During a lesson last year, my instructor told me my right foot (I'm right handed) should be perpendicular to the target line. I'm also working on keeping my right knee bent. Keeping my foot perpendicular seems to inhibit my back swing and put extra pressure on my knee. Any comments?
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Position of Feet
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Re: Position of Feet
Keep your hips still going back. This helps the knee. You should now feel the pull/streach on the lower back.
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Re: Position of Feet
if a person has limited turn then turning their foot out will aide them in getting shoulders to around ninety degrees. if they are turning back too far then keeping the foot square will limit the back swing. also, sometimes keeping spine angle will help that right knee stay bentLast edited by shootin4par; 05-27-2006, 03:09 PM.
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Re: Position of Feet
Do you mind expanding on the relationship of the spine angle and keeping the right knee straight? That's interesting...
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Re: Position of Feet
Originally posted by GregJWillisDo you mind expanding on the relationship of the spine angle and keeping the right knee straight? That's interesting...
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Re: Position of Feet
Originally posted by Simon WooShootin did u mean to say that keeping spine angle will help right knee to stay bent, rather than straight?I will go and edit
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Re: Position of Feet
Originally posted by shootin4par...stand with no spine angle and some knee bend. Now turn back while watching the right knee without trying to keep the right knee flex. Now bend over to a 45 degree angle and turn back. The knee should have stayed straighter when you were bent at the waiste.
Turning back is a shoulder and torso turn, right? If you mean turning back using you legs and hips (not recommended), then I might see there is a "straightning" of the back leg but again all wrong in golf...
And to this point, having the spine angle straight up or 45 degrees had no difference or affect in the back leg while turning in what you described...
It's a small point anyway...not to worry.Last edited by GregJWillis; 05-27-2006, 09:48 PM.
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Re: Position of Feet
Originally posted by GregJWillisWhat you just described had no difference in what the right knee was doing while turning back...
Turning back is a shoulder and torso turn, right? If you mean turning back using you legs and hips (not recommended), then I might see there is a "straightning" of the back leg but again all wrong in golf...
And to this point, having the spine angle straight up or 45 degrees had no difference or affect in the back leg while turning in what you described...
It's a small point anyway...not to worry.
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Re: Position of Feet
I will put one description out there on this. If you take a universal socket and have it in a straight line condition, all the torque you put on it will be transfered from the top to bottom, now bend it at ninety degrees and it will lock up and have no transfer of torque, so the more bend in the universal socket the less transfer of torque from the top to the bottom. our upper body and lower body are similar to that universal socket so the more bend/spine angle at the waiste, the less torque that is tranfered all the way down to your foot, the less bend, the more it is transfered. Simple biomechanics of the human body and since they are starting to bring it into the golf swing, in the next twenty years the understanding of the golf swing will grow rapidly
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Re: Position of Feet
Wouldn't the main torque come from the separation of the hips and shoulders? I would think the legs mainly serve as a firm foundation to ground the hips for this separation. In other words, wouldn't the base of your torque transfer be the hips and not so much the legs?Attached Files
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