Quote of the month:
"It's easy to see golf not as a game at all but as some whey-faced, nineteenth-century Presbyterian minister's fever dream of exorcism achieved through ritual and self-mortification." ~Bruce McCall
I should have asked this earlier. Understanding that Greg's lesson is meant to be a drill, and drills are usually exaggerated, just how much of the cupped right wrist should we be doing in the real game? I've been experiencing a bit of pain in my right wrist lately, and I'm not sure if it's a sure sign that I've been swatting, or have I been cupping my wrist way too much (if there's such a thing as too much?)
I should have asked this earlier. Understanding that Greg's lesson is meant to be a drill, and drills are usually exaggerated, just how much of the cupped right wrist should we be doing in the real game? I've been experiencing a bit of pain in my right wrist lately, and I'm not sure if it's a sure sign that I've been swatting, or have I been cupping my wrist way too much (if there's such a thing as too much?)Thanks!
Where's the pain, and what sort of pain?
If the muscles in your forearm, on the same side as your palm, feel strained, then you might be swatting, since those are the flexors that make the swatting movement. If it feels more like a pain in tendons and ligaments around the wrist, then you might be letting the inertia of the club cup the wrist back too much at the top of the backswing. I've had both of these!
The pain is at the wrist, and yep it's definitely tendon/ligament and not muscle. It only hurts when I cup my wrist, or when I try to press hard on that particular point. So I could have been overcupping my wrist all this while? And I always thought it only be a matter of too little and never too much
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