START HERE: "Creating Lag in the Downswing Secret" Video

Key component to Jim Hardy’s one plane golf swing


Posted By: Lefty
Subject: Key component to Hardy’s swing
Date Posted: 21 March 2006 at 8:45pm

After a debate on Jim Hardy's website about this, I gave the "hard (body, arms, hands, everything) release" advocated by two Hardy disciples there a shot today. I have to say it's a radically different way to swing from what I had been doing. The key is to keep the clubface pointing at the ball (or, square to the arc) as long as you can on the way back, which naturally slots your elbow back behind you and stretches your front arm across your chest.

You can not rotate the forearms off the ball. I think some days I did this and others I didn't, as I never really thought about it. This no-forearm-rotation point has has been said before, I know, but somehow I guess I missed that lesson. It turns out to be a crucial component of the swing.

This single move gets you to the correct position at the top.

From the top, you turn everything really hard and keep turning. But you don't release the club in the traditional way. This is how you get the feeling Hardy describes of "gator arms", where the back elbow stays against your side but is sort of pulled by your front arm which starts bending across the body as it rotates through the shot.

I've read this plenty of times but I guess I never understood what Hardy was saying. The forearms don't cross over as in a 2PS release. It feels like you're holding on but it delivers the clubface very square. And very powerfully. I can now really see what Hardy means by taking timing out of the equation.

I must caution that I hit a few hooky pulls so I've got to sort it out but the majority of shots I hit today were really powerful and, beyond that, I felt like it was at best a three-quarter swing. I hit a utility 275 and I've never hit that thing more than 250.

Lefty

 

 




Replies:
Posted By: armuge
Date Posted: 21 March 2006 at 10:14pm

Lefty,

Can the shaft not across the target line at the TOP without any rotation of forearm?



Posted By: Lefty
Date Posted: 21 March 2006 at 10:22pm

Armuge,

I wasn't back there looking

That said, I'm sure there was forearm rotation, naturally, as the arms went up and back - ie, the final third of the backswing - I just didn't feel it, or more importantly, try to do it. The key is no concious forearm rotation off the ball. The other thing this does is keeps the clubhead from getting inside the hands. I sometimes got in trouble with having the club too far to the inside and I think now that this was the cause.

Lefty

 



Posted By: armuge
Date Posted: 21 March 2006 at 10:39pm

Thanks Lefty.

I should just forget about how my shaft looks like at the top and keep swinging. When I don't rotate my forearm I feel so powerful at the top and I hit balls very well. Time to time I get some pull shots and I suspecting that it may caused by my top position.



Posted By: timchong
Date Posted: 21 March 2006 at 10:58pm
Originally posted by Lefty

After a debate on Jim Hardy's website about this, I gave the "hard (body, arms, hands, everything) release" advocated by two Hardy disciples there a shot today. I have to say it's a radically different way to swing from what I had been doing. The key is to keep the clubface pointing at the ball (or, square to the arc) as long as you can on the way back, which naturally slots your elbow back behind you and stretches your front arm across your chest.

You can not rotate the forearms off the ball. I think some days I did this and others I didn't, as I never really thought about it. This no-forearm-rotation point has has been said before, I know, but somehow I guess I missed that lesson. It turns out to be a crucial component of the swing.

This single move gets you to the correct position at the top.

From the top, you turn everything really hard and keep turning. But you don't release the club in the traditional way. This is how you get the feeling Hardy describes of "gator arms", where the back elbow stays against your side but is sort of pulled by your front arm which starts bending across the body as it rotates through the shot.

I've read this plenty of times but I guess I never understood what Hardy was saying. The forearms don't cross over as in a 2PS release. It feels like you're holding on but it delivers the clubface very square. And very powerfully. I can now really see what Hardy means by taking timing out of the equation.

I must caution that I hit a few hooky pulls so I've got to sort it out but the majority of shots I hit today were really powerful and, beyond that, I felt like it was at best a three-quarter swing. I hit a utility 275 and I've never hit that thing more than 250.

Lefty

Lefty, are you saying that even though your hands were going off the rear foot on the backswing all this time, you were rotating your forearms away from the ball simultaneously?

If you have been -- YIKES!  If you read Jim Hardy's book, I think you missed a crucial message about where the clubface should be facing during the middle of the backswing (should be closed somewhat).  Forearm rotation DOES happen at the top of the backswing in order to get the club shaft behind your head.  But this occurs nearly when your torso has rotated almost 90 degrees with the hands and club behind the seam of your shirt.

Tim C.



Posted By: bottomsup
Date Posted: 21 March 2006 at 11:23pm
Lefty: Still tinkering?


Posted By: Lefty
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:00am

Hey B-Up,

Apparently, not tinkering enough! Anyway, it's an element of the swing I was already making, so I don't classify that as tinkering (certainly by my historic standards, where each hole could bring a different swing!)

Tim,

I didn't rotate them on purpose but I think it happened from time to time. I certainly never made a point of keeping the clubface square to the arc or keep it pointing at the ball as long as possible. In other words, it probably happened, but this way it seems to guarantee that there's no forearm roll.

More significantly, I know that I was releasing the club on the through swing. This release is different altogether.

Lefty

 

 



Posted By: timchong
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:20am

Lefty,

Well, I think I mentioned it before but I haven't made a conscious effort to swing with gator arms because I didn't want one element of my swing to be more overcooked than the rest.  So.... be careful.

Tim C.



Posted By: dave.
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 2:31am
It may be me,and it probably is,but all he is describing is a one piece takeaway and a full turn,but the key being the downswing is one piece also,hips and arms move togeher,or am i missing something?

what exactly is he saying you should do differently?  I think i do exactly as he says but by accident,i have never worried or thought about rotating forearms,but i full turn is crucial.I came to this site btw because i was struggling with transition,and found the answer,it seems i must have being on a ops by luck!


Posted By: monkeyboy
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 4:00am

I agree with Dave.  Trying to keep the clubface looking at the ball stops the clubhead hopping over the toeline too quickly, something a lot of amateurs do too soon and I'm sure lots and lots of one-plane swingers are prone to do as well. 

Quite often, the start of the backswing is a turn and a swing of the arms inside, instead of waiting for the turn to bring the club inside when it's good and ready.

A full turn from here will feel like a 3/4 swing because, although you've made your full turn, you've made a shorter arm swing.  (May also feel that your arm stays straight for longer into the backswing.)

From here you can turn hard at the ball without worrying about having to add anything with the hands and arms because they haven't adding anything going back, haven't manipulated the clubface.  No action, no reaction.

 



Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 7:02am
The backswing side of the "allegator arms" swing is actually just a way to keep the clubface square to the arc as it goes to the top.  In fact, it may actually be slightly closed to the arc early in the takeaway, ala Jim Flick's old "square to square" theory. 

On the target side of the ball, the "allegator arms" swing is very different.  The idea is to pull the left arm back from the target line immediately after impact, not allowing the right arm to cross over the left as the swing continues up the plane to the finish.   The motion of the right arm was described as "chasing the left arm" around to the finish of the swing".

I commented in the thread on Hardy's site that this seems quite different than what Hardy wrote about the release in "The Plane Truth", where he said the left arm rotates and the right arm releases, and you can do this as hard as you want so long as you keep turning hard to the left (pg. 85).  it seems to me if you rotate the left arm and release the right arm through impact, the right arm is going to cross over the left very soon after impact. 

But now, apparently Hardy is saying he wants the left arm folding and retracting to the left immediately after impact and the right arm chasing it up to the finish with no crossover.  This is the feeling of "allegator arms".  There is no straightening of the arms on the target side.  They fold very quickly.  The club comes quickly around to the left.  The finish is very flat.  The right arm is almost horizontal with the ground, similar to the look of Justin Leonard's follow-through.

At least, that's my interpretation of what Hardy is saying.  If you're familiar with Hardy's idea of the "inner circle" (the arc the hands travel around the body to make an in-to-in path at the clubhead), think of that, but think of it as being very tight around the body -- tighter on the target side of the ball than I ever imagined it to be.

I haven't tried hitting shots with "allegator arms", but I have made swings in the house with this exaggerated retraction of the left arm and no crossover of the right arm over left through impact.  To me, in this admittedly limited test, it feels like "sawing off" the follow-through because the right arm doesn't straighten or extend.  It also feels like intentionally holding off the hands through the impact zone.   There is no free rotation of the clubhead through impact in relation to the target line.  It almost feels like chicken-winging the left arm and scooping the ball in the air.  It isn't about passive arms and hands or a centrifugal release.  If anything, I would call it restraining the arms and blocking the hands while making a very tight, total body release.

I don't want to pre-judge it without trying it on the range, but it seems quite radical to me at this point.  Maybe my interpretation is wrong, but I don't think so.
 


Posted By: hayes959
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 9:11am

I posted this yesterday, in another thread.

"Byron Nelson, when talking about the discoveries that helped his game, made some comments that you will find interesting and helpful.

He talked about seeing pictures of leading amateur and professional golfers of his day "Rolling their writsts" as the swing nears the ball--as a result of a series of experiments, he found that when he did not roll his wrists, and just let  them stay in place for "about thirty inches before impact and through the early stages of the folow through," he increased his accuracy."

I didn't get it several years ago, while taking a couple of lessons, but the instructor was teaching this hard rotation left, holding off the rotation of the forearms.  The clubface was facing skyward after impact well into the followthrough.  Looking back, a lot of what he was trying to teach was one plane principles, but he didn't teach it that way.



Posted By: Lefty
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 10:26am

As always, Uno's on the money.

It's very different, let me say again, from the "traditional" way I had been releasing the club (and I doubt I kept it that closed going back, either, though of that I'm not sure because I never thought about it).

I now understand why Hardy says you can turn as hard as you want. I had been thinking of passive hands v active hands in terms of their rotation and movement. Actually, the hands are only holding the grip, but they are holding on quite firmly and not really turning at all, that's the difference, hence are "active". As Uno noted, the forearms do not crossover, which is definitely weird to me.

It is a body release because the body sort of "shoves" the clubhead into the ball with the arms feeling like they haven't changed their relationship to one another from address, if you get that visual. The clubface also stays square (which took me some time - and a few hooks - to trust).

The oddest thing is the alligator arms just sort of happen. I didn't really try to finish like that but I felt the sensation of two "short arms" around impact, the back arm chasing the front arm.

Lefty

Hayes, I think Byron was onto something

Tim, I don't think it's possible to overcook this one.



Posted By: dave.
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 10:47am
to me,everything is moving to fast into impact and beyond to have any control over it,I certainly can' imgaing trying to control anything that happens below waste height,or as Nelson said,about 30 inches from impact.I don't roll anything,just let it rip through.I agree he was onto something,why would you deliberately roll your arms and rotate anything that doesn't want to rotate naturally?


Posted By: Lefty
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 10:51am

That's what I'm saying, Dave, I've always felt it DOES want to rotate naturally (ie, the forearms). Hence, you have to not do it and just "hold on". I don't mean "hold back", I mean "hold on".

If you get the feeling of the traditional golf swing release as clearing the trailing side, this is nothing like that. This is smothering the ball with your trailing side.

If you want to get the feel of it, set up slightly closed with your feet to the target and slightly open with your shoulders.

Lefty

 



Posted By: bottomsup
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:03am
Lefty, oneplane: looking back on my swing that I posted, was I not trying to accomplish what you're talking about? Or am I reading it wrong? I try to roll my wrists as little as humanly possible as I always felt the club stayed more square to the ball through the hitting zone. Of course, it may be just a result of my grip? The chicken or the egg....


Posted By: 55Preakness
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:03am

Lefty,

I am a tad confused. I have read Hardy's book several times and do not remember reading anywhere to keep the face closed/facing the ball.  Maybe I was too excited about how much my swing would improve by buying his book.

I have read this post three times an still am confused on the backswing?  And at the top, by that I mean the forearms never rotate at the top or is it just a natural event?



Posted By: Lefty
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:31am

B-up,

I'm visualizing your swing but it's hard to know. I would say, though, that if you did it this way, you'd compress the bejesus out of the ball and you'd be hitting it longer than ever.

55,

The clubface is actually closed at waist high if you keep it facing the ball - or, as Hardy says, square to the arc (same thing). From there, you do the lawnmower move and the forearms naturally rotate nearer the top. But you don't rotate them early. Again, I probably didn't do this but I certainly didn't guarantee not doing it before. This takeaway, with the hands not rolling at all but moving over the back foot, keeps the clubhead outside the hands and, when you pull the lawnmower chord after that, it sets the club perfectly at the top (ie, don't worry about your forearms in the second part of the backswing).

Get the idea that the positional relationship you establish between the forearms at address really doesn't alter much throughout the entire swing.

Also, another way to look at it is that the back forearm (for me , my left) stays above - ie, doesn't go underneath - the front forearm.

Lefty

  



Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:36am
Isn't this the approach that Leadbetter was teaching 15 years ago? I seem to remember that from his book that I have.  Take it back to waist high then to straight up.  Or am I completely off in my interpretation of what is being said.

Also, if I try to retract my left arm after impact won't I actually increase the tension in that arm well before that point and hence increase tension in my overall swing?


Posted By: 55Preakness
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:38am

Lefty,

Thanks that helps.  When I stand upright and do the baseball swing it looks like you are describing. I guess I never noticed it from that perspective (baseball swing).  Why would I have paid attention to the club position in a drill .

It will take some experimentation but I will try it and re-read your posts on the downswing again.



Posted By: Lefty
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:47am

Fly,

The approach Leadbetter was teaching 15 years ago??? I dunno what he was teaching 15 minutes ago but I'm guessing it's changed. I'm sure he's touched all the bases.

Anyway, I can't imagine it's the same thing. Simply, you just keep the clubface pointing at the ball as long as you can and pull the lawnmower chord. Where things get different is on the way down. You turn hard but dont let your arms release, as you would in a normal swing. You keep them close and you don't let the forearms crossover. You still turn hard and do all those other things but the forearms stay fairly well where they were in relation to one another.

I want to say that I'm sure lots of other people already know/do this. I'm merely saying I wasn't. I have been releasing in th traditional way.

I also want to say, as I say in jricci's thread, that this ain't the low maintenance "turn-turn" swing. I really think it's something I have to practice.

And, 55, yeah, I had the same ironic laugh when I realized that it is the baseball swing!

I guess I'm just a slow learner ...

Lefty

 



Posted By: timchong
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:50am

Look like alligator arms according to this picture:

http://www.golfdigest.com/instruction/index.ssf?/instruction/gd200505swingplane5.html - http://www.golfdigest.com/instruction/index.ssf?/instruction /gd200505swingplane5.html

Also, see how the hands and club pointing near his right hip at waist high -- evidence that he is taking the club back DEEP without premature forearm rotation off the ball.  If there was forearm rotation, the clubhead would be near facing to the sky and result too flat of a backswing.  From that point on, the arms work UP to match the shoulder plane.

Have you guys been doing this lately? 

Tim C.

 



Posted By: striker
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:53am
Just wondering, how much does the grip effect this  discussion, ie weak or strong?


Posted By: timchong
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:54am
Originally posted by 55Preakness

Lefty,

Thanks that helps.  When I stand upright and do the baseball swing it looks like you are describing. I guess I never noticed it from that perspective (baseball swing).  Why would I have paid attention to the club position in a drill .

It will take some experimentation but I will try it and re-read your posts on the downswing again.

55, please don't take it the wrong way when I ask you this quesiton.  For the sake of everyone knowing the proper technique.

How do you do the baseball backswing while standing up?  Where are your hands positioned at address, and where is the clubhead?

Tim C.



Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:58am
I'll look at my book tonight but based on tc's description and the pictures in the post it reminds me a lot of Leadbetter's teachings.


Posted By: 55Preakness
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 11:58am

Lefty,

That makes two of us that are slow learners.  Also I don't think I can accurately explain the lawnmower move?

Could you explain it to me? Or direct me to a picture?



Posted By: hayes959
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:04pm
I believe that if you consciously do nothing with the forearms, due to the movement of the left shoudler joint during the backswing, the forearms naturally rotate, and at the top of the backswing the left hand faces down, and the right hand faces up.  Just a reverse natural movement of the forearms through impact during the downswing.


Posted By: 55Preakness
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:05pm
Originally posted by timchong

Originally posted by 55Preakness

Lefty,

Thanks that helps.  When I stand upright and do the baseball swing it looks like you are describing. I guess I never noticed it from that perspective (baseball swing).  Why would I have paid attention to the club position in a drill .

It will take some experimentation but I will try it and re-read your posts on the downswing again.

55, please don't take it the wrong way when I ask you this quesiton.  For the sake of everyone knowing the proper technique.

How do you do the baseball backswing while standing up?  Where are your hands positioned at address, and where is the clubhead?

Tim C.

TC-

Not sure I am proper but my arms are at a little less than parallel to the ground with the club in my hands. Face is pointing straight up at the sky. Hands are pointed straight out like I was at address holding the club.  I may not be explaining it well but I try to mimick the drill in the DVD.  When I don't pay attention and just swing with my core the clubhead moves straight back to the arc in the takeaway or backswing.  I don't roll my forearms when I do this but I do think I roll them on the bs and I also think I roll them on the release.  Not sure that helps and don't worry I take very little the wrong way.



Posted By: Billy
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:09pm
Originally posted by Lefty

You turn hard but dont let your arms release, as you would in a normal swing. You keep them close and you don't let the forearms crossover. You still turn hard and do all those other things but the forearms stay fairly well where they were in relation to one another.



Lefty, I'm trying to get the visual and feel of what you're describing.  Is the follow-through similar to what Snead described when he said "I really had both lawnmowers working today"?


Posted By: 55Preakness
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:11pm

Theres that lawnmover thing again.

Just don't get that.



Posted By: Lefty
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:17pm

55,

If you were starting a lawnmower - the old school ones - you have to give that chord a good zip (or a chainsaw would be the same, I guess, though I'm no lumberjack!).

So it's the feeling of pulling on it to get the thing started.

Billy, I wouldn't say it's Snead's two lawnmowers. More so you are smothering the ball with your trailing shoulder while your hands are near your thigh. You'll feel a little chicken winged. This all hinges on no crossover of the arms. If you get that - turning just as you are at the top of the backswing - you've got it.

Striker, I have a fairly neutral grip, maybe a touch strong but hardly. I hold the club as if I'm holding a hammer. Good visual for me.

Lefty

 



Posted By: timchong
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:28pm
Originally posted by 55Preakness

Originally posted by timchong

Originally posted by 55Preakness

Lefty,

Thanks that helps.  When I stand upright and do the baseball swing it looks like you are describing. I guess I never noticed it from that perspective (baseball swing).  Why would I have paid attention to the club position in a drill .

It will take some experimentation but I will try it and re-read your posts on the downswing again.

55, please don't take it the wrong way when I ask you this quesiton.  For the sake of everyone knowing the proper technique.

How do you do the baseball backswing while standing up?  Where are your hands positioned at address, and where is the clubhead?

Tim C.

TC-

Not sure I am proper but my arms are at a little less than parallel to the ground with the club in my hands. Face is pointing straight up at the sky. Hands are pointed straight out like I was at address holding the club.  I may not be explaining it well but I try to mimick the drill in the DVD.  When I don't pay attention and just swing with my core the clubhead moves straight back to the arc in the takeaway or backswing.  I don't roll my forearms when I do this but I do think I roll them on the bs and I also think I roll them on the release.  Not sure that helps and don't worry I take very little the wrong way.

 

55, read my older post in this link, 3rd post down from the top: http://www.oneplanegolfswing.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=1984&KW=timchong&TPN=2 - http://www.oneplanegolfswing.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=1 984&KW=timchong&TPN=2

Is your baseball drill somewhat similar to what I do?

Tim C.



Posted By: bottomsup
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:46pm
lefty: well, I'm driving close to 250yds where I use to hit it about 225. I think a large part of that is the body rotation around a center with no swaying. To me the lack of forearm rotation helps me hit it in the fairway and hit more greens in regulation. The club face spends more time in a square position through the impact zone.


Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 12:47pm
striker brings up a good point.  If you get a correct grip on the club and you have a correct setup you would naturally place the club in the correct positions on the backswing.  Trying to purposely put it into the positions Hardy describes just seems overly rigid to me. If I try to put the club in specific positions I feel like I am taking away from any natural flow in the golf swing.  I also don't like the idea of pushing the club back to a specific position then lifting my arms to get them into the position I want at the top of the backswing. It seems to me that it should flow back to the top of the backswing.


Posted By: timchong
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 1:30pm

Maybe Hardy was onto something after all.  Re: no forearm crossover

 

Ben Hogan 



Posted By: 55Preakness
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 1:36pm

TC,

Yes that drill and you explained it much better than I did.

I just did not realize it.



Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 1:37pm
Interesting picture.  I wonder if any of Hardy's commentary has anything to do with fighting a hook using the swing.  We all know Hogan fought one.


Posted By: mikec
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 1:39pm
Would somebody just go oustide and try Hogan's drill in his book regarding the body and arms/hands. Feel like your arms are strapped as tight as possible to your chest and even make the arms rigid. Then swing halfway back turning the body, then turn the body through. Back and forth, back and forth as he says. 

Bend over as much as you like, widen your stance as much as you like, put your hands wherever you want to, just  keep your posture back and through.

The body controls, the hands/arms lag, crossover happens when it happens. It's like fly states, which I like:    

"If I try to put the club in specific positions I feel like I am taking away from any natural flow in the golf swing.  I also don't like the idea of pushing the club back to a specific position then lifting my arms to get them into the position I want at the top of the backswing. It seems to me that it should flow back to the top of the backswing."


Posted By: timchong
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 1:45pm

Flyfishin,

I think I am beginning to grasp the concept.  If the body doesn't fully rotate through to the finish form like Ben Hogan in the picture, the arms would either be crossing over a-la 2 plane OR, with the gator arms, the leading arm would be chicken-winged.

I guess it's ok to show a bit of a chicken wing as long as you rotate through well past the impact zone.  Shrugs.

Tim C.



Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 1:51pm
That's funny is I just looked at my avatar and it doesn't look like I cross over. I never looked at that before.  I figured once I hit the ball who cares what I do.   I guarantee it isn't something I try to do.  I think you are right tc, you just keep rotating the body through impact and it will occur.


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 2:36pm
Originally posted by bottomsup

Lefty, oneplane: looking back on my swing that I posted, was I not trying to accomplish what you're talking about? Or am I reading it wrong? I try to roll my wrists as little as humanly possible as I always felt the club stayed more square to the ball through the hitting zone. Of course, it may be just a result of my grip? The chicken or the egg....


Yes, Bottoms, that's exactly what you do.  You block your hands through impact.  With your strong grip, you would snipe the ball hard left if you released your right arm over your left arm.

 


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 2:50pm
Originally posted by 55Preakness

Lefty,

I am a tad confused. I have read Hardy's book several times and do not remember reading anywhere to keep the face closed/facing the ball.  Maybe I was too excited about how much my swing would improve by buying his book.

I have read this post three times an still am confused on the backswing?  And at the top, by that I mean the forearms never rotate at the top or is it just a natural event?



55, the forearms appear to rotate with respect to the target line because the golf swing is from the side of the ball on an inclined plane.  In this case, the rotation or lack of it is with respect to the inclined plane of the swing.   If you do nothing with your arms but let them go along with the rotation of the body, the clubface will always be square to the plane, although it will open and close to the target line.

 


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 2:57pm
Originally posted by flyfishin

Isn't this the approach that Leadbetter was teaching 15 years ago? I seem to remember that from his book that I have.  Take it back to waist high then to straight up.  Or am I completely off in my interpretation of what is being said.

Also, if I try to retract my left arm after impact won't I actually increase the tension in that arm well before that point and hence increase tension in my overall swing?


Your recollection is correct, Fly.  Leadbetter in those days wanted the shaft very steep in the last half of the backswing and then shallowed out coming down.

Re tension in your left arm, it might increase until you groove the move.

I'm still trying to decide whether I like the move.  It has some attractions, but I'm bothered by the idea of no crossover.  Crossover rotates the shaft and hence the clubface.  If you rotate the clubface open going back, as I think most of us do, then this allegator arms thing isn't going to work.  So, the first step if you're going to do it is to eliminate opening the clubface going back.  That might be a good thing actually, but will you lose toe speed at impact and hence not get full leverage out of the club?

 


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:04pm
Originally posted by flyfishin

I'll look at my book tonight but based on tc's description and the pictures in the post it reminds me a lot of Leadbetter's teachings.


But I don't think Hardy would say that the shaft should go up vertically from there.  He wants it slightly laid off rather than directly down the parallel left line.

I don't remember Hardy saying anything about keeping the face looking at the ball in the first half of the backswing in "The Plane Truth".  Maybe he said it on his forum and I just missed it.

 


Posted By: dave.
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:04pm
If you lose toe speed,how will you know?  It would be impossible to analyse,therefore its a worthless concept.Leadbetter wanted an early wrist set because he believed it was easier to complete a full shoulder turn,unless I've misunderstood him.But he didn't really place much emphasis on the forearms,on rotation,although he mentioned it when referring to Faldos move,his emphasis was on the wrist set.I do agree that there is far to much talk about this here,there is a fascination with forearms.aliigatros,passive arms etc etc, and I have never even considered what my arms do.I keep my arms nipped in but not tense and then turn,I do nothing else and think of nothing else.The focus is on the grip,alignment and posture,then tempo and rythym.


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:11pm
Originally posted by hayes959

I believe that if you consciously do nothing with the forearms, due to the movement of the left shoudler joint during the backswing, the forearms naturally rotate, and at the top of the backswing the left hand faces down, and the right hand faces up.  Just a reverse natural movement of the forearms through impact during the downswing.


That's where the rub comes in, Hayes.  If you rotate the forearms going back with respect to the inclined plane of the swing, the clubface is open at the top.  Therefore, the forearms must counter-rotate in order to get the clubface back to square when the ball separates.  If you do that, you're right arm is going to cross over the left.  But the "allegator arms" swing calls for no crossover.  To do it, you'd definitely have to keep the clubface square to the inclined plane going back and swinging through.  I'm not saying it's wrong, but there is that caveat that the clubface be very square to the plane during the backswing.

 


Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:11pm
I think if you get your grip and address positions correct you will achieve the positions of keeping the clubhead outside the hands on the backswing without trying to put them into position.  With a weaker grip you would tend to fan the club more open on the backswing.  


Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:13pm
Originally posted by dave.

The focus is on the grip,alignment and posture,then tempo and rythym.





Posted By: Lefty
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:20pm

No question, you can not rotate the forearms at all going back (until they naturally do in the final third of the backswing). Disastrous things happen with this if you get too inside.

Uno, it's a powerful swing but very different feeling. It's like you're driving into the ball with the body. Though as I say, I've got to try it again and again and groove it (I released the forearms a few times yesterday and really bad things happen).

Fly, if you set up closed with your feet but a little open with the shoulders and let your right forearm stay above your left one, you'll get the idea.

Lefty

 

 



Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:24pm
Lefty, I'll leave the experimenting to you.  I'm going to go sit in dave.'s corner.


Posted By: dave.
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:31pm
I just genuinely believe the arms just need to be put in place at address,nothing more.Just let them hang loose,but not floopy,with the biceps 'nipped in'.Thats it.the torso and arms will move back together and you won't have any feeling of rotation,its just not a required move and not something you need to consider,the right posture,grip and overall set-up will do the work for you.Imho,if the arms are so important to you chances are something else is wrong with the set-up.


Posted By: 55Preakness
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:33pm

What great feedback from one post on this site.

I don't mean to speak for Lefty but I will speak for me.  I think that some of the more veteran OPS'ers may be doing this "forearm, club square to the arc thing" naturally.  I agree with Lefty that it may happen for me sometimes, but not all the time.  I know that I definatley cross the arms over each other either right at impact or shortly after it.  I have hit those pulls to the left as well not knowing why, now I might have an idea of what causes it. For me, Lefties post was more of a cue for him and maybe for me.  I have read on this site of a "bump" or a trigger to the left or to initiate the downswing.  I have not needed a trigger or bump to start the downswing.  That does not mean I don't use one, I just never paid attention to it.  So for me and maybe Lefty he has found a fault in his swing and a potential "trigger" that others may have naturally.



Posted By: 55Preakness
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:41pm

Dave,

I would also agree that it could definately be a flaw in my setup.

I'm the guy that can't figure out the "lawnmower" move.

 



Posted By: RickyHarris
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 3:47pm
Just feel like you get into a chicken wing position on purpose!


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 4:08pm
Originally posted by dave.

If you lose toe speed,how will you know?  It would be impossible to analyse,therefore its a worthless concept.


Not so, Dave.  This will seem a little off topic, but it relates to the idea of no crossover.  Crossover rotates the shaft and hence the clubface as it passes through the ball.  This is why I haven't yet warmed up to the idea of the "allegator arms" release.  No crossover=no face rotation.  But I'm beginning to get a glimmer of how Hardy is saying the clubface is rotated in the "allegaor arms" release.  He does it with palmar flexion of the right wrist.  I think the TGM guys call this "angled hinging" or something like that.

Toe speed realtive to heel speed affects the flight of every shot.  A golf club is a two-levered implement.  It is swung in a circle from the side of the ball.  Because the clubhead extends outward from the shaft, the toe travels at a different rate of speed (hopefull faster) than the heel as the club passes through impact. 

It's very easy to analyze toe speed by the rules of ball flight.  For example, if the ball starts right but curves right, two things happened.  The face was looking right when the ball separated, and the toe was not rotating fast enough to offset the slice spin imparted by the open face.  If the ball starts right and curves back to the left in the air, the face was looking right at separation, but the toe was traveling fast enough to overcome the slice spin with hook spin.  The flight of every shot can be analyzed in terms of clubface rotation or toe speed relative to heel speed.

I know.  Thinking about all this crap could drive you nuts.  I'm not saying you should think about your toe speed, but it is definitely central to the dynamics of impact and ball flight.


 


Posted By: flyfishin
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 4:16pm
OP, I grew up hearing this information regarding ball flight.  A right to right flight pattern meant your club head was traveling on an in to out path, relative to your target, and the club face was open relative to that target line.  Hence the right to right.  On a right to left shot your club head was traveling in to out but the club face was either sqare to or closed to the target line.  Flight path was all based on club path at impact and squareness to target line at impact. Are you essentially saying the same thing and I'm just too dense to notice it?


Posted By: Knock It Stiff
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 4:26pm

I don't like to speak for anybody, but I will try anyway  I think what OP is saying is that ball flight is the final determinant as to whether you made a good swing or not.  Ball flight has to do with one thing--where was the club at impact and at the flash instant of time that the ball separated from the club face.  I believe it was in GD last month where John Jacobs said he could easily tell a golfer what the clubface was doing at impact by watching the ball flight of that particular shot.

Impact is the true moment of truth in the golf swing.  The ball only knows what the club is doing during the swing during the few inches of the impact zone. 

 



Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 4:48pm
Originally posted by flyfishin

OP, I grew up hearing this information regarding ball flight.  A right to right flight pattern meant your club head was traveling on an in to out path, relative to your target, and the club face was open relative to that target line.  Hence the right to right.  On a right to left shot your club head was traveling in to out but the club face was either sqare to or closed to the target line.  Flight path was all based on club path at impact and squareness to target line at impact. Are you essentially saying the same thing and I'm just too dense to notice it?


Close, but not quite saying the same thing, Fly.  I'm adding another dynamic to what you've written above, namely face rotation.  How would path and clubface position at separation explain the shot that starts right and draws back to the target, but the divot points left?  The divot indicates that the path at separation was either on the line or turning to the inside.  How did the ball start to the right?  Because the clubface was looking in that direction when the ball separated.  How did the ball curve back to the left when the open face imparted slice spin?  Because the toe was rotating around the heel applying more hook spin than the slice spin imparted by the open face.  The hook spin was greater than the slice spin.  Hence the ball drew back to the left after starting right.

I wish I could hit that shot every time.  It's so pretty. 

 


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 4:51pm
Originally posted by Knock It Stiff

I don't like to speak for anybody, but I will try anyway  I think what OP is saying is that ball flight is the final determinant as to whether you made a good swing or not.  Ball flight has to do with one thing--where was the club at impact and at the flash instant of time that the ball separated from the club face.  I believe it was in GD last month where John Jacobs said he could easily tell a golfer what the clubface was doing at impact by watching the ball flight of that particular shot.

Impact is the true moment of truth in the golf swing.  The ball only knows what the club is doing during the swing during the few inches of the impact zone. 

 



I totally agree, Knock. 

 


Posted By: Nayra
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 4:53pm
Oneplaner: I'm having trouble understanding how what Lefty is describing differs from how you would normally swing (I thought I had it, but 6 pages later and I'm lost!).  I think I understand the backswing issues, but on the forward swing I visualize what Lefty/Hardy are describing as having the forward upper arm tucked up into the front side through impact while the both foreams are flung to the left by the force of the turn.  I hate to beat a dead (and very long) horse, but is that correct?  If so, how is your forward swing different? 


Posted By: Clubcaster
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 4:53pm
I haven't read through this thread very carefully because this isn't something I want to worry about at the moment.  But this alligator arms thing just sounds like a more complicated version of what Chuck talks about in his "Divots Left / Tee Drill", is it not?


Posted By: mikec
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 5:08pm
Anybody like Hogan's drill?


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 5:48pm
Originally posted by Nayra

Oneplaner: I'm having trouble understanding how what Lefty is describing differs from how you would normally swing (I thought I had it, but 6 pages later and I'm lost!).  I think I understand the backswing issues, but on the forward swing I visualize what Lefty/Hardy are describing as having the forward upper arm tucked up into the front side through impact while the both foreams are flung to the left by the force of the turn.  I hate to beat a dead (and very long) horse, but is that correct?  If so, how is your forward swing different? 


Nayra,

What Lefty and Hardy are talking about is pulling or folding the left arm back from the target line immediately after impact and "chasing" it up to the finish with the right arm.  In doing this, the right arm does not cross over the left arm as it does in a more traditional release.  As I'm beginning to understand it. the action of the left arm on the target side of the ball mirrors the action of the right arm on the backswing side of the ball.  You "pull the cord" going back, and you "pull the cord" going through.  One way to think about it is that the two sides of the swing are nearly symetrical, especailly in the action of the arms.   The clubface must be square to the arc at all times, and the thrust of the swing comes purely from rotating the body hard to the left through the ball.


 


Posted By: One Planer
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 5:58pm
Originally posted by Clubcaster

I haven't read through this thread very carefully because this isn't something I want to worry about at the moment.  But this alligator arms thing just sounds like a more complicated version of what Chuck talks about in his "Divots Left / Tee Drill", is it not?


It's very similar, Club, but the left arm folds at the elbow and pulls back from the target line sooner than I think Chuck would have it do.  Also, I don't think it can be termed a passive or centrifugal release in the same sense as Chuck uses the term.

I wonder what Chuck thinks of this discussion. 

 


Posted By: Nayra
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 6:06pm
Thanks OnePlaner - that makes this whole discussion clearer (and I agree, I'd like to hear from Mr. Q).


Posted By: armuge
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 7:53pm

Try not to turn your shoulders as you across your left arm around your chest and folding right elbow back and up. This will give you better feeling to understand what JH's talking. It's just like baseball swing. I didn't understand why OP swing is wide swing naturally until I realised that how much club head moves by just moving my arms across my chest without any movement of shoulders.  When I try to replicate same feeling over my much bended spine, I think I understand what JH and Lefty are talking about. The execution of JH OP swing feel totally different from how I used to swing. I'm so happy to find a swing which does not require to roll my hands over through impact area.



Posted By: 01ragtop
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 8:04pm

Reading the posts in this topic, I have found many things that I have struggled with in the past. 

As some of you know, I had/have problems with the passive hands idea.  I had very little rotation because of this "passive" arms idea, and struggled with a slice.  I used a very strong grip just to hit my short irons straight, but the longer clubs were hopeless.  Finally, I was talked in to using a weaker more neutral grip by Hayes959. (thank you to him BTW) Using the weaker grip I rotated my arms through the back-swing, and allowed them to rotate back through on the downswing.  This however introduces an element of timing. 

While reading on another website, I ran across the idea of using a weak grip(hogan weak) and making sure your left wrist is flat at impact. (some of you know what I was reading, nowWink)  By using this method I was able to eliminate the timing equation.  You, of course, have to watch for an early release, but as long as you keep that flat left wrist at impact, using a weaker grip, you are guaranteed to have a square club-face.  Why?  Because the Club-face matches the back of the left wrist at every part of the swing.  The arms do not roll over each other at impact, (Not a release) the right arm is slightly bent, but straightening, the left wrist flat, the right wrist is bent, hands are in front of the club-head.(The hands are in a very similar position at impact, as they are at the top of the back-swing, therefore, if the hands don't have to move much, then the timing is almost eliminated)

For those who like the idea Lefty has mentioned about very little initial rotation, you may have to play a stronger grip.   Because of the lack of arm rotation, the club face will not be closing as much during, or after impact, therefore the ball may try to go right on you a little.  A stronger grip will neutralize this, and could very well be why Hardy recommends the stronger grip. 

I know a lot of you probably will not like what I am suggesting here, but look at how many pros have a flat left wrist at the top, club-face matching it, and a flat left wrist at impact.  There must be something to this.

 

 



-------------
Golf is 90% mental, and 20% physical!


Posted By: bottomsup
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 8:20pm
01: No disrespect, and whatever you do that works for you, I'm glad. But what the "pros" do and what the average golfer does have really no relation to anything. I watched M Jordan a lot and could not even begin to copy ANYTHING he did. I think that is a dangerous trap watching what the pros do. They are so far above us it isn't even funny. We really don't have a clue what they're doing or trying to acomplish. If you think Hogan's grip and trying to get a flat L wrist works, good luck. Write back about 2 weeks from now and let us know if it's still working? Plenty of us have had ah-hah moments that flittered away.


Posted By: 01ragtop
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 8:32pm
Originally posted by bottomsup

01: No disrespect, and whatever you do that works for you, I'm glad. But what the "pros" do and what the average golfer does have really no relation to anything. I watched M Jordan a lot and could not even begin to copy ANYTHING he did. I think that is a dangerous trap watching what the pros do. They are so far above us it isn't even funny. We really don't have a clue what they're doing or trying to acomplish. If you think Hogan's grip and trying to get a flat L wrist works, good luck. Write back about 2 weeks from now and let us know if it's still working? Plenty of us have had ah-hah moments that flittered away.


Bottoms,

I know you take issue with the weak grip idea, you and One Planer have had the debate, and I understand why you do things the way you do.  And you have a deal, I will write back in two week and let you know how I am doing with the weaker grip!  As for not trying to learn from the pros, well I leave that one alone


-------------
Golf is 90% mental, and 20% physical!


Posted By: Chuck Quinton
Date Posted: 22 March 2006 at 9:56pm

Ok, I'll weigh in here briefly. First off, regarding the "alligator" arms (correct spelling used, hey, I'm a Florida boy now and you have to know how to spell alligator :) No question, this works and relies on the release of the arms, particularly the right arm and the folding up and back of the left. It creates the very flat release you see on guys like Jacobsen, where the club comes out well beneath the left shoulder, although I've yet to see it come out under the left shoulder and held off from the toe releasing the way Hogan did. I believe there was an earlier pic of this. Hogan released with everything he had and spent a billion balls learning how to perfect that aggressive move. Jacobsen, in all the shots I have seen of him, releases the toe of the club over. If someone has video of this not happening, feel free to post it. Either way, it really doesn't matter, one will tend to fade and will tend to draw. I quite honestly, don't focus on the release of the club and don't really care is someone chicken wings it and hits it solid or releases his hands and hits it solid. I can show you dozens of tour players who are more one plane at the top and release the club different ways. However, I can't show you many who release the club the way Hardy advocates. Yes, Hogan did it, but Hogan was Hogan and he hit more balls and worked on his game more than all 2400 people on this forum put together. The more aggressively you work the arms and the more aggressively you work them around to the left during the release, the more the "alligator" arms naturally happen. You needn't look very far to see this move:

Does this guy look familiar?

Bottom line. I prefer to teach most golfers to keep the arms passive and let centrifugal force straighten everything out and release the club without conscious manipulation. I have seen it produce incredible ball striking in hundreds of students and cure so many common woes, it's not even funny. If it didn't produce effortless, powerful, penetrating golf shots, I wouldn't teach it, period. The fundamentals I laid out in the Nutshell article are the fundamentals upon which to build your swing, like the foundation of your house. But from there, I let the house take shape and shape it into what works best for that golfer. I have professional golfers that I teach who release hard to the left the way I do and I have them that really release the clubhead and the right arm over the left. They all do the fundamentals correctly and they can build upon those fundamentals any way they wish. That being said, keeping the arms quiet and soft allows the release to happen powerfully without effort, alligator arms takes a lot more effort and is far more aggressive.

As for the left wrist, it should be flat at impact, but flat is misunderstood and the grip needs to be taken into account. As for studying the pros, you can definitely get lost by studying a couple, but study dozens or hundreds and you'll begin to learn some very important trends. The most important thing is that they tend to have the most efficient movements. What makes them efficient and repeatable is key and I spend a lot of time studying them for this very reason.



-------------
Current USGA Handicap +.2
http://www.oneplanegolfswing.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=3130&PN=1 - See what's in my bag!
Scoring Avg. 72.92, GIR 65%, FIR 65.71%, Putts 30.38

 

5 Reasons to Start Today

  • Learn a golf swing that has been used by pros for decades! Swing like Tiger Woods - only better!
  • See how easy it is to pick up 30+ yards off the tee with our Bomb Your Driver videos that teach you the science of 300 yard drives.
  • Learn a "simpler" one plane swing with our online instruction videos.
  • Get 2 swing reviews each month from a Certified instructor!
  • Rid yourself of golf swing related pain!

Meet Your Instructor

I've worked with golfers on every major tour around the world and they've gone on to win millions of dollars.

But, more importantly, I spend my time teaching amateur golfers as well as pros. Anyone can teach a tour pro.

Working with a 30 handicapper and getting him or her to hit it like a tour player, now that takes skill.

We have thousands of testimonials, just take a look at some of these examples.

What My Students Say

“Chuck Quinton is hands down the single best golf swing instructor in the industry.

As a former athlete I consider Chuck to be one of the great teachers in not just golf; but all of the sports world. He is an elite class all his own.

He has a passion for seeing his students improve and has helped me shave 12 strokes off my handicap in less than a year.”

Ed Mylett
World Financial Group Chairman’s Council Member & Former Professional Baseball Player

I've Worked with Players on These Professional Golf Tours

Want to know more?

Visit our FAQs to find out more about Rotary Swing

Join today
Heard enough? Start now

Copyright 2012 Rotary Swing Golf