THE RIGHT-ARM DRILL
Many of the students I coach on my golf schools say they are confused at the way golf instruction over analyses the wrist action in the process of learning to make a backswing. Well, here's one of the simple exercises that I use to illustrate just how easy it is to make a correct backswing without even thinking about the details - one that features a natural hingeing of the wrist and right elbow.
Using the long, narrow triangle as our starting point (1), you simply hold a club up at waist high, remove your left hand, and then hinge the right arm at the elbow to cock the club up and over the tip of your right shoulder (2). From here, turn your shoulders and upper body away from the target until the right forearm is to the right of your body (3), the right elbow again pointing at your right hip. Finally, reach across and replace your left hand on the grip. Get a feel for this position. You are now in a perfectly sound and naturally correct backswing position.
NOTE: The key to the exercise is that through repetition your body begins to recognize and respond automatically to the sensations involved in putting together a naturally correct and symmetrical backswing. What you have here is the 'core' of the motion - completing the shoulder turn (the extent of which is down to the length of the club you are using) being the final dynamic that determines the actual length of your backswing. Use this drill when you practise, between hitting shots for real.
HOW TO MAKE THE PERFECT THROUGH SWING
LEFT-ARM ONLY DRILL TEACHES YOU VITAL SYMMETRY IN THROUGH-SWING
Are you one of those amateurs who constantly checks positions in the backswing but neglects the follow-through? If so, you are not alone in failing to understand that the way in which you complete your swing is one of the keys to its overall power and efficiency. Where the right arm folds away to create the backswing, the left arm folds to establish the mirror-image symmetry of a naturally correct action through the ball -one that maximises clubhead speed through impact.
Starting this time with just the left hand on the grip, hold your left elbow with your right hand in front of the body to help maintain good 'connection'. Now rehearse the exercise you see here to appreciate the sensation of a balanced, tension free and controlled through swing motion. Simply turn and stand up to face your target, allowing the left elbow to fold whilst staying in front of the body. The clubshaft swings up and over the tip of your left shoulder. Holding the upper part of the left arm with the right hand keeps the left arm connected with the elbow still pointing at the left hip as you turn to the finish, which is vital. When you place your right hand on the grip and then complete your turn through towards the target (far right), you will find that you have replicated the shape of a naturally correct follow-through: totally in balance and with a straight up-and-down look that minimises stress on your back.
I cannot stress too strongly how effective this left-arm only drill is in terms of improving the quality of your release through the ball. One of the biggest faults in the through-swing is 'chasing' after the ball with the left arm, as opposed to folding the left elbow and trulyreleasing the clubhead down the line. The result is that the left arm is seen to work (or 'chicken-wing') away from body, rather than rotating and folding in the direction of the target in harmony with the rotation of the body. For a naturally correct release, the left elbow must 'soften' and give way as the right hand and arm swing across the chest to arrive at this balanced finish - a mirror-image of the backswing.
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