Re: Inside out swing plane
The cupped RH will not force an inside path (as we come back to the origional question). You can still use the arm "press inward" and "push outward" method to create the path, regardless of the RH position. The cupped RH simply gets the clubface to be BEHIND everything else at impact...so your hips, shoulders, arms AND Hands are now fully rotated, turned, dropped and released before the ball is struck.
I'll get detailed here becase it seems like you like this stuff:
F=ma
Mass is essential to golf. Everything we do to this little ball requires a mass to be accelerated at it. The more mass that is used, the greated the force. Mass comes in many places. The swing weight of the club is one. The position the ball is struck ON the clubface is another (the reason a club designs are so different and why the sweet spot is crutial to a good shot), and now where the RH drill comes in...The body's position at impact can be used to add mass to the equation. If your leading arm is in a straight line with the shaft, and the shaft is ahead of the ball at impact, you get to add parts of this acumulated mass (arms, hands, grip, and shaft) to this equation. Breaking the right wrist's cupped position too early and causing the shaft to lean backward prior to impact will negate this added mass.
The cupped RH will not force an inside path (as we come back to the origional question). You can still use the arm "press inward" and "push outward" method to create the path, regardless of the RH position. The cupped RH simply gets the clubface to be BEHIND everything else at impact...so your hips, shoulders, arms AND Hands are now fully rotated, turned, dropped and released before the ball is struck.
I'll get detailed here becase it seems like you like this stuff:
F=ma
Mass is essential to golf. Everything we do to this little ball requires a mass to be accelerated at it. The more mass that is used, the greated the force. Mass comes in many places. The swing weight of the club is one. The position the ball is struck ON the clubface is another (the reason a club designs are so different and why the sweet spot is crutial to a good shot), and now where the RH drill comes in...The body's position at impact can be used to add mass to the equation. If your leading arm is in a straight line with the shaft, and the shaft is ahead of the ball at impact, you get to add parts of this acumulated mass (arms, hands, grip, and shaft) to this equation. Breaking the right wrist's cupped position too early and causing the shaft to lean backward prior to impact will negate this added mass.
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