Friday, July 30, 2010

Power: Arms or Body?

- Audio version at the end of this post –

Today, we’ll talk about swinging the body versus swinging the arms.

As we know, with the rotational swing today, you get your power by swinging your body faster as compared to the Peak Performance Golf Swing which says we move the body less and swing the arms faster. We’re creating centrifugal force, swinging the arms in a circular arc, like swinging a rock on the end of a string.

When you swing the rock faster on the end of a string, the hand moves less. The symbolism in the golf swing is the rock is the clubhead, the shaft and your lower arm is your string, and the body represents the hands, swinging the rock. The key is when we want to swing our rock, the clubhead faster, we actually move the body less.

Yesterday, this came into a full picture for me with my second lesson with Larry. As I walked to the tee, he was on the far end hitting. He didn’t notice me so I hung back and I watched him hit a few shots. There’s nothing better than seeing exactly how good and what a player is doing by watching them when they don’t even know you’re watching.

I was just about really impressed and blown away with how well the setup was. He had the wide knees down perfect. He was set up very athletically ready. Takeaway was a little off but not not bad. He was in the mitt and somewhat up the tree, fairly vertical, knees barely moved and I saw what seemed to be a pretty good transition to the forward side and then a really good finish.

To reiterate what Larry’s problem was last time, he had a really bad finish. He was a 100% rotational swinger, pulling his hips out of the way really fast and finishing way left of the target. The biggest problem hitting shots was he was hitting weak bleeds out to the right. No power. They could draw a little bit but mostly they were cutting and/or being a pure push to the right. But what would happen every now and then, he’d go after one and really accelerate his hips trying to swing his arms faster. I had told him, “Larry, it just bleeds out there. Your arms are noodly, there’s no power. Every time he tried to add power he just snapped his hips faster, which pulled his arms across the ball more.

If you stand up right now, wherever you’re reading or listening to this, and try to pull your hips around really fast , watch what it does to your hands. It actually pulls your hands into what I call an under release. Under releasing means that when you pull it across fast, the hand is pulled skyward. So that opens the face wide open. Remember, release is where we swing into the forward mitt, toe up. When you move your hips too fast it pulls your arms in a way that it under releases so it goes in the mitt skyward, face up, So the face is open at address, you’re adding loft to the club and there’s the weak bleeds and pop ups to the right. If you pull through fast enough and it accelerates you hands and arms so fast that your club could be wide open at impact that you actually have shots that sound like, look like, and feel like a shank! But what they are is an open face blade. The face is so wide open it’s pointing out to the right, in some cases 100 yards right of your target and the ball goes off like a shank.

I start talking to Larry. He has had good results the last couple of weeks after his lesson. He’s hitting pretty good shots, but he’s still got a problem with the bleeds out to the right and weak pop ups. He didn’t say anything about shanks, but once we got into the lesson and I started looking at his swing  and he was complaining about distance. He said, “The few shots I hit good there aren’t really going very far. I used to hit an 8 iron 150 yards and now I’m about 130 yards.”

I said, “Larry, you got to swing at the ball, you’re arms aren’t swinging at it.” So as soon as he gets into that Larry equates swinging speed with moving and turning his body faster into the forward swing. As soon as he speeds it up one time with his body, it’s a little more of a blade type shot, weak to the right, and he’s moving his body faster and faster and the first thing you know there are the balls that look like shanks.

So I started explaining to him. “Your body’s moving too fast.” He told me he been using the rotational swing for about 8 years when he started taking lessons and every teacher he has told him that power comes from turning your body through the shot. The tarter you want to hit a ball, turn your body faster. In many cases he said that in lessons he was told that you can never move your body fast enough. The faster you turn the body out of the way and to pull your arms, the better you’re going to hit the ball and the farther you’re going to hit it.

I think that’s definitely wrong. The faster you pull your body through, the more it pulls your arms to the left, which is across the ball so: A. your hitting the ball with a glancing blow and B: because of that, even if the face is square at impact on the aiming line, because it’s cutting across the ball, it may start at the aiming line and fade. If it’s not square to the aiming line, open, the ball will start to the right and go to the right. If you’re pulling hard enough and fast enough, your lower hand on the club rotates under releasing fast enough and open enough, you could hit everything all the way to that shank.

We had to slow Larry’s body down. Because up to now, with the last 8 years of lessons, he always had to move the body faster and turn faster trough the shot. But the Peak Performance Golf Swing gets power by keeping your body as still as we can and swing the arms faster. In fact, DJ once said in a golf lesson when one of my students ask him what he did when he wanted to hit the ball father, “I hold my knees more and I swing my arms faster pointing that way (he was pointing toward the target).”

I made that reference to Larry and I even showed him by saying, “Larry, I’m going to hit a golf ball right now. I’m going to set up and I’m going to move nothing but my arms. In this case, because I’m moving nothing but my arms and I want to hit a pretty good shot, my left elbow is probably come through high, but I’ll it pretty solid and I think you’ll be impressed with how far it goes.”

So the left elbow comes up like what is known as a “chicken wing.” I stood there and used nothing of my body. No weight shift. No transfer. My feet stayed flat on the ground and I hit it dead solid perfect. The ball mark of the club showed that and Larry was really amazed. It went almost perfectly straight with almost a sift cut. Next I set up and made my normal golf swing, and it barely went 10 yards farther.

So what does that prove? It proves the power you get from your body isn’t much. What you get from your body moving too much is all the myriad of bad shots. So all body, no arms, big problem. The biggest lesson Larry learned yesterday is that the body needs to be quiet and swing your arms faster. When wanting to get back that distance he had before, which we did by the end of this lesson with no problem. He was hitting at a green out  there that he wasn’t even reaching before with his best hits. When I first showed up his hits were fairly solid, good divots, a little right. When we slowed his body down, decent hits where going on the green and he started to hit a couple over the green,

It brought a big smile to his face because he knew now he still had the distance. It was always there, he just had to find the right way to do it.

If you’re doing the Peak Performance Golf Swing and the ball bleeds out to the right, those little pop ups out there and maybe the contacts aren’t that sold, but you feel like you’re trying to make the swing, check the fact you still might be moving your hips too fast. Your body may be running away from your arms.

The actual drill I gave Larry was to feel like, in his set up, when he took his backswing and started his transition, that basically nothing moved in his body from the waist down, until impact. Once he reached impact, when he hit the ball, then his whole right side, meaning from the foot to the right knee to the right hip and shoulders, he just popped up like a Pop Tart, swing up to the T-finish, chasing his club to the finish so that he could get up there really fast and finish square to his target.

The key was, he started getting his body quiet.

The Surge!

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  • Mathew Waters
    Hi Surge,

    WOW is my first thought, I have read with great anticipation over the last few blogs and I must say that these have had the most profound effect on my game.

    I am connecting with the ball on 95% of all my shots now and have seen strokes falling away from my my score - Thank you!! I think the clincher was using the arms and "keeping the Body quiet" that really did it for me!

    One question though! I do tend to fade the balls to the right on most of the shots I take. Although I am taking strokes off of my game as I have indeed made huge improvements, I cannot shake this fade.

    I had a brief chat with my local pro and once I'd waded through the nonsense of the full rotarional swing hewas trying to teach me, I did notice something which I think will remove the fade, but it is something I've notheard you mention before.

    He said that I am probably not "releasing" properly or in time, which is resulting in me striking the ball with an open club face.

    My understanding of the "release" is that on ones forward upswing, you must turn your hands over, apparently this is a huge power generator.

    Before I head off to the range, is this action part of your teachings for PPGS or do you have anoher I idea on what is casing my fade? I have checked my alignment, grip an stance and i'm sure that they are not the reason for it!

    Thanks,

    Mat
  • jimsha
    I think Ernest Jones Had it right over 70 years ago with his simple concept of "swing the clubhead". It worked back then and it works today.
  • jimsha
    Murry, does the expression " unhinging your wrists to soon" work better for you?
  • Mike Bowman
    Hi Don

    I'm a U.S.G.T.F Golf Pro from Pensylvania and I have this problem of my head moving left and

    down on the downswing . At full speed it does not look to bad, except in slow motion it's bad.

    I'm trying your PPCS swing and made my ball stiking better.

    Is there anything I can do to stop from dropping down 5 to 8 inches with my body and head.


    Thanks Mike
  • Maury Youmans
    I'm still getting the hang of using the swing. I'm an old (73) former pro football player with quite a few body restrictions and think your method will be the best to keep me playing. I tend to pull the ball left on most of my shots. Any suggestions?
  • Don Gilmore
    Surge, this posting is indeed one of the best I have read as well. Worked on quieting the lower body today and got great results. Thanks!!
  • Reading back through the posts above I see where the term "Sway" has been used. I know this is semantics but the pictures people evoke through the words they hear is critical in learning.

    When I think of a tree swaying it's more of a top of the tree movement than a bottom of the tree movement. Thus using the term sway to define a misuse of the lower body seems confusing.

    I personally would prefer the term slide in relation to the lower body in the sense that it is moving beyond its parameters and sway to suggest a loss of secondary posture (face on spine angle)over a more stable base.

    Just a thought, I've seen the term sway used in several places with respect to golf instruction and it's one of the things I question as Teacher and clarify differently.

    Keep up the good work Surge, your efforts and the site here are both inspiring and show leadership.
  • David Giltz
    Do you have any instructors in the Hilton Head area where I live? Are any of the guys at Old South (where I think you had an academy) qualified to teach this system? I am a former assistant pro (Pinehurst early 80's) who is intrigued by your system and frankly wants to play better! Thanks in advance.
  • Robert
    Something to add there are three stages of golfers, first stage "Right handed" the slicer who swings outside to in and trys to servive by aiming way left of target so the ball lands in the short grass. Second stage who swings from inside to out "Drawer of the ball" who after a while starts hitting shots way over to the right so to land the ball on the short grass. Third stage, the golfers we see on tour when you see the camera behind the line and the shot looks like it's going way right out of bounds and the commentator says great shot right at the pin. The third stage golfer hits the ball alittle outside to in and turns over the wrist just before impact and puts a little toe hook on the ball which makes the ball come back and hits that great shot. Understanding the tool or the club face helps, the ball can only compress and release perpendicular from the club face and your ball flight will tell you what position your club face was through impact. All you guys that are slicing your not turning over before impact, your turning over after impact. Think about it.
  • Jacobus
    Hi Guys, Try this drill to get the feel of a quite lower body. From the address position, start back swing, arms only. Then start down swing, arms only. Now for the drill!! After impact, continue past the T- Finish, all the way back to the address posision. Stop at the address position.Swing as fast as you can.
    It will feel as if your hands had made a complete circle with your head at the centre of the circle.
    You will be surprised at the distance and solid contact!!!
  • Art
    This is one of the most helpful yet. Both Surge and Lynn provide very useful info in this one.
    Art
  • Don
    Thanks Surge, these last two posts have been the greatest help to me. You described me to a tee in this last post(pushing the ball and shanking when the pressure gets ramped up). I work with a golf buddy who has your videos and we try to help each other on the range. But I can see there is no substitute for some one with lots of experience. Your word descriptions are the next best thing to the real SURGE being there. Thanks for sharing!!!!
  • Dean
    I could not agree with this one more. I was once a scratch player and after having a few frustrating rounds decided to take lessons from a local pro. This was a beginning of a nightmare that lasted for years with multiple lessons even one with Hank Haney. At times I would have some success but it was short lived. I ran across a tip very similar to yours on the internet, his name was Cameron Stratchan and his teachings are very similar to yours. My handicap ballooned to an 18 before I discovered this information, I am now down to a ten and and going down. The only tip you give that I feel can be somewhat dangerous is the hip bump. I personally feel it is a natural happening if you swing your arms properly. The more stuff that you put in your mind concerning technique the greater the damage can be. The old saying of paralysis by analysis takes over and believe me I am an expert at that one. Keep telling it like it is Surge.
  • Jim Morrow
    This is one of the best posts that I've read. I am a converted single plane rotational swinger. When I really start hitting the ball well with PPGS, my lower body wants to get involved and now I realize why the trajectory changes from straight to a slight fade. Now that I think about it, I'm moving from a bump to more of a strong turn with my hips. It's Friday, warm in Atlanta so I will be hitting balls this afternonn getting ready for the weekend.

    Thanks for the updates. Jim
  • Jim Booker
    Good morning Surge! I too have been having trouble with pushes at times, but most of my iron shots have been pulls.
    I have lost 2 clubs of distance in the last two years.This is really distressing! 2 years ago I had 3 occasions while playing ( before "The Surge) to take a shorter backswing and no wristcock and let my arms drop and I actually hit the damn ball further than I even thought I could! The terrible thing about it was I couldn't keep it for more than 5 holes and then it would just go away. I've tried and tried to do this again, but can't seem to duplicate that swing again.My son-in-law witnessed this, but he can't explain what he saw to even give me a clue! I actually had 5 straight birds starting at 13 and ending on 17 at my home course. I just can't seem to duplicate this swing again to save my life.All my golfing pals tell me that I pull my head up. I find that misleading because I see the club strike the ball and I have heard that it makes no difference what happens with your head after the ball has been struck! One pal says that I am pulling my left elbow across my left side and therefore getting too flat a swing resulting in the pull hooks. I need help. Please.... any suggestions? I'm not a bad player, but something's got to give!
  • David T
    Wish I had this yesterday before I played the first round of the year. Every other shot went either as a big slice or a block, some coming off the toe. By the 16th I had worked out that I was opening the hips and shoulders big time, but found it really hard to stop it happening. I began concentrating on getting the hands through under the chin and that seemed to help, but it was still a rotten score.

    I am going to press on with the PPS because it does seem to help my back, but I am at the moment loosing length.Bill's idea of watching DJs swing sounds good, and I will have to try to find something like this.
    Good stuff - keep it coming.
  • carl
    Hi Surge,
    Thanks for the tip, reading what you have written, its clear to me what you are saying.
    but zhe question is should i keep my feet close together at address ?
    I feel when I do this the tendency is to use my arms more and less body shift. Am I right?
    Any advice on that?
  • Mark B.
    I agree with Patrick, Peter, John, and K. Geiger. Your post nailed it today. I didn't read it until I had hit a couple of buckets at the range trying out some of your other recent posts. I discovered that my problem wasn't "overswinging" in the usual sense of trying to kill the ball, it was over-firing the hips to try to generate clubhead speed. As you said, this does not work. For six months it has caused poor contact and weak fades. I kept hitting the ball off of the heel. Keeping lower body quiet and finishing to T-finish resulted in effortless distance and consistently straight shots down the middle. Amazing.
  • Dom Rovito
    Surge; I think you hit the nail right on the head!!! The other day at the range, I was hitting my irons well, but not my driver or 3 wood. I kind of figured that I was pulling my hips to the left, but didn't realize the consequences. I'm definitly going to think quiet lower body tomorrow at the range. Last two articles I think will help alot Thanks
  • Bruce Barnes
    Dear Sir, You have messed up my golf game so much that I qualified to complete at Poppy Hills In April. Thank You Very Much.
  • To all,
    The problem is that so many think that the swing involves a fast rotation of the hips around which in turn can also cause the torso to over rotate and finish left of target. I really hate to bring this up again but there are two basic swings. One is the flat more rotational swing and the other is the more upright swing which is the root of the PPGS. In the flat rotational swing, you have to rotate the hips fast as this pulls the upper body through the impact area and you pretty much have to do the lag, drag, and block move with the hands and arms to not hit big pull hooks. If you do this move, the quick spin out of the hips, using an upright swing, the lower body out races the upper and it will tend to leave the club face wide open upon impact. So, Surge is not saying there is no lower body movement, but what he is saying, and I use the same instruction, if you have an over active lower body, then your thought is no lower body movement. In reality, you will have some movenment but it is very quiet movement. The answer to over doing the bump is called a sway. It's not over rotation of the hips. If your bump is more than a couple inches, then you have created a sway. This should be difficult to do if you have the correct flared knees as this position helps minimize lower body movement. Yes, the down swing does start by using the bump. But, remember, the bump is a very slight and small movement, not a large, exaggerated movement which is a sway. Also, you can not keep the right heel on the ground and make a good golf swing. If you keep the right heel on the ground you never transfer the weight to the left side (for right handers). Granted, if you swing and keep the right foot planted you will not rotate the hips but you certainly create another whole issue of swing problems. Just like over rotating the hips can cause weak fades, not getting the weight over to the left side and result in pulls if your arm rotation is correct. There are no short cuts to the proper swing. For those that have not gotten the sensation of the bump, try the skipping the rock drill and notice the sensation of the movement of the hips just before you start to bring the arm though to skip it. For those of having trouble with spinning out with the hips, think no lower body movement. I guarantee that it will move it just will not be exaggerated. Make sure that when you come to the finish that you are in the high T finish and that your torsoe is facing a line parrellel to your target and not pointing somewhere to the left. If it is, then you've over rotated. I hope this helps some of you that have questions about the move still and will find it easier to perform.
    J. Griffin
    Certified PPGS Instructor
  • Jeff Puhek
    Todd,

    Just my opinion, but I had the same trouble and this is what I discovered:

    I believe the slice comes from moving/rotating the shoulders ahead of the arms swinging. That causes your club head to move outside the toe line and as you bring your hands through the ball, the shoulders are already turning toward the target (instead of being parallel to the target line at impact) and the clubhead cuts across the ball at impact causing the slice-inducing spin on the ball. If your shoulders rotate first, you cannot maintain "on-on-on" and a block or a slice will be the result.

    The reason you are probably doing this more pronounced with the driver, 3-wood, etc., is you are tryng to "add power" to the swing with these clubs. With he PPGS, "power" comes from speed, which comes from the accelleration during the forward up-swing through to the T-finish... If you think "add power" you will start the shoulders too soon as you "put your back into it."
  • The Surge!
    To G. Bathurst,

    One of the main tenants of the PPGS is "golf is a game of angles; the fewer the better." I call the forward wrist the #1 Domino or Angle. When the first domino falls they all fall. What this means is that when you were trying to cock your wrists for power, it also caused your arms to also bend or break. To much bend or break in the arms can also cause he spine to tilt or sway. In other words you were changing angles everywhere. This is loss of power as well as increasing error big time in your swing.

    Once you firmed up your wrists, so did everything else firm up. You reduced and or eliminated all the changing angles in your swing, took soft noodle arms and turned them into firm and controlled arms that you could swing faster on a more stable body. More stable body allowed you to swing your now more firm and longer arms faster which is more clubhead speed and thus you hit it more solid and straight and longer.

    The Surge!
  • The Surge!
    Stu,

    The lower body is kept silent, or quiet in the backswing with the wide Knees and outward pressure being the key to making the limited turn PPGS backswing.

    The transition is begun with the bump and swinging up to the T - Finish. Like all sports that throw or hit balls or pucks, they have little windups and then step or shift their weight to their forward leg to throw or hit.

    SO, the PPGS is a guiet, limited turn backswing with the lateral shift BUMP, then explodes to swinging up and standing up to the T - Finish.

    The Surge!
  • The Surge!
    Andrew,

    I also can't wait for you to become PPGS accredited. I will get you listed to be notified when the program launches which hopefully is in the next few months. There will be an on line version for those who can't get to a live version with me.

    I will also add that there will be big announcements here on the PPGS.com site about the launch. The launch will include all the info needed to register. So keep a watch out for the announcement.
  • The Surge!
    Ron,

    Just spoke with DJ and he is feeling better and as of right now he is planning on being at Bay Hill next week as will I for Monday and Tuesday. Then I head to Port St Lucie for a PPGS Golf School Wednesday thru Friday. Then it is back up to Bay Hill to watch DJ for the weekend.

    The Surge
  • G Bathurst
    I'm 63 years old. In the last few years, as I have lost some flexibility, I have used more wrist cock to develop power. My consistancy hasn't been very good, although I have hit the ball pretty well at times. Studying your method has made me aware that my forward press and
    tucked right elbow have made my swing inconsistant. I see what you mean about right elbow position and maintaining a straight left arm. I haven't been able to do more than some practice swings, but I sense a different feeling to the impact part of the swing, Instead of developing power by "snapping my wrists" I can feel a real increase in club speed as I release the club to finish. This is all without any wrist cock. I feel like I'm swinging easier, yet faster. How could that be?
  • Peter J
    I've used your method with some success late last year by watching your videos. I signed up for some lessons which are indoor recently. The swing speed is measured by lasers. With a 7 iron they want me to swing at 80 mph. I'm 54 with a tender back. I put all my weight (6' 2" 220 lbs.) on my right side as much as I can and swing away at the ball to a complete follow through. At best I get the club head speed up to 70 mph. Most of the time in the 65 mph range.

    I find your method a lot easier on the back but give up a little distance. With your swing method being the 3/4 swing, what should my club head speed be with a 7 iron?
  • Kevikn Geiger
    Todays instruction was probably the best I have read from your website since I joined 3 weeks ago. After 40 years of using the more traditional golf swing, your new verticle swing has been very difficult to master. I have no choice but to try since my right hip flexors is shot and my back muscles can't coil anymore without a great deal of lower back pain. Since practicing the PPGS, I have been very inconsistent and most of my shots have been thin or topped or weak pull slices and pushes. When I do make good contact with the ball, I see long high fades. I can't even think about drawing the ball yet. I have a 12 handicap so I still have a decent golf game.

    Now, your discussion today of using the body to pull the arms is exactly what my problem has been. My left hip and knee starts my down swing and I can feel myself spinning out and pulling my arms to come over the top from outside to inside causing my weak pull slices or pushes. This has given me fits in trying to figure out how to swing down the target line without coming over the top.

    I am going to try now to keep my lower body from taking over the downswing. If I keep my knees still as if they were holding a beach ball and not letting the ball fall to the ground through out my swing, this might help me to not spin out and use my arms more to help me to swing down the target line.

    One thing would be helpful in learning the PPGS and that is better videos showing the entire swing from all angles with slow motion and stop action. I believe this is missing and would benefit everyone.

    Thanks for the daily instruction since some of it will hit home.
  • Stu
    It gets a bit confusing when you talk about keeping the lower body silent in one lesson and then talk about starting the downswing with the bump in another...perhaps you need to sort this out for us...
  • Todd Jennings
    Don,

    I'm having a great deal of trouble with slicing my driver and fairway woods ( 3 and 5 ). I keep hearing about keeping a triangle formed with the arms but can't seem to shake the slice. Any suggestions or or chances for lessons from you or your team near Atlanta, Ga.

    Thanks
  • Fantastic advice Don , I tell my students this procedure every chance i get !! Don as mentioned before, I can not wait to become a PPGS instructor , I am a AAA rated Australian Golf Professional based in Fremantle Western Australia , could you please email the procedure to become accreditted .

    Cheers

    Andrew Humble
  • Walter Flanagan
    I went out today and practiced with yesterday's lesson on the way to find the top of the backswing by placing your right hand under your left arm as you are swinging back. I worked with it today for nine holes and found that if I used a slight forward press with more weight on my left foot than right foot, I was able to execute the swing from the top quicker and add distance I had not seen before. I love the straight ball flight I am achieving from your swing. It beats the hell out of the Freddie Couples swing I used to have. Of course, golf ball mfgs will suffer because I rarely lose a ball with your swing.
  • Sea Bass
    Amanda,

    I encourage you to watch a YouTube video of any baseball player hitting--Ken Griffey, Barry Bonds, etc. The bump is a natural hip slide that takes place during the transition, no matter what sport you are playing. If your setup is athletic, and you make a good takeaway lifting the arms, the bump will occur naturally in the transition. Have a friend video your swing on a cell phone and take a look back at it. I bet you'll see "the bump" in your swing, and you didn't even know you were doing it. If not, it means you are not setting up athletically. It means your weight is too neutral, or even worse, you are doing a reverse weight shift during the swing, with your weight staying on your left during the backswing and your right leg straightening.

    Watch those baseball players. The move they make is not so different than what we are learning here. While you're at it, check out their shoulder turn as they are cocked and loaded. No ninety degrees in those swings!
  • Dan Battles
    Is spinning out the hips and,therefore, the body the same as overdoing the 'bump'? Was the suggestion above, about holding our right heal on the ground through impact an effective way to slow down the hip and body swing? This is a great lesson and it really feels like we're getting close to the 'nut' of it, but I still think many of us would like to hear the Surge speak to the relationship of a good solid bump to the slower body turn. How do we best do both?
  • Murray
    We are one day ahead of you here in South Australia.

    Very lucky down here, can try to play golf every day of the year.

    Thanks again.
  • Murray
    Im confused - your answer to Walt yesterday 18th March you are talking about uncocking your wrist too soon - I did not think there was supposed to be any wrist cock.

    Your diagram of placing hand on elbow is great. Best way to explain the correct way.

    Thanks a lot. Keep up the good work.

    Regards, Murray
  • Lou
    After reading all this....

    I play tennis left handed and play golf right handed.
  • Steve O
    Sid,
    rather than speeding your arms up to catch your body, slow your body and the arms will catch up. I think that's what Don is saying in the last paragraph, where he suggests you imagine that your lower body isn't moving until impact. I was told the same thing--speed up the arms. But my body was just turning too quickly, almost spinning out. Now the feeling is more of a slowed down body rotation.
  • JOHN BOSCO
    HI DON,

    YOU HAVE JUST SOLVED MY PROBLEM. I BELIEVE THE LAST THREE POSTS HAVE BEEN THE MOST IMPORTANT OF ANY I HAVE READ, ESPECIALLY THIS ONE. THE RING THE BELL ANALOGY IS ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC, NOW THAT I HAVE THE KNOWLEDGE TO KEEP MY BODY QUIET, I WILL ENJOY MY GOLF EVEN MORE.
    CAN'T WAIT TO HAVE A PPGS TRAINED GOLF COACH RIGHT HERE DOWNUNDER.
    THANKS AGAIN DON, YOU TRULY ARE A SWING SURGEON
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