Great Tips To Improve Your Golf: Section 1B - Back The
Swing
When you are
ready to start the swing, to uncover the first fatal flaws that
appear, with the horrible shots they produce, and to learn the
first of the magic moves that will cut strokes from your score.
Ironically, these first flaws that creep into the average
player's swing produce an effect that is the exact opposite of what
he wants. Just as you have, he has read and heard all his golfing
life that certain things are essential.
The first of these is that you must pivot, the second is that
the club must be taken away from the ball inside the projected line
of flight, the third is that the wrists should be broken late and
upward.
You twist your body as you start the take away. This brings the
club back on an inside line. Fine. It opens the face of the club
too. Excellent, you say, for you know it should
be open at the top of the swing. You delay the wrist break as
long as possible and then let the wrists break upward.
Then what happens? The very thing you wanted most to avoid. You
hit the ball from the outside in, with an open face (usually), and
you get an outlandish slice. If you close the face on the downswing
you probably will get a pull, or a smother (if it's closed too
much), or a hook. If the club is outside the line far enough, you
will even get that most horrible of all shots, a shank.
You are then thoroughly crestfallen. You have done everything
you'd been told to do and you still hit those awful shots. Why?
You hit them because your early movements got you into such a
position at the top that you could hardly hit anything else.
Your early pivot, your attempt to "turn in a barrel," didn't
permit you to transfer your weight to your right leg. You kept too
much of it on your left leg.
Taking the club away inside (it was probably quite sharply
inside) got it moving too flat, as well as opening the face.
Then, to get the swing farther along, you had to bring the club
up. At that point things began to get tight and uncomfortable.
To ease them you stopped the turn that your shoulders were
making and let your left wrist collapse, or bend back and go under
the club. This let you raise the club and get what you felt was a
full swing, without being uncomfortable. The face of the club, of
course, was wide open at the top.
What happened next was inevitable. You started the downswing by
regripping with your left hand, which had loosened, which made you
get the club head started moving too soon. Your weight, being
mostly on your left leg, moved back to the right leg. You turned
your hips and shoulders sharply, which threw the club onto the
outside-in line you were trying to avoid. And you came down across
the ball. Chances
are that as you did, your left knee snapped back and locked and
your right knee bent straight out in front of you. And your
follow-through, what there was of it, carried the club around you
instead of up and out after the ball.
You, however, see none of these things as the cause of your bad
shots. You feel only that you haven't done well enough what you are
trying to do, and in your efforts to meet the standards, you
exaggerate the actions. You don't improve. You may easily get
worse. And you finally end your practice session frustrated and
dejected, or your round, if you are playing, with a shameful
score.
The Answer:
Fortunately, there is a cure for all this, a cure that is almost
miraculous. The magic move that puts you on the right track
immediately is simply this:
Start the backswing with an early backward wrist break.
Of course this sounds too simple to be true. It violates every
rule you ever heard about starting the swing. Your first reaction
is that the best golfers have gone completely off their rockers.
But it is true and unless your swing is now everything that you
want it to be, you will find out how and why this magic move is
made.
The wrist break itself is simple enough, actually, though if you
have been breaking in the conventional way you may need a little
time to convince yourself of what is to be done and to make
yourself do it.
Since the backward break is one of the key points in our system,
let's be absolutely certain you understand what it is.
First, hold your right hand in front of you, fingers together
and extended, thumb up and the palm squarely facing the left.
From that position bend the hand to the right, trying to make
the fingers, come back toward the outside of the wrist.. You can't
get them anywhere near the wrist, of course, but a person with
supple wrists can bend the hand back until hand and wrist form a
right angle. This motion of the hand, straight back, is the
backward wrist break.
The way the right hand should move from the wrist in the early
backward break straight back toward the outside of the forearm,
with no turning or rolling.
The standard wrist break is quite different. Hold your hand
again as you held it before. Now, instead of bending it backward,
bend it up, so that the thumb comes toward you.
That is the orthodox, accepted wrist break. Forget it. You will
get it eventually, but you don't want it now. You will remember
that the grip we stipulated was one which, at address, showed only
two knuckles of the left hand and one of the right hand. You will
also recall that the right hand was put on the club so that the
left thumb lay right down the middle of the right palm. This
brought the heel of the right hand against the big knuckle at the
base of the left thumb.
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