
Golfers of all abilities are always looking for a tip or technique that improves some aspect of their game. Most tips and drills are often "temporary fixes" or going from one extreme to another. "Keeping your heard down, swinging through the ball, turning your chest, or rotating your forearms", often sound interesting, especially if demonstrated by a recognizable player or teacher. We all have a tip or two that works for a time, then "it" seems to loose its impact and we are on to the next hot concept.
One plane or two, stack and tilt, natural golf, an x factor here,a y factor there, all seem interesting but do they work? And, what about secret moves, is there such a thing and how do you trust the information?
4 comments:
Hey man, I just grip and rip. Don't get bogged in technical and position stuff.
This idea of VJ's, how is it different than many of the other "secrets" on Hogan's swing?
Learning to write is technical. One must hold the writing instrument with some proper placement of the hands. One must learn to move the end of the pencil vertically, horizontally, and different degrees of curves. It is practiced over and over until at some point it is a habit. That habit is then either "chicken scratch" or "good penmanship." Their are varying degrees in the middle of course. For a person to not understand the techniques of golf and simply "grip it and rip it" may not be simple at all. In fact, it generally leads to "chicken scratch on the golf course."
The secret here uses geometry, physics, mathematics, and golf swing principles. Do the other "secret" books?
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