WHen I was out in the Desert filming with tour pro Berry Henson, Berry told me that wolrds longest lefty DAN (s)mackintosh had the absolute secret to hitting solid full and partial wedge shots. (I was like :huh???"). So after our workout I drove over to see Dan and found out it was a total swing philosophy and it really works. I have more videos coming with dan becuase it is more inrticate than it first looks. You really ONLY hit the ball with the stretch point and the pressure change of the legs. The balls come out like straight missiles. If you try to do your old thing AND this at the same time, it is easy to hit it fat. I'm digging more into this becuase it was really encouraging.
This makes so much sense now. I actually accidentally discovered this with my 3 iron off a tee. We have a lot of short par 4’s. I concentrated on my lower body staying seated on the edge of an imaginary bar stool and then stretch my upper body back around as far as possible and was hitting it 220. But can’t do it with my driver. Only hit that 230 - to 235. It’s been driving me nuts for 2 yrs Now with this video I think I can finally transfer that swing to my driver. It should be noted also I’m 62 yrs old.
I discovered this very method accidentally about 2 months ago. Amazing that I’m seeing others to validate it. Now I’m sure it’s not a fluke since we’re in winter here now. Thanks
Trackman doesnt show your swing path and face angle on the first drive, it means it could not read it and its gonna show a straight ball. Not sure if youre aware of that or did it intentionaly, but that "trackman is not level" warning is there for a reason. Doesnt take away from the information in this video, just a little bsing of people. Cheers
@@ultimatejay some people learn better by seeing, some by feeling, some by listening. And looks can be deceiving, i have 8 likes on my comment you have zero. That meens that according to you 9 blind people has watched this video.
"Kelvin Miyahira was the pioneer in looking into facia and how it relates to the golf swing but unfortunately he had a severe stroke which prevented him going further . He also pioneered the spine engine ideas in golf and a lot of his ideas have been used developing long drive and golf training. Dan does a very good job of explaining the slings, I would be very interested if Dan got his ideas from "Kelvin Miyahira or someone taught by him.
Makes sense so if connected through the X, firing left hip down and away is going to pull across to right shoulder and help you shallow and stay on plane automatically. I've been told the "x-factor" happens at all the joints in the swing to some degree right. This system of staying stretched and activated seems healthier than how some people do it (pulling on joints and tendons not distributing load across all the muscles in the X chain). There are exercises meant for this "X" I am going to work on them, maybe some ball throws. I have some laxity in my joints and I know I need to get stronger, but without this "activation" I think it would be still bad for my back without them activated through load so I'm excited to work on this, thanks.
This is very much the X factor from the past. Works for some, not for others. As an orthopedic surgeon there are no discrete fascial bands in the upper body that correspond to the diagrams shown in the video. ALL muscle is covered with fascia, some thicker and tougher than others but with very littel stretch.
Glad you clarified that diagram they showed. I was like I don’t think that is accurate. What they propose can lead to back injury if the hips move out from under the torso. Be very careful learning this and make sure not to leave your torso behind your hips by sliding the hips forward.
Yes well that's the first thing that came to my mind(X Factor swing rotation) not too far into the explanation of the workings of this swing. And how many people ended up with bad backs after using the X Factor method.
B - thanks for this; I love it! I think the insight from this is huge, and in simple terms it makes total sense to me that we should be trying to rotate the body in the reverse order from which we are trying to swing back into the ball (i.e: ground upwards). I am struck that this appears tit be the opposite of what Dr Kwon was teaching (re backswing), but Dan’s theory appears to me the opportunity to keep much best connection and shape in the backswing. In your more recent short video on the 3 essentials that you try to focus on, you appeared not to take this video into consideration. Am I wrong about that, because while I agree with everything both guys seem to say about the downswing and rotation through the ball, this video seems to contain a valuable ingredient that most others miss or fail to understand. I’d be interested in your thoughts…
Please please please do more on this! I can get 97 mph clubhead speed easy on my 7 iron but can’t control it because of the turn. I’ve tried so many different swings and I think this is the missing link. Whenever I do more rotational swing I lose clubhead speed. This video alone made me subscribe!
EVERY SINGLE SHOT of the 1.5 hours we filmed was like that. Every shot he hit had a face to path difference of less than 1. He was usually 0 point something face with a 0 point something path.
@@BEBETTERGOLF Must be something about you Canadians. Moe Norman as I understand, is the only person who could hit a ball with zero sidespin. Incredible hitting Dan!
Very interesting. I would be interested to know if he thinks this is more taxing on the back because of the separation or if he thinks it's less taxing because of the core engagement.
To me this is "rib sway" (JT Thomas and Elite Golf) and I do the rib sway in both directions. I have NEVER hit it better. Insane how straight and long!
Reminds me of the old X Factor which died out due to high stress on the lower back, this is for the elite long knockers, the ave hack needs to focus on hands & wrists according to Paddy Harrington & Tom Watson.
hey B! Just wanted to chime in here and say that my last 3 range sessions (before watching this) I've sort of just discovered this feeling on my own. however, I'm still very slide and dump flip and scoop. But, for whatever reason-- I'm getting great contact and seeing the ball fly relatively lower than what I usually hit! I really need an anti slide drill along with this feeling.
When you say crunch, is it necessary to bend the spine forward too or is it just tightening the core muscles. I believe Rory mentioned this in a video where he says he activates his core muscles.
I really like the feeling of activating my glutes like I am doing a heavy deadlift and feeling the spring wind up 😊 and I will pause to feel it at top of backswing and then release
Hi . another great video. I'm a big fan. this one is another body driven swing . similar to milo. have you seen any of marcus edblad ? another long drive champion from sweden . he's similar to mike malaska. hands first and the body responds. fancy going to sweden?
Curious to see if you pick up some speed on driver like you did w Berry or if this just works for you on partial and full wedges/irons… would be cool to look back at all you’ve experienced and pick your preferred method for distance, accuracy, pitching, chipping…
I love that idea of creating separation in the backswing, not the downswing. Sooo much instruction tells people to squat or lead with the hips in the downswing and it screws people up.
I just flushed alot of balls in the net. core crunch feeling... I am a shorter stocky person and can hit it long. I am someone who over swings, opening trail hip too far. this kept my lower body stable. Felt really good. great video
this sounds an alot like the old X factor from years ago, where the upper body rotation resists against the lower body rotation, which "=" BAD back in the long term. Can you say with certain that it's not the same movement?
I remember what dear Bob Toski said and Seymour Dunn in Bobs Book. “I just don’t understand what these people (big-muscle advocates) are talking about,” Toski says. “The body can’t make a swing, because the body isn’t touching the club. You can’t get any speed from your shoulders. “All this talk about big muscles - give me a break. You’re a dead duck if you start thinking about big muscles and forget about the hands.” "Some players might as well stick their hands in their pockets," said the great golf instructor Seymour Dunn, "for all the use they make of them." Think back to the swing in the park [Toski was talking about a child's playground swing in an earlier chapter]. Let's say it's not a swing now, but a tennis ball hanging from a rope attached to the swing crossbar. You find it at rest and you want to start it swinging. How do you begin? Do you butt it with your body or nudge it with your shoulder? Do you push the rope with your arm? Or do you set it gently swinging with an easy push of your hand so that the ball climbs and falls back before you send it on its way again? And if you use your hand, do you clench it tightly or hold it just firmly enough to start it on the natural path limited by the length of the rope? Do you stiffen your wrist or let it flex? Which will keep the ball moving without bowing or jerking the rope? In a similar way, do you "flick" your wrist slightly at the bottom of the club's arc to add speed and send it forward faster? Or do you twist your body and lunge forward to quicken the club's pace? The freedom and motion that we spoke of in Chapter 1 emanate from the hands. The hands start the clubhead moving, keep it on its natural path and sustain its centrifugal motion. It would take very little movement on your part to get that tennis ball moving at its maximum speed, and most of the movement would come from your hands. And so with your golf swing. The hands, Dunn said, are the leaders of the swing. And that surprises most golfers. You see them on the practice range struggling to lift the club with their arms or pull it with their shoulders or help it along with their legs and trunk. They twist and turn and slap and hit, clutching the club in a grip so tight their hands lose all of their natural power. "Most poor golfers," Ernest Jones said, "merely use their hands to hold the club. They don't understand that it is through the hands and fingers alone that they can influence the behavior of the club."
I couldn’t disagree with you more. To me the hands are merely a loose hinge. Of course the hands move during the swing but they do so as an affect of the arms and body turning. Look at how a medieval trebuchet works. It’s an upside down golf swing and has a perfect release every time due to the effects of physics. Look at the speed of a golf swing, if you think that you can say to the wrists hold it , hold it, NOW, you’re severely mistaken.
That’s weird because it sounded good to me but a couple people are complaining about it. We both have our own DJI Mike, and they were working really well. I’ll check it for our next video.
Commenting 13 seconds into this clip. Let's get your 63 year old dad in there and see if he can swing like that. Or better yet, get 5 random golfers from the local muni. Pfft, forget it. Let's see what you got...
ok. Fair on these tips. But I'd like to see one of these guys teach a sub 6footer and see what happens to a loss of speed due to arc and musculature. If it was simply moves why is it only Jason Zuback the only short guy to win and he had to be built like a small gorilla.
Be careful with this method, it has created a ton of back issue on tour. Creating the separation in transition is hard on the lumbar spin, Patrick Cantlay was out nearly three years with stress fractures due to using this swing philosophy. According to TPI, he created a lot of separation in transition which caused the issue. His new swing still creates separation but he created that separation in the backswing which is better on the back.
@@JJHWAS91 Crunching the core is a basic move for creating speed. Rory really emphasizes this as well as having a firm grip. Grip pressure varies during the swing, it is very strong at the start of the backswing, then lessens and strengthens up again to change direction and then loosens again to let out the wrist angles.
Not the worlds longest drive, 515 on men's tour is (Mike Austin at age 64!!!). So what if you are left handed? You are still human and not a female so who cares? This guy can't hit it as far as a 64 year old. Oh, and those are muscles you are using......
All ridiculous nonsense that will help no one improve. It a shame what has happen to our once great “game” of golf. John Erickson is 1000% correct in saying “it is no longer the “game” of golf, but now the “sport” of golf.” The PGA and USGA and they’re nonsensically allowing the equipment manufacturers to completely make golf a joke. Remember “tennis” anyone?
WHen I was out in the Desert filming with tour pro Berry Henson, Berry told me that wolrds longest lefty DAN (s)mackintosh had the absolute secret to hitting solid full and partial wedge shots. (I was like :huh???"). So after our workout I drove over to see Dan and found out it was a total swing philosophy and it really works. I have more videos coming with dan becuase it is more inrticate than it first looks. You really ONLY hit the ball with the stretch point and the pressure change of the legs. The balls come out like straight missiles. If you try to do your old thing AND this at the same time, it is easy to hit it fat. I'm digging more into this becuase it was really encouraging.
One of the most interesting channels on RUclips. You keep interviewing the most exceptional guests. Well done, B.
This makes so much sense now. I actually accidentally discovered this with my 3 iron off a tee. We have a lot of short par 4’s. I concentrated on my lower body staying seated on the edge of an imaginary bar stool and then stretch my upper body back around as far as possible and was hitting it 220. But can’t do it with my driver. Only hit that 230 - to 235. It’s been driving me nuts for 2 yrs
Now with this video I think I can finally transfer that swing to my driver. It should be noted also I’m 62 yrs old.
Really like the idea of crunching the core before going into our backswing.
I discovered this very method accidentally about 2 months ago. Amazing that I’m seeing others to validate it. Now I’m sure it’s not a fluke since we’re in winter here now.
Thanks
Great minds think alike Nelson!
Trackman doesnt show your swing path and face angle on the first drive, it means it could not read it and its gonna show a straight ball. Not sure if youre aware of that or did it intentionaly, but that "trackman is not level" warning is there for a reason. Doesnt take away from the information in this video, just a little bsing of people. Cheers
Love your channel brah !!!
You’ve always got something totally different than any other channel
Always wondered if the core should be flexed/engaged before swinging..... Great vid!
The crunching motion from setup needs a very detailed explenation of how its done! Please thanky you, this was interesting
Are you blind ? They actually showed you how to do it in the video.
@@ultimatejay some people learn better by seeing, some by feeling, some by listening. And looks can be deceiving, i have 8 likes on my comment you have zero. That meens that according to you 9 blind people has watched this video.
@@Robin-Cj millions of people voted for Biden too what does that tell you?
@@ultimatejay that your election is rigged or your country is just plain stupid
@@ultimatejay They were smart
"Kelvin Miyahira was the pioneer in looking into facia and how it relates to the golf swing but unfortunately he had a severe stroke which prevented him going further . He also pioneered the spine engine ideas in golf and a lot of his ideas have been used developing long drive and golf training. Dan does a very good job of explaining the slings, I would be very interested if Dan got his ideas from "Kelvin Miyahira or someone taught by him.
I’ll ask
Makes sense so if connected through the X, firing left hip down and away is going to pull across to right shoulder and help you shallow and stay on plane automatically. I've been told the "x-factor" happens at all the joints in the swing to some degree right. This system of staying stretched and activated seems healthier than how some people do it (pulling on joints and tendons not distributing load across all the muscles in the X chain). There are exercises meant for this "X" I am going to work on them, maybe some ball throws. I have some laxity in my joints and I know I need to get stronger, but without this "activation" I think it would be still bad for my back without them activated through load so I'm excited to work on this, thanks.
Met Dan at a charity tournament. Really nice guy and fun to watch
Fascinating! Can't wait to see more with Dan!
New video on Wednesday!
@@BEBETTERGOLF you never disappoint, B!
Its a Great lesson! Do the crunch is the thing. Will test as soon possible.
Please do!
This is very much the X factor from the past. Works for some, not for others. As an orthopedic surgeon there are no discrete fascial bands in the upper body that correspond to the diagrams shown in the video. ALL muscle is covered with fascia, some thicker and tougher than others but with very littel stretch.
Glad you clarified that diagram they showed. I was like I don’t think that is accurate. What they propose can lead to back injury if the hips move out from under the torso. Be very careful learning this and make sure not to leave your torso behind your hips by sliding the hips forward.
Yes well that's the first thing that came to my mind(X Factor swing rotation) not too far into the explanation of the workings of this swing. And how many people ended up with bad backs after using the X Factor method.
This is such a clear explanation 👍
Your content is great! I love what you do! Been watching your videos for a long time now. Awesome work!
Thanks so much!
B - thanks for this; I love it! I think the insight from this is huge, and in simple terms it makes total sense to me that we should be trying to rotate the body in the reverse order from which we are trying to swing back into the ball (i.e: ground upwards). I am struck that this appears tit be the opposite of what Dr Kwon was teaching (re backswing), but Dan’s theory appears to me the opportunity to keep much best connection and shape in the backswing. In your more recent short video on the 3 essentials that you try to focus on, you appeared not to take this video into consideration. Am I wrong about that, because while I agree with everything both guys seem to say about the downswing and rotation through the ball, this video seems to contain a valuable ingredient that most others miss or fail to understand. I’d be interested in your thoughts…
Great video .
Please please please do more on this! I can get 97 mph clubhead speed easy on my 7 iron but can’t control it because of the turn. I’ve tried so many different swings and I think this is the missing link. Whenever I do more rotational swing I lose clubhead speed. This video alone made me subscribe!
Thanks Kyle. More coming soon!
Love that insight. Very different but yet makes so much sense. Thank you.
This an awesome video. Can't believe how straight Dan hits it.
EVERY SINGLE SHOT of the 1.5 hours we filmed was like that. Every shot he hit had a face to path difference of less than 1. He was usually 0 point something face with a 0 point something path.
@@BEBETTERGOLF Must be something about you Canadians. Moe Norman as I understand, is the only person who could hit a ball with zero sidespin. Incredible hitting Dan!
Probably one of your best videos .. thanks for sharing ...
Excellent vid, great insights into the swing. Thanks.
Very interesting. I would be interested to know if he thinks this is more taxing on the back because of the separation or if he thinks it's less taxing because of the core engagement.
I’ll ask. A lot of people of wary of anything that sounds like X factor stretch
@@BEBETTERGOLF agree 100%
cool video, learned something, thanks
Thanks Dan
Great info
To me this is "rib sway" (JT Thomas and Elite Golf) and I do the rib sway in both directions. I have NEVER hit it better. Insane how straight and long!
Is this the resistor pattern from the releaser vs resistor comparison you hear Scott Lynn mention?
I played my first round of the year on Saturday and it was so good! I’ve never hit so straight and consistent 😁
I would love to hear more about how he taught his son! I am currently working with my daughter
Mike Austin is credited with the longest drive on the PGA Tour 515 yards
Reminds me of the old X Factor which died out due to high stress on the lower back, this is for the elite long knockers, the ave hack needs to focus on hands & wrists according to Paddy Harrington & Tom Watson.
You are correct. Over time this would kill your back. Ask Tiger
This works. Have not hit a ball in 3 weeks, shot the best round in many years. Got a little tired crunching for 4 hours.
I used to advise my junior students to practice their slap shots from both sides.
Isnt this the same as Jim Mclean X factor?
what's crazy is his competition LD swing looks like a pretty playable golf swing on the course.
Sounds like Jim McLean's X Factor from 20 years ago.
hey B! Just wanted to chime in here and say that my last 3 range sessions (before watching this) I've sort of just discovered this feeling on my own. however, I'm still very slide and dump flip and scoop. But, for whatever reason-- I'm getting great contact and seeing the ball fly relatively lower than what I usually hit! I really need an anti slide drill along with this feeling.
Great post.
Thanks Eric!
Do you tense your abb's? Is that part of the crunch?
When you say crunch, is it necessary to bend the spine forward too or is it just tightening the core muscles. I believe Rory mentioned this in a video where he says he activates his core muscles.
I really like the feeling of activating my glutes like I am doing a heavy deadlift and feeling the spring wind up 😊 and I will pause to feel it at top of backswing and then release
Like a heavy feeling in your body?
@@BEBETTERGOLF like a torque in feeling to the ground
They used to call this the “X Factor” swing years ago. Rinse and repeat
Hi . another great video. I'm a big fan. this one is another body driven swing . similar to milo. have you seen any of marcus edblad ? another long drive champion from sweden . he's similar to mike malaska. hands first and the body responds. fancy going to sweden?
How long do you keep "the crunch" on the through swing? I would assume you try to keep all the way to the end?
Curious to see if you pick up some speed on driver like you did w Berry or if this just works for you on partial and full wedges/irons… would be cool to look back at all you’ve experienced and pick your preferred method for distance, accuracy, pitching, chipping…
I love that idea of creating separation in the backswing, not the downswing. Sooo much instruction tells people to squat or lead with the hips in the downswing and it screws people up.
I just flushed alot of balls in the net. core crunch feeling... I am a shorter stocky person and can hit it long. I am someone who over swings, opening trail hip too far. this kept my lower body stable.
Felt really good. great video
Victory!
this sounds an alot like the old X factor from years ago, where the upper body rotation resists against the lower body rotation, which "=" BAD back in the long term. Can you say with certain that it's not the same movement?
This is literally how I turned pro and coach.
So stable, so solid.
Where is this location you are filming?
Secret Location, Palm Desert, CA. Dan rents out space behind a physical therapy studio
@@BEBETTERGOLF thank you, good to know as I live in the area
I literally shouted out loud holy f*** at that 249 yd 7 iron shot
He’s built different
This was kind of new "must test"-stuff. Struggling to get to the forward side in the downswing. This might do it.
Its flexibiltiy plus muscle. No matter what.
Dan has so much power one thing i have learned is getting older is no bar to finding more distance.
That’s good news!
This is the best lesson i ever heard.
All the other lower body, pivot driven swings, where there is no elasticity, dont work !!!!
Sounds similar to Jim McLean's X-factor swing.
I remember what dear Bob Toski said and Seymour Dunn in Bobs Book.
“I just don’t understand what these people (big-muscle advocates) are talking about,” Toski says. “The body can’t make a swing, because the body isn’t touching the club. You can’t get any speed from your shoulders.
“All this talk about big muscles - give me a break. You’re a dead duck if you start thinking about big muscles and forget about the hands.”
"Some players might as well stick their hands in their pockets," said the great golf instructor Seymour Dunn, "for all the use they make of them." Think back to the swing in the park [Toski was talking about a child's playground swing in an earlier chapter]. Let's say it's not a swing now, but a tennis ball hanging from a rope attached to the swing crossbar. You find it at rest and you want to start it swinging. How do you begin? Do you butt it with your body or nudge it with your shoulder? Do you push the rope with your arm? Or do you set it gently swinging with an easy push of your hand so that the ball climbs and falls back before you send it on its way again? And if you use your hand, do you clench it tightly or hold it just firmly enough to start it on the natural path limited by the length of the rope? Do you stiffen your wrist or let it flex? Which will keep the ball moving without bowing or jerking the rope? In a similar way, do you "flick" your wrist slightly at the bottom of the club's arc to add speed and send it forward faster? Or do you twist your body and lunge forward to quicken the club's pace?
The freedom and motion that we spoke of in Chapter 1 emanate from the hands. The hands start the clubhead moving, keep it on its natural path and sustain its centrifugal motion. It would take very little movement on your part to get that tennis ball moving at its maximum speed, and most of the movement would come from your hands. And so with your golf swing.
The hands, Dunn said, are the leaders of the swing. And that surprises most golfers. You see them on the practice range struggling to lift the club with their arms or pull it with their shoulders or help it along with their legs and trunk. They twist and turn and slap and hit, clutching the club in a grip so tight their hands lose all of their natural power. "Most poor golfers," Ernest Jones said, "merely use their hands to hold the club. They don't understand that it is through the hands and fingers alone that they can influence the behavior of the club."
I couldn’t disagree with you more. To me the hands are merely a loose hinge. Of course the hands move during the swing but they do so as an affect of the arms and body turning. Look at how a medieval trebuchet works. It’s an upside down golf swing and has a perfect release every time due to the effects of physics. Look at the speed of a golf swing, if you think that you can say to the wrists hold it , hold it, NOW, you’re severely mistaken.
I like that he's a lefty
Pretty helpful. Seems to me like he is saying: start back with the arms before turn. NOT one piece takeaway
Berkshire and Borgmeyer are the fastest Love your content
It's true! I only weigh 98 Lbs soaking wet yet my drives go miles.
"He has this golf swing philosophy called the sling swing or something like that" excellent research. Lol
Great video. When he pulls it, it goes straight through the wall. 😂
Would love to see his pressure shift on a swing cat as well
Will do.
Please buy another Rode mic so the audio sounds good for both of you!
That’s weird because it sounded good to me but a couple people are complaining about it. We both have our own DJI Mike, and they were working really well. I’ll check it for our next video.
Amazing
That’s a wild swing brah.. This dude ain’t playing for score and won’t be playing for long swinging like that..
Love golf! Fuck the PGA tour tho
my dad played college hockey i think thats why he hits it really far
The muscles move the bones and joints but the mind or your nervous system moves the muscles.
Can someone give me the name of the best iron player in the world Dan mentions as I can't decipher what he said. Tha k you.
This is applied Pete Cowan. Still good though.
“Separation?” What is being “stretched and separated?” Are we talking about creating an “X” between the pelvis and shoulders?” Sounds like it.
Could you get to the instruction please!!! 😢
Sounds good guys but I don’t think seniors like me (73) can keep their legs fixed and turn that far otherwise I would end up in traction.
Commenting 13 seconds into this clip. Let's get your 63 year old dad in there and see if he can swing like that. Or better yet, get 5 random golfers from the local muni. Pfft, forget it. Let's see what you got...
ok. Fair on these tips. But I'd like to see one of these guys teach a sub 6footer and see what happens to a loss of speed due to arc and musculature.
If it was simply moves why is it only Jason Zuback the only short guy to win and he had to be built like a small gorilla.
Jaime is 5’11”. But yeah, long levers do help
he did so have a build of a small gorilla, I have on many occasions practiced beside him and talked with him back in the early 2000's in Calgary.
His 7 iron goes about as far as my driver! 🤣😭
Please go see Marcus Edblad.
Quick trip to Scandinavia
It's not the muscles, but...... Look at the guy. His arms are huge! And, he's huge!
241 7 iron 😆😆😆
Longest drive is 515 yards in 1974
SMACKINTOSH
Fitting!
Hopefully they get a clothing sponsor and fix up the garage😂😂😂
Longest not . Marcus Edblad can do that at 50.
Over time, this would kill your back, hips and knees. Ask Tiger
Fair concern. I’ll ask him about that.
No driver example! Fail!
You could have fooled me, mr muscle man.
He is pretty built
At 72 years old I’ll pass on the crunching.
Kool
please invest in better sound
Be careful with this method, it has created a ton of back issue on tour. Creating the separation in transition is hard on the lumbar spin, Patrick Cantlay was out nearly three years with stress fractures due to using this swing philosophy. According to TPI, he created a lot of separation in transition which caused the issue. His new swing still creates separation but he created that separation in the backswing which is better on the back.
However crunching the core is a good feel
@@JJHWAS91 Crunching the core is a basic move for creating speed. Rory really emphasizes this as well as having a firm grip. Grip pressure varies during the swing, it is very strong at the start of the backswing, then lessens and strengthens up again to change direction and then loosens again to let out the wrist angles.
Actually, engaging your core is extraordinarily safe and protective for your low back. Poor core is a big problem with rotational athletes.
Umm Tiger taught us this, 15 years ago…go watch the vids
Tons of dudes out on the course just coughing twice every shot, haha
First off, you're hitting on the wrong side of the ball. 😂😅
Not the worlds longest drive, 515 on men's tour is (Mike Austin at age 64!!!). So what if you are left handed? You are still human and not a female so who cares? This guy can't hit it as far as a 64 year old. Oh, and those are muscles you are using......
😑 Promo SM
The guy is twice as wide as the other guy
All ridiculous nonsense that will help no one improve. It a shame what has happen to our once great “game” of golf. John Erickson is 1000% correct in saying “it is no longer the “game” of golf, but now the “sport” of golf.” The PGA and USGA and they’re nonsensically allowing the equipment manufacturers to completely make golf a joke. Remember “tennis” anyone?