we will see how it wears. Even synthetic grass has water retention and that’s the balance. That property needs to show longer term reliability. So we will see…
The shoulder and hand work against each other. Shoulder forward, hand (fingers) pointing to your right (for a righty). Now you have a torsion arm to compress down. Don’t ’swing the arm’, compress it in extension. Try it with short pitch shots first.
It resists but is overpowered and driven around and a bit up. What you don’t do is spin the torso. The harder you drive it down the greater the release. Kick the trail shoulder out and down and the trail hand is wound the other way. Then it reverses into the ball. It’s the opposite of the short chip shot, where you need no power. Torsion is a power move. You have a Torsion Arm in a power move.
Get on a driving range or course setting when making these. Hard to take someone’s opinion when they’re making a video with a low res camera inside of their car stall. Even if it’s the best tip in the world.
Well I am talking to a small group, answering specific questions. Not competing with the popular instructors at all and don’t care to. But I will tell you exactly what’s happening. I won’t say ‘spin your forearm’ (which is nonsense) I will describe exactly what the arm is doing, tell you the degree count of motion and when where and why, usually based on questions. Ask a question and I’ll give you an exact answer. The answer is the same in my garage, taking a shower, mowing my lawn or on a tee box. And No, I won’t do my next video from the shower. 😃
Heady stuff. Love it!
You are bringing so much clarity to things that I was feeling but struggled to explain. Much appreciated.
More brilliant info. Just fantastic stuff. A dude in his garage unloading better info than every golf lab combined. Do NOT delete these videos and please repost the pivot video because I think I’ve got this figured out. The pivot compresses as well, into the arm. I think. I can’t thank you enough.
Yes it does. It recruits more efficiently and generates more power than a jump, rocking, sliding, etc. I have to figure out how to explain what the femur and pelvis is really doing in a way that people can understand and actually do it. In person it’s much easier to explain.
Hmm torsion of the right arm towards the ball coming into impact. You are saying that’s the correct action. Ok, it would be great if you could clarify this a bit more for new viewers like myself.
It reminds me of a video involving Pete Cowen and Danny Maude, same action but no explanation again as to why one would do it, anyhow thanks for your efforts 👍
You would do it to correctly to add angular momentum, which is done only through stable shape change with mass recruitment. I’ve got a few other video that go into it. Golfers do not conserve angular momentum, they need to increase it. We can’t add to our mass and we can’t use external forces so we are stuck with shape change and mass recruitment behind the change. It’s not a forearm spin, like I think Cowen talks about. Although I think there is intentional omission going on there. It is a business to some.
@@frozendivots1564 .. ok thanks for the reply. I’ll be trying this out today
Would I be right in thinking that your coming into the ball with the heel? face open? . And then you do this move down at the ball? I have had pretty good success coming into the ball with the heel as the club feels like it naturally squares up at impact because of the design of the club. My struggle is hitting thin of the ground due to lack of compression, your explanation of this down move is what I think I’ve been missing. I’m glad I’ve found your videos, thanks for the help. I’ve watched Lee C for a long time but couldn’t really understand him very well. He seems to have deleted all his videos now which is a shame
You’ve got it and it sounds like all you need is that torsion arm for compression.
Lee is great. I’m sure he will post again. The problem is trolls who intentionally ruin threads and posts. But Lee knows his stuff and tells the truth. Many others don’t.
Thanks for this. I think I get it... mostly. Now to execute. BTW, I see your video on the artificial green is down. You said it's good in Minnesota winters. It's 95 today. How is it in high heat? Does it get super soft?
It doesn’t change at all and should be good to 150+. A heat gun at 120 didn’t melt it. It’s still raining but it’s hotter today. Last summer it was great and I cleared it in the winter a few times and played it and it played like a summer green. It reacted at -10 like it does at 72. I am going to re-do the video while on the green when it clears up. The tee box has held up and I’m assuming the fairway will as well. I’ve hacked the hell out of the tee box and haven’t damaged it at all.
@@frozendivots1564 Wow. That's impressive.
@@goathumper111we will see how it wears. Even synthetic grass has water retention and that’s the balance. That property needs to show longer term reliability. So we will see…
Which way does the trail arm twist into the ball, as im looking down at my hands my arm is rotating clockwise?
The shoulder and hand work against each other. Shoulder forward, hand (fingers) pointing to your right (for a righty).
Now you have a torsion arm to compress down. Don’t ’swing the arm’, compress it in extension. Try it with short pitch shots first.
When you throw the back shoulder in the downswing to compress the trail arm, does the front shoulder resist or just continues to open?
It resists but is overpowered and driven around and a bit up. What you don’t do is spin the torso. The harder you drive it down the greater the release. Kick the trail shoulder out and down and the trail hand is wound the other way. Then it reverses into the ball.
It’s the opposite of the short chip shot, where you need no power. Torsion is a power move. You have a Torsion Arm in a power move.
@@frozendivots1564thank you
Get on a driving range or course setting when making these. Hard to take someone’s opinion when they’re making a video with a low res camera inside of their car stall. Even if it’s the best tip in the world.
Well I am talking to a small group, answering specific questions. Not competing with the popular instructors at all and don’t care to. But I will tell you exactly what’s happening. I won’t say ‘spin your forearm’ (which is nonsense) I will describe exactly what the arm is doing, tell you the degree count of motion and when where and why, usually based on questions. Ask a question and I’ll give you an exact answer. The answer is the same in my garage, taking a shower, mowing my lawn or on a tee box.
And No, I won’t do my next video from the shower. 😃