Plane Shift & Pressures Part 2- Bradley Hughes Golf
In this video I talk about the pressures being exerted during transition and the downswing and how plane differs as a result of these. For more information visit www,bradleyhughesgolf.com
The Revolutionary New eBook on the Golf Swing
In this video I talk about the pressures being exerted during transition and the downswing and how plane differs as a result of these. For more information visit www,bradleyhughesgolf.com
Demonstrates proper swing plane for golfers.
Jim hitting a fairway wood at a clinic prior to the 2008 PGA Championship.
EATischler is the founder of the New Horizons Golf Approach and has self published 18 golf instructional books and is currently working on a series entitled The Secrets Of Owning Your Swing. Those books discuss the biomechanics of the golf actions and will help golfers understand how their unique golfing machines work and how to build a golf swin with their particular body’s in mind. For more information visit www.newhorizonsgolf.com
My name is CJ Caliendo. I play golf for Concordia University Texas in Austin. Check out my swing and leave a few comments fools.
swing plane, basketball pass
The biokinetically soundest relation of the arms and the main body is when arms can work perpendicularily to the core. Of course, it can happen only in certain phases of the motion because of human’s body nature. One of these phases is the backswing top where the entire lead arm should exactly be perpendicular to the spine (and the rear humerus is parallel to the spine). The shoulder line should be perpendicular to the spine as well which means that the lead humerus is pinned to the chest and can work together the main body automatically. A sort of one plane backswing position where there are no excessive flatness or uprightness of the plane – because of the square relation to the core. Today’s golf instruction does not often understand biokinetics and sometimes find ridiculous arguments against low plane golfers while the truth is that the vast majority of the best ballstrikers in history of golf were never upright players. And even if some of them might have been, they were capable to shift back beautifully to the low plane during the downswing (vide: the EEP concept). However, this procedure is just a waste of kinetic force and one does not need to be a genius to state that the best scenario is when necessary plane shifts are as small as possible – from elbow plane to the shoulder plane at the top and to the elbow plane as soon as possible in the downswing (where the rear forearm becomes perpendicular to the core). Mr.Hogan was right again with imagining the swing …
2006 PGA Teacher of the Year Billy Bondaruk shows how to pitch the ball better using a one plane Stack N Tilt motion. This is the same way Ben Hogan,one of the best pitch shot artist in golf played the shot. www.BillyBondaruk.com
The EEP (early elbow plane) is a logical result of benefitting from one of the golden rules of (bio)physics concerning the perpendicularily of the distal parts motion to the spine (core). The EEP is a description of a biophysical phenomenon when a classic double shifter achieves the EP relatively very early in the downswing with the shaft bissecting the forearm; a decent amount of lag is necessary to perform the EEP. An EEP golfer receives full support from both rear humerus (in relation to the body alongside with which is moving) as well as from rear forearm that supports the shaft and clubhead until impact being in-line with it and at a perpendicular angle to the core. The best example is post-accident Hogan who achieves the EEP very early in the downswing (his rear elbow moving forward early and fast after transition) until shaft becomes in-line with rear forearm and rear forearm perpendicular to his core. From this moment there is his turning main body only, the rest is in status quo in relation to it which may be certainly considered as the best possible biomotoric scenario for consistency in the downswing phase. Please visit: biokineticgolfswing.blogspot.com The music that accompanies this vid has been composed by a genial Polish conterporary composer – Zbigniew Preisner; the tiltle – Concerto en mi Instrumentation contemporaine n°2 & n°3 ; it is a part of the soundtrack for the Krzysztof Kie?lowski’s great movie “The Double Life of Veronique” – one of the best …
PGA Certified Professional, Todd Dugan, analizes the “down the line” view of Ben Hogan’s swing with the driver.