Great Tips To Improve Your Golf: Section 1H - The Down Swing
Tips
The first
movement from the top of the swing is a lateral thrust of the hips
to the left, eventually followed by an automatic turning of the
hips. This is true. But there is more than that. Here are some
great tips to improve your downsing.
The hips must not only move to the left and turn, their movement
must be so closely tied to the left arm that it pulls the arm and
the club down and whips them through the ball.
There must be a definite, conscious feeling that this is
happening. It is the single most important movement that a good
golfer makes. This is not to be confused with the mistaken advice
to start part of the body stay back.
Finally you must turn your hips toward the target as they reach
the extension of their lateral movement. Are your hips ever in this
position when you hit the ball?
What happens, actually, is that the left arm itself is being
pulled by the hips. The arm is merely the connecting rod between
the hips and the club.
When the hips exert this pulling action, they cause the
shoulders and the left arm to revolve so fast around the axis of
the upper spine that the hands have little or no time to manipulate
or do anything whatever with the club except hang onto it.
If there is one single secret to the golf swings this is it.
Moving the hips in this fashion would seem a simple thing to
do.
It is easy to say and easy to understand. Yet nearly all of the
vast army of golfers fail to do it. Millions have read it and heard
it and seen pictures of it, but just as many millions keep right on
starting down with their hands, or pulling with their arms, or
stopping the hips after they start them, forgetting to move them
all the way through.
They fail for two reasons.
The first is that this is a big movement and they are afraid to
make it. The second is that, preoccupied with what they think they
must make the club head do, they completely forget the fundamental
hip action and let it die.
The tight connection between the hips and the club, and the
consequent pull the club gets from the hip action, is the single
greatest source of power in the golf swing. The big muscles of the
upper legs and of the torso are giving the club a flying start
before the hands do anything.
To visualize what happens it may be helpful to use a mechanical
image. Think of a golfer at the top of his backswing.
Now imagine a rope, running from the point of his left hip up
his left side to his shoulder and then out through his left arm to
his left hand. This rope is pulled tight at the top of the swing.
As the hips start the downswing by moving to the left and turning,
they will pull shoulder, arm, and club with them so long as the
rope is tight.
The rope can be kept tight only if the hips move first and only
if they keep moving and then turning, on past the ball.
Otherwise the rope will slacken, the pull will stop, and the
club never will gain the speed it should reach at the ball. The
rope will slacken if, from the top, the shoulders or the hands move
first, or if the hips stop moving before they are all the way
through.
How do we know when to start the hip movement?
We start it the instant we feel the backward momentum of the
club start to pull against our hands at the top. This is a reflex
action with most of us, but for those who want the moment
pinpointed, there it is. And once you start to move the hips, keep
them flying—all the way through until they turn toward the target.
This action alone will cure a great number of golfing ills.
This is how it should feel:
For you who have been hitting from the top and from the outside
for years (and you are about 95 per cent of all golfers), these
actions will feel strange indeed, and our problem is how to
describe the feeling you should have when you make them.
Words here become of even greater importance than they are
customarily. So, since the same action feels different to different
people, we will describe several feelings so that perhaps one of
them may be recognized.
What all this comes down to is two things. First, we coil
ourselves up on the backswing to gain tension that is going to be
released as late as possible on the downswing. Holding that tension
is the "staying uncomfortable" feeling, the "storing up"
feeling.
That is what gives us distance.
Second, as we move our hips laterally and keep our head back,
but do nothing else, there is a complete absence of effort in our
arms and hands. Then, if we have kept ourselves from uncoiling, the
hands and club come down on the inside. That, plus club-face
position, gives us direction.
When we have made this first move from the top correctly, where
does it bring us? It brings us to a position generally
Called the hitting area. It is not that, exactly. It is only one
position in an infinite number that we pass through in the
downswing.
It is, roughly, the point in the downswing that we reach before
the arm-shaft angle opens up much.. The move brings us down so that
our hands are nearly opposite our right leg, our weight is about
equally distributed but moving toward our left leg, the body is
beginning to bow out to the left, the right elbow is nestled
against the hip bone, and the club is nearing a horizontal
position.
Right here the check points appear. We can't see them in the
actual swing, of course, but we can stop the swing now and then and
take a look.
If the swing has been made correctly and if the hand-wrist
position gained by the backward break has been held, then one
knuckle of the left hand should be visible and two of the right,
the club face should be at about a 45-degree angle with the ground,
the right arm should be firm .against the, right side, and if the
hips have gone through as they should, the player should be able to
see the outside of his right leg from the hip to the foot.
Except for seeing the outside of the right leg, these check
points are exactly the same as they were after the stationary wrist
break on the backswing.
If you follow these tips your swing will improve no end.
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