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#1 |
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Hey guys. I am thinking about making a swing-change during the winter off-season. At the top of my backswing, my hands get pretty high... sorta like Nick Watney high. When it is on, it is good and powerful. When it is off, however, it can get ugly, really ugly I want to be more consistent, even on the off-days, and even if I lose a bit of power.
When looking at "simpler" swings, however, I think I can make a consistency change without losing a ton of power. In particular, I reviewed Charley Hoffman's and Gary Woodland's swing. Their hands are much lower at the top and they still generate sufficient power. I think I might try to get closer to this position at the top. Has anyone else made this change? How did it go? |
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#2 |
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I just wanna offer some quick input before I head to bed.
I made a plethora of changes this season under the watchful eye of my ocach. One of these changes was length of backswing. I was past parallel, hands relatively high and real "loosey goosey". A lot of things happen when the swing gets too long among the real bad things is timing. The timing can get out so fast that it's mind boggling. You're change may not really need a full change in the way that it's thought. However without viewing your swing you could be both high with the hands at the top and too long. I bet that if you feel like you're at 3/4... it's just right. Ultimately, I've made the change you describe and both the power and timing is there. Results are fantastic. Alex |
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#3 |
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I just wanna offer some quick input before I head to bed. |
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#4 |
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Hey guys. I am thinking about making a swing-change during the winter off-season. At the top of my backswing, my hands get pretty high... sorta like Nick Watney high. When it is on, it is good and powerful. When it is off, however, it can get ugly, really ugly I want to be more consistent, even on the off-days, and even if I lose a bit of power. |
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#5 |
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I made that change last year. I actually dont put as much strain on my shoulder (injured it) anymore and actually am hitting the ball much farther then I used to. I am going to spend some time at the range this week with the vision of his swing in my mind and see how it works out. I am pretty sure that if I go this route, my irons will need to go a degree or two flatter. Probably should bring some electrical tape and a board to check it. |
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#6 |
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That is great to hear. Funny that you mention the change from injury. I have learned that Ben Crane made the same change after a back injury. I looked at his 2 swings. His older swing is more like my current swing (high hands, lift and more in front of me). His new swing is where I am thinking about going (lower, deeper hands). He has since said that he did in fact lose distance, but gained much more accuracy. I could be OK with some loss in distance. |
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#7 |
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#8 |
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Hey guys. I am thinking about making a swing-change during the winter off-season. At the top of my backswing, my hands get pretty high... sorta like Nick Watney high. When it is on, it is good and powerful. When it is off, however, it can get ugly, really ugly I want to be more consistent, even on the off-days, and even if I lose a bit of power. |
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#9 |
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Keep your right arm (back arm if right handed) straight at address, if the right elbow is bent at all at address it will throw off your swing bottom through the ball when your hands go high it stretches your arms out away from you and you need to be setup with straight elbows to all ow for that reach. When I play my best I feel like I am pushing the club up high over my head at the top as opposed to just back around and behind, this keeps everything stretched out and full and will greatly increase power with a full turn. Not sure I make that change. Just sayin.
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#10 |
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Keep your right arm (back arm if right handed) straight at address, if the right elbow is bent at all at address it will throw off your swing bottom through the ball when your hands go high it stretches your arms out away from you and you need to be setup with straight elbows to all ow for that reach. When I play my best I feel like I am pushing the club up high over my head at the top as opposed to just back around and behind, this keeps everything stretched out and full and will greatly increase power with a full turn. Not sure I make that change. Just sayin. |
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#11 |
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So this video almost shows exactly what I am thinking about doing. The swing on the right is fairly close to my current swing. The swing on the left is where I am thinking about going (if all goes well during the incubation stage). You can ignore the commentary; just using it as a visual cue of what I am considering doing.
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#12 |
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I already keep my right arm straight at address and, like you, I am high at the top. That is exactly what I am contemplating changing. I am willing to give a little power for more consistency. I want to be a sub-5 index... it is not lack of power that keeps me from it. It is a lack in consistency, and I need a better short game. You think the high-hands, outstretched swing is more consistent than the more compact, flatter swing? I am hoping for the opposite, but only time will tell. |
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#13 |
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My swing used to be long and I ended up kinda high too, and Tadashi also recommended to me to shorten it so it wasn't so long and to just hinge my wrists a little more because I virtually had none. What was happening before was that my hands got caught behind me and I as pushing the ball. So while it was a very minor swing change (I keep getting a lot of crap for talking about my "swing change") it was actually a very small adjustment that I didn't even have to practice on the range. I just made a mental note on my next round to only go a little past parallel and hinge my wrists, and I am getting the same distance with no push whatsoever. Since then I have been more consistent and have been shooting some of my lowest scores in a long time.
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#14 |
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I spent a long time working on a flatter swing trying to get rid of a tendency to hit the ball what I thought was too high on average and found myself hitting pull hooks all day long, this is with a more compact, right elbow lower and closer to the body throughout the swing. It worked great for the longer clubs but my wedges and short irons really suffered for some reason. It got to where I was shanking one almost every round and I attributed it to the flatter swing plane. As soon as I went back to the more upright swing no more shanks, all that went away. I found that I hit everything straighter, with a slight fade and a little high but not sky high, when I stay more vertical. It might help your consistency but I couldn't find the secret to it. I went from a 15 to a 5 and back up to about a ten with all of this experimenting but I am done with it now. Not trying to say it won't work just that it didn't work for me and I thought I would share that. |
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#15 |
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Hit another 175 balls with the swing change in mind. Did not go very well. I keep getting laid-off on the downswing. One of two things tends to happen: 1) I keep the right elbow too "tucked" and, combined with the deep turn, I come in too flat; or 2) I get into an OK position at the top, but in the transition I drop-in too much, leaving the club way too behind me without much room to come into the ball.
I was beginning to think that this experimental swing change might not be for me, so I hit 25 balls with the less-deep and higher hands over the right shoulder swing. Everything went well. I might give the proposed swing change a bit more, but not looking good thus far (400 or so balls in). |
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#16 |
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Hit another 175 balls with the swing change in mind. Did not go very well. I keep getting laid-off on the downswing. One of two things tends to happen: 1) I keep the right elbow too "tucked" and, combined with the deep turn, I come in too flat; or 2) I get into an OK position at the top, but in the transition I drop-in too much, leaving the club way too behind me without much room to come into the ball. |
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#17 |
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Interesting. I hate to bring this word up but I tried a swing something like this and ended up hitting a lot of sh**ks. Is this what you saw too? |
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#18 |
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This is similar to what my coach was having me do this summer and I think it took me a better part of 2 months to get used to but it was the few good shots where I could see what it was going to lead to that kept me working at it. Its not an easy change since it is uncomfortable and you are used to the original swing but the consistency will be worth it.
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#19 |
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One thing I was fighting with this swing is my natural move through the ball is somewhat 'handsy' and I struggled with keeping my wrists locked down through the ball. I think the consistency of Matt Kuchar has made this flatter swing more attractive to a lot of players, but it is hard to do, at least for me it is.
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#20 |
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No worries about bringing it up. I didn't see sh**ks, but everything was starting way right (and often off the toe). I was having to try to "save" almost everything with the hands. Lost a decent chunk of distance and height. Anyways, it sounds like you're trying to get a little flatter with your swing. I actually made the mistake of thinking that getting flatter would shorten my swing, and I had the issue where I was taking the club back too far to the inside and then I was under the plane on my downswing. All I could do is hit blocks or flip with my hands and hit hooks. For me, the fix was that I had to make sure I was still taking the club back on the correct plane on the backswing and feeling like the club was in front of me. Incidentally, my coach is mainly having me work this winter on getting the feel of a 9-o'clock backswing and where that really is. The first time he told me to take it back to what I felt like was 9 o'clock, my hands were at about 11 o'clock. So it's lots of mirror work this winter. The big thing that we're also doing is going slow on the backswing, taking the club back to the 9 o'clock position, stopping there for a second or two, then finishing your swing. You could adapt that drill to get into a "top of the backswing" position with lower hands but still a full turn, hold there to ingrain the feel, then go to a full finish. Don't worry about ballflight all that much, focus on the feel of that position. Just my 2 cents, hope that helps in some way. |
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