His hands are slowing down as the clubhead is released as late as possible creating tremendous speed from thexarms sling the releasing clubhead through b the ball. Hogan said the clubhead reaches maximum speed a foot past the ball, so it is accerating at impact.
The whip effect is not the hands simply slowing down, this may be an effect not a cause. It is primarily caused by the handle of the club moving up away from the ground around impact time, before and after. The handle comes up because the left shoulder is moving sharply up and back away from the target. Nobody stresses the fact that the handle MUST come up out of the ground for the whip effect. I’ve experienced this myself recently and added a good few yards to my drives and irons. Also paradoxically it promotes a downward strike with the irons, I now can hear the fizz from the spin on the ball after impact with irons, even with 60 yd SW shots. Moves need to be made to facilitate the handle moving up through impact to crack the whip , this is my own personal discovery and experience. Golf coaches need to distinguish between causes and effects, passive Vs active etc
First of all, you can’t tell if it’s slicing unless you can see his swing path clearly, which you can’t in this video. For all you know, his go to shot might be a push draw. Secondly, he’s not quite at contact in that shot so there is time to release more. Thirdly, his body is quite open and his hands are forward which is going to require a hand position different from what you’d see at address. Finally, he has quite a strong grip. Look at the beginning of the video. He’s not that far off from his address position. Bottom line, you couldn’t possibly know where that ball is going from this one angle.
@@gitchiemanito2408 I can see why you'd think his left hand position at impact would lead to a slice/open face to path, but it's all relative to how strong of a grip he started with at address, as well as the flex/cpm of his shaft and how much it's flexing in the downswing and 'slamming shut' at impact to rapidly close the face. Usually the faster the club speed/swinger, the stronger the grip gets... Not all the time, but usually
Yeah, no. That would be called "rolling shutter". A mostly undesirable effect of most digital camera sensors that "scan" the photo diodes of the sensor from top to bottom. The bent shaft is a combination of the sensor readout speed and the speed of the clubhead. To see what the shaft really looks like in a freeze frame you would need a global shutter camera and a fast shutter speed.
@@longdrivebryce Well, the shaft will obviously flex and load during the swing-no argument there. But when you freeze frame a video like this, what you see never happend in real life. The extreme "forward kick" of the shaft never happened. It looks like that due to rolling shutter of the camera. When you freeze a golf swing shot by a "normal" camera you get an image that is "old" and the top and more "recent" and the bottom. It looks like "a moment in time" but the position of the clubhead, the different parts of the shaft, and the hands are all from different moments in time. That's why it looks so bent. As long as we agree on this, all's good! 🤗
he murders the ball...he hits it so far he jest shot a 67 using only a 2 iron to tee off with..If he could become accurate with driver..would be dangerous
His hands are slowing down as the clubhead is released as late as possible creating tremendous speed from thexarms sling the releasing clubhead through b the ball. Hogan said the clubhead reaches maximum speed a foot past the ball, so it is accerating at impact.
Hands (and body) slowing down preparing for impact is called the break effect, good catch!
The whip effect is not the hands simply slowing down, this may be an effect not a cause. It is primarily caused by the handle of the club moving up away from the ground around impact time, before and after.
The handle comes up because the left shoulder is moving sharply up and back away from the target. Nobody stresses the fact that the handle MUST come up out of the ground for the whip effect. I’ve experienced this myself recently and added a good few yards to my drives and irons.
Also paradoxically it promotes a downward strike with the irons, I now can hear the fizz from the spin on the ball after impact with irons, even with 60 yd SW shots. Moves need to be made to facilitate the handle moving up through impact to crack the whip , this is my own personal discovery and experience. Golf coaches need to distinguish between causes and effects, passive Vs active etc
One could say then the left shoulder moves up due to the pressure applied and the ground reaction forces traveling through the feet and legs…
a fantastic, fundamentally sound swing.
Lots of things to like about it!
Hi how do you get to the world long drive finals do you have to pay
Hi, there’s a qualification process via various competitions. Head over to worldlongdrive.com and they’ll have more info
@@longdrivebryce thanks if you comp in eonrope can you go through that way
@@user-rc3kr1ud2k they do have some events where they partner up for WLD qualifying!
Looking at his hands position at 4:00...pretty sure this was a push slice. Great swing though!
What about his hands at that point in the swing lead you to believe this was a push slice?
@@longdrivebryce Logo on glove hand pointing toward the camera...
First of all, you can’t tell if it’s slicing unless you can see his swing path clearly, which you can’t in this video. For all you know, his go to shot might be a push draw. Secondly, he’s not quite at contact in that shot so there is time to release more. Thirdly, his body is quite open and his hands are forward which is going to require a hand position different from what you’d see at address. Finally, he has quite a strong grip. Look at the beginning of the video. He’s not that far off from his address position. Bottom line, you couldn’t possibly know where that ball is going from this one angle.
@@gitchiemanito2408 I can see why you'd think his left hand position at impact would lead to a slice/open face to path, but it's all relative to how strong of a grip he started with at address, as well as the flex/cpm of his shaft and how much it's flexing in the downswing and 'slamming shut' at impact to rapidly close the face. Usually the faster the club speed/swinger, the stronger the grip gets... Not all the time, but usually
Yeah, no. That would be called "rolling shutter". A mostly undesirable effect of most digital camera sensors that "scan" the photo diodes of the sensor from top to bottom. The bent shaft is a combination of the sensor readout speed and the speed of the clubhead.
To see what the shaft really looks like in a freeze frame you would need a global shutter camera and a fast shutter speed.
The rolling shutter effect… because the club head is moving faster than the shaft and hands, which is commonly referred to as the break effect 😊🤯
@@longdrivebryce Well, the shaft will obviously flex and load during the swing-no argument there. But when you freeze frame a video like this, what you see never happend in real life. The extreme "forward kick" of the shaft never happened. It looks like that due to rolling shutter of the camera.
When you freeze a golf swing shot by a "normal" camera you get an image that is "old" and the top and more "recent" and the bottom. It looks like "a moment in time" but the position of the clubhead, the different parts of the shaft, and the hands are all from different moments in time. That's why it looks so bent.
As long as we agree on this, all's good! 🤗
@@AndreeMarkeforswhat did I say in the video? 😊
His drive are unreal, however it is his 100 yard and n that will take hi m to the next level?
Thank goodness I focused on his driver swing lol
He finally ditched the red ventus noodle.
Is that the official shaft model? Lol
he murders the ball...he hits it so far he jest shot a 67 using only a 2 iron to tee off with..If he could become accurate with driver..would be dangerous
I rarely use driver off the tee too, usually a 280 yard 3 iron
He looks very muscular as well.
I think 5’8 165
Zero accuracy
define zero accuracy. Like, never hit a fairway in his life? Zero?
Joe is lonely so just hating for no reason
And tremendous lag.
Pretty solid for sure!
Tremendous coil, his hips hardly move on the backswing.
Flexibility is huge here for sure!
Can’t put it play… Myrtle qualifier. Putting and short game is weak at best.
Didn’t see where I critiqued his wedge and putting game lol