Re: My free online review of the golf swing
Tony
Another point.
Consider the Hardy OPS. The left arm does not turn on the same plane as the shoulder turn during the backswing. What actually happens is that the left arm (which is near-vertical at address) is brought across the chest as the backswing evolves, and the left upper arm moves upwards across the upper chest as the shoulders turn. The amount that the left arm moves upwards during the backswing is less with a OPS golfer compared to a 2PS golfer, because it ends up lying on the same plane as the shoulder turn at the end of the backswing. In other words, the left arm has to move upwards in both the OPS and 2PS. It is only a matter of degree - the amount of vertical climbing of the left arm across the upper chest.
During the dowswing, both OPS and 2PS golfers get into a similar position where the butt end of the club points at the ball (when the left arm is parallel to the ground). A 2PS golfer has to drop the arms much more to get into that "clubshaft slot", while the OPS golfer's clubshaft only has to drop a small amount. Again, it is only a matter of degree - varying degrees of clubshaft plane shifts during the early downswing.
Jeff.
Tony
Another point.
Consider the Hardy OPS. The left arm does not turn on the same plane as the shoulder turn during the backswing. What actually happens is that the left arm (which is near-vertical at address) is brought across the chest as the backswing evolves, and the left upper arm moves upwards across the upper chest as the shoulders turn. The amount that the left arm moves upwards during the backswing is less with a OPS golfer compared to a 2PS golfer, because it ends up lying on the same plane as the shoulder turn at the end of the backswing. In other words, the left arm has to move upwards in both the OPS and 2PS. It is only a matter of degree - the amount of vertical climbing of the left arm across the upper chest.
During the dowswing, both OPS and 2PS golfers get into a similar position where the butt end of the club points at the ball (when the left arm is parallel to the ground). A 2PS golfer has to drop the arms much more to get into that "clubshaft slot", while the OPS golfer's clubshaft only has to drop a small amount. Again, it is only a matter of degree - varying degrees of clubshaft plane shifts during the early downswing.
Jeff.
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