Which of the following identifies this critical Alignment?
- The Flat Left Wrist creating the Primary Lever.
- The Left Arm crossing the Chest at 45 degrees
- The Flying Wedge Structure
- The Right Forearm On-Plane.
Originally Posted by airair Is this right arm move the same regardless of being a hitter or a swinger?Yes, but the execution of the right forearm has to comply with the left wrist action 18-C-2 (single wrist action versus standard wrist action) per the action addressed in 7-19-2 (by resisting the Backstroke motion for Drive Loading). The number three power accumlator during a right forearm takeaway wants to rotate naturally, so the golfer needs to resist that natural rotation by resisting it with the right forearm (reference the first two paragraphs in 7-3). So with the hitting motion you have three things happening simultaneously....extensor action, bending of the right elbow and resisiting the natural rotation of the (left forearm and wrist) with the right arm. Takes a little bit of coordination and concentration. But once you grasp the movements and with some practice, the movement becomes as natural as swinging with the right forearm takeaway.
Originally Posted by ChangeMySwing I'm convinced that the RFT is the absolute best way to start the swing. I was having a lot of inconsistency with my swing using a STT. I practiced tonight using the RFT, and I was hitting long lasers. Delaware Tommy's swing + an old school heel lift type pivot = Godly ballstiking. The drill he shows in the video actually had me doing the RFT incorrectly. I was rotation the club to a toe up position, and then cocking the club up with my right bicep, OppsActually Tommy's GI interview describes the up and down motion of the right forearm perfectly as Homer describes it per section 7-3. I believe the drill you're talking about (the 10 step sequence drill), that first move, the one to two position is to show/demonstrate the right wrist (only) bends and the left wrist turns and cocks. However, during actual play, if you are going to use the right forearm takeaway, its a folding up of the right forearm from the address position....it's a very precise movement. Not surprised you were crushing the ball.![]()
It's a great feeling not to guess where the club is going in the backswing. It's "The Magic of the Right Forearm"...that it is.... Originally Posted by Delaware Golf Actually Tommy's GI interview describes the up and down motion of the right forearm perfectly as Homer describes it per section 7-3. I believe the drill you're talking about (the 10 step sequence drill), that first move, the one to two position is to show/demonstrate the right wrist (only) bends and the left wrist turns and cocks. However, during actual play, if you are going to use the right forearm takeaway, its a folding up of the right forearm from the address position....it's a very precise movement. Not surprised you were crushing the ball.The sad part is that I spent 5 years doing it wrong.It's a great feeling not to guess where the club is going in the backswing. It's "The Magic of the Right Forearm"...that it is....
DG
Oh well... Time to view my old 'Knowledge' vid to see what else I got wrong.