By Chuck Evans
Special Contributor |
In a recent
article I shared with you something that Jack
Nicklaus had said about setting up properly.
Set-up is only part of the equation however. Most players think that set-up
is how to position yourself to the ball - and it is - but we must also
realize the importance of ball placement, weight and balance, and the right
forearm alignment to the clubshaft.
Set-up alignments are really the most critical part since they determine what
is going to happen during the stroke and ball positioning can effect those
alignments.
I'll give you an example. A player is having trouble and is hitting the ball
fat. So we need to look at some of the more common elements that can cause this
"laying the sod over it" shot.
1. Ball position too far forward
2. Weight leaning backward at impact
3. Head over the right foot at impact
4. The right arm straightening too soon.
5. The swing plane is too far from the inside.
2. Weight leaning backward at impact
3. Head over the right foot at impact
4. The right arm straightening too soon.
5. The swing plane is too far from the inside.
Numbers 2-5 all effect ball position. By leaning too far back you have
effectively moved the ball position forward, same with keeping the head
over the right foot and swinging too much from the inside. The straightening of
the right arm is a conscious/sub-conscious effort to take the clubface to the
ball and it changes the clubshaft/forearm alignment.
Anytime you lean back you move the low point of the golf stroke back which,
in effect, moves the ball position forward.
Ultimately, however, fat or thin shots are a changing of the radius that was
established at address. Fat shots mean the radius is getting longer and thin
shots...it's getting shorter.
It takes no athletic ability at all to look as good as any PGA Tour player at
address. It's what happens next that tells the tale!
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