George, love your style within these lessons. You do a such a great job of explaining the physics behind ball flight that even I understand it well enough to try and implement these changes in to my swing. Cheers!
Fantastic explanation of the separation George! Is it fair to say that golf club handle movement dictates path and wrist rotation club face/sweet spot? In other words, as the club releases, the club face catches up with the handle on the path chosen, but a bit delayed, just enough of a differential to generate a draw or fade. For me, most shots start straight but eventually hook when I try to draw and slice when I try to fade, that seems a path issue, as you explained (too straight, on target line vs right or left). Please correct me, if I am organizing this wrong in my head. Thank you so much, very helpful videos!
Please, someone educate me, how by hitting the club toe into the ground will eventually represent the club head presenting the sweet spot ? Isn’t the club completely closed thus massive hooks ?
This enables the player to experience rotating the shaft while the clubhead is lagging (lead wrist in flexion) and allowing the clubhead to freewheel. The player then learns how to use vertical ground reaction force to resist the rotation of the clubhead which stabilises the clubhead. You don't keep the clubhead square with your wrists against the force created swinging the club.
@@GRFGolf You dig it into the ground with the wrists, I know, it looks terrible, but from that position try this: bump your hips a bit, the handle will travel forward, hands move in front, the club face is now perfectly square. All happens at the same time in fluid motion. I think Marcus has a video about it.
It is what pro's do just doesn't look like it in this form. If you watch more of the videos you'll understand the application and how its organises into a complete functional pattern.
Ingenious, Coach George!
George, love your style within these lessons. You do a such a great job of explaining the physics behind ball flight that even I understand it well enough to try and implement these changes in to my swing. Cheers!
Well done George, looking forward to you teaching me this in a couple of weeks 🙂
Zen 1 - Golf 0. Brilliant as always.
Finally a decent explanation that makes sense 👍
The toe in the ground is a great tip and not a bad preshot routine (not on the tee box, please). ZEN is the magic pill. 👍👏
Brilliant George, great to see you taking your own lessons now. The knowledge you’ve adopted is impressive ! 💪🏽
Where are these lessons taking place? Something I need in my life!!!
Simply simply lovely !!! ⛳️👍
clever thought processes and images of what is required. i like it
Great stuff, gents.
face sends it, path bends it!
Great video.
Fantastic explanation of the separation George! Is it fair to say that golf club handle movement dictates path and wrist rotation club face/sweet spot? In other words, as the club releases, the club face catches up with the handle on the path chosen, but a bit delayed, just enough of a differential to generate a draw or fade. For me, most shots start straight but eventually hook when I try to draw and slice when I try to fade, that seems a path issue, as you explained (too straight, on target line vs right or left). Please correct me, if I am organizing this wrong in my head. Thank you so much, very helpful videos!
Watch Bryson Dechambeau how to hit driver like him, it's everything Zen golf teaches.
you don’t compress a driver, do you?
Bit dramatic with the music lads 😂
Much sooner as well.....
Please, someone educate me, how by hitting the club toe into the ground will eventually represent the club head presenting the sweet spot ? Isn’t the club completely closed thus massive hooks ?
This enables the player to experience rotating the shaft while the clubhead is lagging (lead wrist in flexion) and allowing the clubhead to freewheel. The player then learns how to use vertical ground reaction force to resist the rotation of the clubhead which stabilises the clubhead. You don't keep the clubhead square with your wrists against the force created swinging the club.
@@GRFGolf You dig it into the ground with the wrists, I know, it looks terrible, but from that position try this: bump your hips a bit, the handle will travel forward, hands move in front, the club face is now perfectly square. All happens at the same time in fluid motion. I think Marcus has a video about it.
this is not what pro’s do. so how do i understand this suggestion?
It is what pro's do just doesn't look like it in this form. If you watch more of the videos you'll understand the application and how its organises into a complete functional pattern.
he is hitting a hook.....