| | #1 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2003 Location: .
Posts: 30
| My game has been down the pan over the last few months and long work hours combined with dark afternoons here in the UK means I dont get time to practice. Whilst looking at my swing in a mirror last night I noticed that I hinge my left wrist back during the backswing (i.e. the left palm gets closer to the inside of the left forearm). I guess this is from overdoing the flat left wrist feeling. I take that this is a bad thing but what effects would it cause on the swing ? I'm thinking thin, toey shots and low hooks if decent contact is made ? |
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| | #2 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Oct 2008
Posts: 61
| Quote:
For many years I taught golfers to hinge the right wrist back to a point that the left wrist was bowed a bit. I now know that this is not the best move and using the feel of the club head during the take away, the correct amount of right wrist bend will happen without the added effort to do it. The right wrist bend is a natural movement when feel is in the club head through the hands. | |
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| | #3 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 385
| Quote:
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| MANZELLA GOLF ACADEMY Director of Instruction Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: USA.
Posts: 9,098
| Arching the left wrist NOT for everyone, and 99% of all my students do not have an arched wrist on the backswing. But, it helps some folks who are coming from VERY BENT.
__________________ Use your Pivot to snap your Kinetic Chain, and to assist your arms, hands and club with creating the proper "D" Plane for the selected shot. Everything else is show biz Brian Manzella is a PGA Teaching Professional and Authorized Doctor of Golf Stroke Engineering (Instructor) of The Golfing Machine who teaches in New Orleans, Louisiana and Louisville, Kentucky. |
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| MANZELLA GOLF ACADEMY Director of Instruction Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: USA.
Posts: 9,098
| Just get your left thumb a bit more under at the top, and let your right elbow fly very slightly.
__________________ Use your Pivot to snap your Kinetic Chain, and to assist your arms, hands and club with creating the proper "D" Plane for the selected shot. Everything else is show biz Brian Manzella is a PGA Teaching Professional and Authorized Doctor of Golf Stroke Engineering (Instructor) of The Golfing Machine who teaches in New Orleans, Louisiana and Louisville, Kentucky. |
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