The 4K 60 FPS video format looks amazing and gives a very clear image of a moment in your golf swing when I try to pause the video! There's not a lot of golf channels that are doing this and I think they are missing out!
Holy moly guys. I've been knocking on a single figures handicap and suffering from consistency issues. I've known I had something off with my wrists and had lack of awareness of them. I watched this video and then picked up the club. Wow, it feels much stronger like when I'm swinging well. I haven't even hit a ball and know this is the key to that consistency. Thank you, thank you
Just started playing golf the last few months and have been slicing badly. Just tried the right palm to the ground drills at the range today. Didn’t slice at all!!! Thanks guys! Amazing stuff!
Was at Arnold Palmers BayHill tourny 2 years ago , and watched Pete Cowan working with Thomas Pieters and the only thing Pete was telling Thomas was to hinge the trail wrist (right hand for a righty), like your showing in this video, great video.
Doesn’t Pete teach more radial “cocking of the wrists” with less r.h flexion. Have you gentlemen thought about a discussion of wrist roll vs underhand throw. With right hand. Maybe splitting hairs but I have issues with left arm feeling too much pressure and pulling with the wrist roll SUV’s throwing motion. What does gears tell us the pro do. Most of.
About time somebody brings that right side in focus.. as a right handed person who picked golf later in life as a leftie, it took me a while to get my hands to work together.. thanks for making this video..
Mikal, start you own channel and say whatever you want to whoever will subscribe. But you are not welcome to try it here. No one is forcing you to watch our videos. If you don't agree with them, don't watch. But enough of the nonsense and ridiculous contrarian advice. Last warning.
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! The right wrist palm facing down through impact changed everything for me. I used to always try and release(flip) my wrist over and struggling with contact.
I have a hairline fracture in my right wrist from playing baseball when I was younger. Compared to my left wrist when trying to put them flat on the table, my right wrist is about 45 degrees when the left would be 90. What advice would you give me when my right wrist won't bend to the point of carrying a tray?
I've been doing some of what you're talking about since last summer but I couldn't explain to anyone why it was important. I'm gonna share this with all my golf buddies. I love your channel.
thanks for the golf instruction. you guys have a very effective style of teaching. i like the focus on body positions especially the wrist in the set up and at impact. its allmost like everything else reacts to this. all so the spine tilt in the set up very important. thanks again
You boys are gold!! My ball striking is so much better after incorporating a lot of your drills over the winter, the knowledge of why I am doing the bad stuff (flipping, early extension) and giving me the ammunition (drills and knowledge) to overcome the awful traits is fantastic, keep up the excellent work chaps!!
Another great video Gents. I'm doing a lot of work to overcome my old habits that lead to casting and slicing. I'm focusing on my right wrist and right elbow as per your vids and it is making a huge difference to my swing path, weight shift and impact. Cheers.
Thank you Thank you. Now I know why I have been so damn inconsistent in my ball striking abilities. I would often try to hyper dorsiflex my right hand at the top to prevent the 'tray' from slipping at the top. I found I could not physically do this and gave it up altogether. Your clarification of right hand extension with a comfortable bending of the right hand and then right hand pointing toward the ground during the downswing is golden and hopefully will give me more consistency in my shot making abilities. Cheers
Athletic Motion Golf yesterday I tried it at the driver range playing on the ground; not a mat. At 72 and playing for over 40 years I could actually feel the lag of my club head heading towards the ball to impact for the first time in my life. Using Hogan's teaching that the hips and knees start the downswing which then propels the arms during the downswing your precise information regarding the right hand on this video works 100 percent of the time. Perfect!
Another great vid guys. Could you elaborate what role rolling the forearm plays in where the wrists end up in the backswing (or is there a vid you've already made for this)? I have to guard against a huge roll to the inside, however, I feel like that sets my wrists better at the top (without crossing the line).
Hi guys. love the content always. cant go wrong with any advice backed up by the numbers 👍 I was wondering if you have any videos on the difference in wrist release with a strong grip? or does this video still apply? thanks, Nick
Well done gentleman. Love that you’re bringing hi tech modern equipment to the everyday golfer. I’d love for a discussion on the timing, that simultaneously as the re centering occurs with the COP shift from just before top of backswing (p3.8) to just before left arm parallel in the downswing (p4.8) the right wrist goes from being partially extended to increasing its extension. This natural “loading” for a thrower will help golfers have some wrist angle left to “release” into the ball once the arms have lowered.
In a previous video, you discussed how the average golfer needs to understand that even during the backswing as your turning, that while you turn, you can actually move forward. I think the same concept gets missed with the wrists for most amateurs too. At the same time the arms begin to move down in the downswing, the right wrist increases it’s extension (bending back) This “opposite overlap”’ seems to be the key to so much of the dynamics. 1) Backswing moves forward as its competed. 2) Right wrist increases extension as the arms start to come down. 3) Pelvis and chest extending in the follow through to “crack the whip”
Question: love this instruction video. With this in mind I’m able to hit my irons well. But my driver not so good. I tend to hit down with my driver putting too much spin and not enough height or upward launch angle. What am I doing wrong? I’m hitting low hooks with driver.
You want to be on you lead side early enough so you can take advantage of the push into the ground to add some tilt your impact with the driver. Make sense?
I had the same problem going from my irons to the driver. So, I weaken my grip to neutral on the driver. And that seems to correct the problem allowing me to hit the ball straighter. Good luck.
Thank you for this video. Very helpful. Could you please provide a link to your left wrist video you referenced. I looked but could not find one similar to this video. THANKS AND KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK.
I have cronic over the top as well as taking the club on the inside. Been working really hard on taking it on outside. After seeing this video realised my right hand comes side ways. 1. The stop movement didn't work. 2. The idea of palm facing down all the way to the ball has been a game changer. Thank you! From pitching to 5 iron it's amazing. Should it be down for fairwoods and driver too???
I have the opposite problem with right hand. Come from a past cast flip swing to now generating power with left leg and left arm dominant. Problem is my right hand wants to add that extra snap at the bottom. Cause consistent pull hooks off the toe. Any suggestions beyond tray move to get past this block would be helpful.
This is probably the most important teaching concept in all of golf and it has been overlooked forever. The over focus on the left wrist for almost all people is the wrong way to teach golf - refocusing on what the Right Dominant wrist and hand have to do is 10,000x more useful in teaching everyone how to hit a ball correctly - I also love the fact that you pointed out the insanity of laying the club off with the palm pointed to the sky - it's insane. Every golfer on Earth should watch this video as long as it takes to get rid of your slice. Arnold - 'talk to the hand' how to hit a draw.
Thank you very much for the info. Interesting as a right handed player I've always, 55 years now, concentrated on the left hand. I'll definitely give this a go.
Thanks for this tip. When i do this right wrist move, i feel my right palm pressing hard on my left thumb at or just after impact. This press helps me supinate my left wrist better. Any comments ? Thanks again
AMG, please give me some advice. I have been getting my weight transferred to my lead side before I finish my backswing, just like you have advised and my contact has been vastly improved. I no longer hit fat shots! However, I noticed that I am taking very big divots and I feel like my swing is getting steeper. Can you make a quick follow up video showing how I can still shallow my club while still getting on my lead side early? Thanks so much.
Check this one out: ruclips.net/video/J7yQorZyD3Y/видео.html The pro in this video shifts forward several inches while still shallowing the club beautifully. So much of it has to do with hand path. Also check out the top 9 in the world doing it too: instagram.com/p/Bg6Z-PChZxH/
Thank you! As a tennis player trying to learn how to golf, I am having some problems with my swing and experiencing wrist issues already. The "right hand slap" idea will stick in my head. I can't wait to try!
Love this one guys! I would say if I was holding a tray of drinks I would not have spilt a drop at the top or even half way down!! Just to clear up, would the tray be level with the ground at the top or angled forward? and then facing the ground all the way to impact? thanks again! Rob
Athletic Motion Golf Thanks again! ...another lightbulb moment when you said its possible to have too much wrist cock! Ive always forced it to max & wrists/forearms were no longer soft/relaxed at top..combine that with trying to flatten on way down (face palm up) its no wonder i had a big slide & hanging back fault ! You guys are gold! 👍
Rob Kedgley agree. Same with myself. Tried their advice yesterday and the results were astounding. Will keep this one swing thought the rest of my life.
I have a question regarding that right-palm-face-the-ground-move. Doesn't that promote a steepening of the shaft coming down? Second question: why does that flipping action do close the face in your opinion? Around 8:05 Mike does show "this move does close the face" which in my opinion doesn't look like it does close the face it does have an effect on loft. The turning to the ground is more pronation in my opinion, which closes the face. Keeping the bend in the right wrist helps to create shaft lean.
The right palm facing the ground is not an arm wrestling move... that would do exactly as you said - steepen the shaft. Think of it in terms as the opposite of keeping the palm skyward, that would keep the face wide open. Lowering the handle, rotating the face, and leaning the handle back are all move that get the face pointing closed. Of course those could be off-set by the golfer through an opposing wrist move, but you'll almost never see an open face late with a shaft leaning forward. Good golfers are moving the right wrist towards flat not holding it bent. Once the club collides with the ground and the hands keep moving, it gives the look of a massively (in some cases) bent right wrist but that is from the ground collision.
@@AthleticMotionGolf Thanks for the kind answer, but if one pronates the right palm before P6 it will steepen the shaft, even if the right shoulder is eternally rotated.
@@swingsearcher7536 The should happen to the shaft coming into impact. The shaft should go from shallow to steep, that's what keeps the shaft on plane and the handle low. The wrong sequence is steep to shallow.
I agree with the advice about the waiter and tray position on the backswing, and I agree with the wrist bent back idea on the downswing. But I think you've missed that when the lead hand is under the chin the shaft will be roughly horizontal to the ground and pointing away from the target for good players. And that tells us that there is a big rotation of the trail forearm right before impact.
At the 9 o’clock position during the backswing, someone standing behind would see my right palm (pointing “stop”) aimed right at them. This results in a very closed, skyward facing club face with a bowed left wrist at the top. Since I don’t have Dustin Johnson’s fast hips, this closed club face returns to the ball closed resulting in a hook if path in-to-out or pull-fade if I manage to get an out-to-in path. How do I get that club face less closed (skyward) at the top? Hitting blocks has ruined my left (sliding) knee.
Very nice. I believe you’re on to something having right handers concentrate more on the right side to learn proper technique/positions faster in the golf swing.
Love your videos, I’m left hand dominant but golf right handed. I feel that I’m not getting compression and I’m releasing my right hand to soon. My longer hits that feel smooth through the ball, the ball goes to 10o’clock. Like I closed the face. I’m going to try the stop, palm down, and slap you are mentioning.😂
@@AthleticMotionGolf This is something I've been struggling to understand for some while. If you haven't already done a video on this perhaps you might consider it as a possible future topic?
I find that if I have right wrist extension in the takeaway, the club gets whipped behind me and is extremely closed in such a way that is is hard to recover from. When exactly do you want right wrist extension?
Awesome video! Thanks guys. I have a question on shallowing. Is there a "primary shallower"? Does wrist movement act as the main force behind proper shallowing?
Great question! I would say what the primary is depends on where the club is at the top... or how it's arriving to the top. But it's hard not to imagine the wrist being involved if there's a need to shallow.
Love to video about the hips. It appears BOTH hips move away from the ball - even the right hip on the down swing doesn’t appear to get closer. Also the sequence of the hips to make room for the right elbow.
Glad to see this video. The last few months I've been focusing on the right hand and it really makes a difference in contact. I suspect accuracy will increase as I practice this more. Cool.
265 is the winning score of David Toms at the 2001 PGA Championship, which was a PGA Tour record that stood for 15 years. I believe Shaun from AMG is the Director of Golf there at Toms’ 265 Academy.
This is what can make things confusion. In recent video the relation to a yo-yo was given. Which is the opposite of keeping the palm towards the ground.
Please insure that when talking about the club face, that it is always visible in the screen view. Left me assuming it’s position. Otherwise, A+ tip for the right hand associated position & feel.
perfect. I'm a former collegiate player, and sometimes I struggle trying to teach my brother in law (high handicapper) wrist motion. I'll just have him watch this!!
Lay it down ; Lay it off. The problem occurs when the golfer attempts to accelerate the club head with wrist motion. Which as you know is a horizontal motion. The wrist will accelerate the club head but only during the uncocking phase. If you flatten the trail wrist coming into the ball The club starts up and in : thin. The compensation is to move the ball back in the stance and maybe add a little slide. Front flat ; trail bent. No throwing from the wrist. Cheers
Watch Seve B. and Jose O. hitting chips. The best part by far was my chipping for 30 years. Got yips all of a sudden.I was reading too much instruction!! Get your weight forward and feel like you are taking the club head and the grip end back more in one piece while using the whole body including the knees and left shoulder and hips. Key on follow through especially on longer chips is let the body rise after impact. This takes a little practice but it will free you up from ever chunking one.Practice how much shaft lean you can use as well. This can vary from player to player. Also helps to keep your spine or sternum angled more in front of the ball at setup. Hope this helps!!! I'm chipping great again.Never give up! Let me know how you do.
Got it after a massive stroke retraining body to play golf is all about reminding parts of the body what to do. Need better job done explaining the stop signal with the right hand?
@@dtgps there is a dramatic difference in how beginners learn to just hit a tennis forehand and how tournament level players entire arm, elbow, wrist, hand and racket move to generate massive power and spin. Not only is the racket faced down, it is actually faced backwards and behind you as your elbow comes wiping through first to generate speed before the trailing hand and racket creates a dramatic Sergio like move accelerating the racket up and at the ball. This right hand video is the closest thing to actually showing you what is happening in a proper tennis forehand I have ever seen. Watch it a 100 times and then go out and practice
@@dtgps if you go on to any public range and watch 99% of neutral grip non right hand facing down coming into impact amateurs slicing the crap out of all their golf shots unless the can time a flip at the ball then yes you are correct. As this video so accurately points out, pros look nothing like amateurs in this aspect.
@@dtgps Not sure what you are arguing any of this for but this video is factual that the Pros have a vastly different right hand than nearly all amateurs. And slicing the ball has nothing to do with an Out to In Path - zero. In fact many better amateurs have an over the top (Out to In) swing path and play a trap draw as they have begun to incorporate some of what this video was all about. If they are able to incorporate more of it and for the most part what is pointed out in the Right Arm video (keeping the angle at 80 to 90 degrees) and not collapsing to 120 degrees - then more would be able to hit slightly from the inside and start the ball slightly right of target as well. Go watch some videos of Trevino hit the ball - arguably top two in history of quality of strike - and look at that right wrist. He chose to hold off at impact and hit a fade from that position as he grew up playing on hard dirt and didn't want the ball running off the fairways.
@@dtgps out to in has zero to do with a slice - zero - if you don't understand you can't understand anything - you can hit a out to in draw - out to in straight and out to in fade - they are unrelated entire Triveno describes his own swing as holding off at impact - just do some RUclips searches it's easy to find - he later in life senior tour type stuff when looking for more distance and when his leg flexibility started to go he deliberately started to release his hands - his swing is the definition in golfing history books of holding off
Sorry, but you’re incorrect about what happens with the right hand on the downswing with pros. Go to GolfswingHD and watch what the right hand really does (at least for the 20+ pros I watched). On the downswing, in all the ones I watched, the right hand leads the club down towards the ball. It looks as if their right hand is trying to Karate chop the ball, not slap it, as you suggest. Only after the hand has passed the ball (by several inches) does it roll over or turn under the left. This is true from John Daly to Tony Finau, with grips as strong as Daniel Berger’s and as neutral-ish as Christie Kerr’s. Think about where the club would be pointing were you to turn the right hand down where you suggest.
mike obrien that’s why we rely on measured data instead of video. Video is great but there are many things that it does a very poor job of accurately showing... this is one of them. Look vs reality can be VERY different. We like sharing as much of the real as we can then it’s up to the viewer to decide what they want to do with it.
Athletic Motion Golf Sorry, your data is wrong. If the palm of a golfer’s hand is turned down toward the ball as early as you suggest, the club will be pointing nearly perpendicularly to the golfer and well outside the swing path. Look at the very slow motion videos on the GolfswingHD channel and tell me if you really still think looks are deceptive.
We work with several pros out there on Tour... we have hundreds of their swings in super slow motion inside the ropes, and back at our facilities... we also have their swings capture on 3D... guess which of those represents what is actually happening? Measurement trumps looks, it's why we invest the capital into systems that can measure.
Get your FREE distance injection here: freedrivedistance.com/
The 4K 60 FPS video format looks amazing and gives a very clear image of a moment in your golf swing when I try to pause the video! There's not a lot of golf channels that are doing this and I think they are missing out!
Superb information. Such a good idea to visualise hand/wrist position on dominant hand. I'm right handed too and this clicked so well. Thanks!
Thank you!!
Holy moly guys. I've been knocking on a single figures handicap and suffering from consistency issues. I've known I had something off with my wrists and had lack of awareness of them. I watched this video and then picked up the club. Wow, it feels much stronger like when I'm swinging well. I haven't even hit a ball and know this is the key to that consistency. Thank you, thank you
Awesome, Ryan! Get in those single digits man👊
Just started playing golf the last few months and have been slicing badly. Just tried the right palm to the ground drills at the range today. Didn’t slice at all!!! Thanks guys! Amazing stuff!
great!!!!
This video has helped more than years of lessons. I’m making huge progress with your videos! Keep it up!
Great job 👏
I've started thinking more about my right side myself being right handed and it has helped a lot thanks a ton guys
Was at Arnold Palmers BayHill tourny 2 years ago , and watched Pete Cowan working with Thomas Pieters and the only thing Pete was telling Thomas was to hinge the trail wrist (right hand for a righty), like your showing in this video, great video.
Love it! Shaun has a ton of similar stories from his time spent at the API over years.
Doesn’t Pete teach more radial “cocking of the wrists” with less r.h flexion.
Have you gentlemen thought about a discussion of wrist roll vs underhand throw. With right hand. Maybe splitting hairs but I have issues with left arm feeling too much pressure and pulling with the wrist roll SUV’s throwing motion. What does gears tell us the pro do. Most of.
Outstanding video. Made sense. Made better sense at the range. Keep the solid ball striking videos coming.
We're doing out best👊😊
Again I have not seen any other site or instructors that make things this easy. Simply the best, better than all the rest.
Good video! This is something that isn't talked about much,but I think it's really important
You guys are very technical but at the same time feel oriented, very helpful thx
This video changed my game.....best channel on RUclips. Always amazing info with context 👌.
Thanks so much!
About time somebody brings that right side in focus.. as a right handed person who picked golf later in life as a leftie, it took me a while to get my hands to work together.. thanks for making this video..
Mikal, start you own channel and say whatever you want to whoever will subscribe. But you are not welcome to try it here. No one is forcing you to watch our videos. If you don't agree with them, don't watch. But enough of the nonsense and ridiculous contrarian advice. Last warning.
You guys did a fabulous job on this topic.
Thank you, Eddie👊
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! The right wrist palm facing down through impact changed everything for me. I used to always try and release(flip) my wrist over and struggling with contact.
This is outstanding. Been trying to explain this concept to my girls golf team. Excellent work as usual.
Hope it helps!
I have a hairline fracture in my right wrist from playing baseball when I was younger. Compared to my left wrist when trying to put them flat on the table, my right wrist is about 45 degrees when the left would be 90. What advice would you give me when my right wrist won't bend to the point of carrying a tray?
I've been doing some of what you're talking about since last summer but I couldn't explain to anyone why it was important. I'm gonna share this with all my golf buddies. I love your channel.
this is the best golf teaching channel i’ve ever seen
wow thank you for watching!
thanks for the golf instruction. you guys have a very effective style of teaching. i like the focus on body positions especially the wrist in the set up and at impact. its allmost like everything else reacts to this. all so the spine tilt in the set up very important. thanks again
That's a great simple way to see the swing, Rick, love that👊
You boys are gold!! My ball striking is so much better after incorporating a lot of your drills over the winter, the knowledge of why I am doing the bad stuff (flipping, early extension) and giving me the ammunition (drills and knowledge) to overcome the awful traits is fantastic, keep up the excellent work chaps!!
thanks brother!
Could you possibly send a link to the anti-flipping/early extension drills please Marky Mark?
great points , Thanks for the tips do you have one that puts both writs together with drills
Another great video Gents. I'm doing a lot of work to overcome my old habits that lead to casting and slicing. I'm focusing on my right wrist and right elbow as per your vids and it is making a huge difference to my swing path, weight shift and impact. Cheers.
That's awesome, Rufuss, thank you for watching and we're glad it's helping!
Thank you Thank you. Now I know why I have been so damn inconsistent in my ball striking abilities. I would often try to hyper dorsiflex my right hand at the top to prevent the 'tray' from slipping at the top. I found I could not physically do this and gave it up altogether. Your clarification of right hand extension with a comfortable bending of the right hand and then right hand pointing toward the ground during the downswing is golden and hopefully will give me more consistency in my shot making abilities. Cheers
Awesome, Thomas, let us know how it goes👍
Athletic Motion Golf yesterday I tried it at the driver range playing on the ground; not a mat. At 72 and playing for over 40 years I could actually feel the lag of my club head heading towards the ball to impact for the first time in my life. Using Hogan's teaching that the hips and knees start the downswing which then propels the arms during the downswing your precise information regarding the right hand on this video works 100 percent of the time. Perfect!
@@thomasfraser9072 Love it!
Another great vid guys. Could you elaborate what role rolling the forearm plays in where the wrists end up in the backswing (or is there a vid you've already made for this)? I have to guard against a huge roll to the inside, however, I feel like that sets my wrists better at the top (without crossing the line).
You want enough roll so it puts the club and hands on plane. Check this one out to see what that looks like: ruclips.net/video/J7yQorZyD3Y/видео.html
Hi guys. love the content always. cant go wrong with any advice backed up by the numbers 👍
I was wondering if you have any videos on the difference in wrist release with a strong grip? or does this video still apply?
thanks, Nick
Thanks, Nick... it would still apply. The amount and feel will always be subject to grip strength, but the motions are essentially the same.
Best golf lesson on the Internet .. Amazing results after watching this video ..😉😉😉😉
Well done gentleman. Love that you’re bringing hi tech modern equipment to the everyday golfer.
I’d love for a discussion on the timing, that simultaneously as the re centering occurs with the COP shift from just before top of backswing (p3.8) to just before left arm parallel in the downswing (p4.8) the right wrist goes from being partially extended to increasing its extension. This natural “loading” for a thrower will help golfers have some wrist angle left to “release” into the ball once the arms have lowered.
In a previous video, you discussed how the average golfer needs to understand that even during the backswing as your turning, that while you turn, you can actually move forward.
I think the same concept gets missed with the wrists for most amateurs too. At the same time the arms begin to move down in the downswing, the right wrist increases it’s extension (bending back) This “opposite overlap”’ seems to be the key to so much of the dynamics.
1) Backswing moves forward as its competed.
2) Right wrist increases extension as the arms start to come down.
3) Pelvis and chest extending in the follow through to “crack the whip”
Question: love this instruction video. With this in mind I’m able to hit my irons well. But my driver not so good. I tend to hit down with my driver putting too much spin and not enough height or upward launch angle. What am I doing wrong? I’m hitting low hooks with driver.
You want to be on you lead side early enough so you can take advantage of the push into the ground to add some tilt your impact with the driver. Make sense?
Thank you. I’ll take this to the range. I’ve found great success is a short swing with minimal wrist hing at the top.
@@jlar1984 You wouldn't be alone in that👍
I had the same problem going from my irons to the driver. So, I weaken my grip to neutral on the driver. And that seems to correct the problem allowing me to hit the ball straighter. Good luck.
I teach the wrist as well but watching this video really cleared thing up for me.
👊
Thank you for this video. Very helpful. Could you please provide a link to your left wrist video you referenced. I looked but could not find one similar to this video. THANKS AND KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK.
ruclips.net/video/pFLchZeN-ng/видео.html 👍
I have cronic over the top as well as taking the club on the inside.
Been working really hard on taking it on outside.
After seeing this video realised my right hand comes side ways.
1. The stop movement didn't work.
2. The idea of palm facing down all the way to the ball has been a game changer.
Thank you!
From pitching to 5 iron it's amazing.
Should it be down for fairwoods and driver too???
Yessir. Do it through the bag👊
This is freakin ridiculously good detail. Thanks guys.
I have the opposite problem with right hand. Come from a past cast flip swing to now generating power with left leg and left arm dominant. Problem is my right hand wants to add that extra snap at the bottom. Cause consistent pull hooks off the toe. Any suggestions beyond tray move to get past this block would be helpful.
Typically, the right hand does that because it has to... often from the handle raising a bunch through impact.
This is probably the most important teaching concept in all of golf and it has been overlooked forever. The over focus on the left wrist for almost all people is the wrong way to teach golf - refocusing on what the Right Dominant wrist and hand have to do is 10,000x more useful in teaching everyone how to hit a ball correctly - I also love the fact that you pointed out the insanity of laying the club off with the palm pointed to the sky - it's insane. Every golfer on Earth should watch this video as long as it takes to get rid of your slice. Arnold - 'talk to the hand' how to hit a draw.
Paul O'Neil wow thank you so much for this comment. Yes I agree that teaching has focused too much on the left hand. !!!🏌️
This combined with Monte's New No Turn Cast is golden.
Thank you very much for the info. Interesting as a right handed player I've always, 55 years now, concentrated on the left hand. I'll definitely give this a go.
Let us know how it goes
yeah seriously you guys are an invaluable service to golfers who are too stubborn to get lessons. aka me. thank you guys.
Thanks for this tip. When i do this right wrist move, i feel my right palm pressing hard on my left thumb at or just after impact. This press helps me supinate my left wrist better. Any comments ? Thanks again
Does the golf ball like it?😉
@@AthleticMotionGolf am not in my ball's brain. I play 4 hdcp in scotland
I feel like I maintain that trail wrist extension throughout the downswing, only rotating my forearms back to the ball. Is this a decent feel?
AMG, please give me some advice. I have been getting my weight transferred to my lead side before I finish my backswing, just like you have advised and my contact has been vastly improved. I no longer hit fat shots! However, I noticed that I am taking very big divots and I feel like my swing is getting steeper. Can you make a quick follow up video showing how I can still shallow my club while still getting on my lead side early? Thanks so much.
Check this one out: ruclips.net/video/J7yQorZyD3Y/видео.html
The pro in this video shifts forward several inches while still shallowing the club beautifully. So much of it has to do with hand path. Also check out the top 9 in the world doing it too: instagram.com/p/Bg6Z-PChZxH/
Thank you! As a tennis player trying to learn how to golf, I am having some problems with my swing and experiencing wrist issues already. The "right hand slap" idea will stick in my head. I can't wait to try!
Awesome! Let us know how it goes👍
So how does it goes?
Love this one guys! I would say if I was holding a tray of drinks I would not have spilt a drop at the top or even half way down!! Just to clear up, would the tray be level with the ground at the top or angled forward? and then facing the ground all the way to impact? thanks again! Rob
Close to level at the top. It works towards facing the ground as it works away from you and the target.
Athletic Motion Golf Thanks again! ...another lightbulb moment when you said its possible to have too much wrist cock! Ive always forced it to max & wrists/forearms were no longer soft/relaxed at top..combine that with trying to flatten on way down (face palm up) its no wonder i had a big slide & hanging back fault ! You guys are gold! 👍
Rob Kedgley agree. Same with myself. Tried their advice yesterday and the results were astounding. Will keep this one swing thought the rest of my life.
I have a question regarding that right-palm-face-the-ground-move. Doesn't that promote a steepening of the shaft coming down?
Second question: why does that flipping action do close the face in your opinion? Around 8:05 Mike does show "this move does close the face" which in my opinion doesn't look like it does close the face it does have an effect on loft. The turning to the ground is more pronation in my opinion, which closes the face. Keeping the bend in the right wrist helps to create shaft lean.
The right palm facing the ground is not an arm wrestling move... that would do exactly as you said - steepen the shaft. Think of it in terms as the opposite of keeping the palm skyward, that would keep the face wide open.
Lowering the handle, rotating the face, and leaning the handle back are all move that get the face pointing closed. Of course those could be off-set by the golfer through an opposing wrist move, but you'll almost never see an open face late with a shaft leaning forward.
Good golfers are moving the right wrist towards flat not holding it bent. Once the club collides with the ground and the hands keep moving, it gives the look of a massively (in some cases) bent right wrist but that is from the ground collision.
@@AthleticMotionGolf Thanks for the kind answer, but if one pronates the right palm before P6 it will steepen the shaft, even if the right shoulder is eternally rotated.
@@swingsearcher7536 The should happen to the shaft coming into impact. The shaft should go from shallow to steep, that's what keeps the shaft on plane and the handle low. The wrong sequence is steep to shallow.
is this the same motion and idea for the Driver? I have noticed when i feel my right hand face the ground in the downswing that it creates a hook.
What does the wrist do in the golf swing in the hitting area, just before contact to finish slow mo. thank you.
Your thoughts on a Hogan type style, where he went from open at the top to intentionally rotating his left wrist to closed.
Great tip! Also gives you the lag you need to make contact before full extension to compress the ball.
Thank You.
Does right palm down also apply for driver swing?
Great channel guys. Could you guys do a video of how the shoulders work at and through impact?
This really worked for me. Much better iron contact. More consistent too.
Love it!
I agree with the advice about the waiter and tray position on the backswing, and I agree with the wrist bent back idea on the downswing. But I think you've missed that when the lead hand is under the chin the shaft will be roughly horizontal to the ground and pointing away from the target for good players. And that tells us that there is a big rotation of the trail forearm right before impact.
what about the right hand movement at impact and after impact? does it roll or flip?
Thx guys watch u a lot think this help me most I was wondering why club is hitting my shoulder because cocked wrist
Love your videos! I learn sooo much!!
Thanks for watching!
This understanding is useful but how do I increase speed of release 🤔
Once again a great video. Keep on doing that work!
Yessir👊
At the 9 o’clock position during the backswing, someone standing behind would see my right palm (pointing “stop”) aimed right at them. This results in a very closed, skyward facing club face with a bowed left wrist at the top. Since I don’t have Dustin Johnson’s fast hips, this closed club face returns to the ball closed resulting in a hook if path in-to-out or pull-fade if I manage to get an out-to-in path. How do I get that club face less closed (skyward) at the top? Hitting blocks has ruined my left (sliding) knee.
Very nice. I believe you’re on to something having right handers concentrate more on the right side to learn proper technique/positions faster in the golf swing.
Love your videos, I’m left hand dominant but golf right handed. I feel that I’m not getting compression and I’m releasing my right hand to soon. My longer hits that feel smooth through the ball, the ball goes to 10o’clock. Like I closed the face.
I’m going to try the stop, palm down, and slap you are mentioning.😂
Does the right wrist go from extension to flexion at any point after contact and if so, when?
That's a tough one because the ground has a HUGE effect on what happens after contact.
@@AthleticMotionGolf This is something I've been struggling to understand for some while. If you haven't already done a video on this perhaps you might consider it as a possible future topic?
I find that if I have right wrist extension in the takeaway, the club gets whipped behind me and is extremely closed in such a way that is is hard to recover from. When exactly do you want right wrist extension?
Sounds like you have too much and not enough radial with the left. The idea to do get the right amount of both to pitch the club up on plane.
Great instruction
Awesome video! Thanks guys. I have a question on shallowing. Is there a "primary shallower"? Does wrist movement act as the main force behind proper shallowing?
Great question! I would say what the primary is depends on where the club is at the top... or how it's arriving to the top. But it's hard not to imagine the wrist being involved if there's a need to shallow.
Love to video about the hips. It appears BOTH hips move away from the ball - even the right hip on the down swing doesn’t appear to get closer. Also the sequence of the hips to make room for the right elbow.
Glad to see this video. The last few months I've been focusing on the right hand and it really makes a difference in contact. I suspect accuracy will increase as I practice this more. Cool.
Yessir!
What does the wrist do AT impact, hold or release at impact or after?
What are your instincts telling you?
Great explanation! What is meaning No.265 on chair seats? ;)
265 is the winning score of David Toms at the 2001 PGA Championship, which was a PGA Tour record that stood for 15 years. I believe Shaun from AMG is the Director of Golf there at Toms’ 265 Academy.
Good video! Going to give it a try!
Great! let us know how it goes!
Good tips and pointers guys
Thank you, Sir👊
You guys are great!
Excellent instruction.
Thanks so much for watching, Peter!
This is what can make things confusion. In recent video the relation to a yo-yo was given. Which is the opposite of keeping the palm towards the ground.
Please insure that when talking about the club face, that it is always visible in the screen view. Left me assuming it’s position. Otherwise, A+ tip for the right hand associated position & feel.
Great use of right hand!
Great video, THX A LOT guys :)
Thanks for watching, Kim
does this concept apply to the driver swing?
Can the prosendr training aid help with this?
curious about this too
Great tip 👍
Great video thanks.
Thanks brother👊
How does one “Shallow” without wrist laying the club open?
great stuff guys
perfect. I'm a former collegiate player, and sometimes I struggle trying to teach my brother in law (high handicapper) wrist motion. I'll just have him watch this!!
Love it😊
Great drill.
Thanks bud!
well done boys!
🙏👊
Another great Vid.
👊
Lay it down ; Lay it off. The problem occurs when the golfer attempts to accelerate the club head with wrist motion. Which as you know is a horizontal motion. The wrist will accelerate the club head but only during the uncocking phase. If you flatten the trail wrist coming into the ball The club starts up and in : thin. The compensation is to move the ball back in the stance and maybe add a little slide. Front flat ; trail bent. No throwing from the wrist. Cheers
Great tip thx.
more good stuff. thnx, steve
Great video
Also don’t let the right elbow bend more than 90degrees at the top of the swing
Couldn't agree more👊
Would you do a video about chipping yips?
Watch Seve B. and Jose O. hitting chips. The best part by far was my chipping for 30 years. Got yips all of a sudden.I was reading too much instruction!! Get your weight forward and feel like you are taking the club head and the grip end back more in one piece while using the whole body including the knees and left shoulder and hips. Key on follow through especially on longer chips is let the body rise after impact. This takes a little practice but it will free you up from ever chunking one.Practice how much shaft lean you can use as well. This can vary from player to player. Also helps to keep your spine or sternum angled more in front of the ball at setup. Hope this helps!!! I'm chipping great again.Never give up! Let me know how you do.
@@lltb67 keeping the sternum angled more infront of the ball, doesnt that mean you have to open the shoulders a touch?
Why so many thumbs down? Great information!
Explains the issue with manipulating your hands to "shallow the club" - all the rage right now. Thank you
There's a lot fads out there right now that are making things tougher than they need to be😬
What about after impact?
Depends on the club and size of divot, Arthur. The ground changes things after the collision.
Got it after a massive stroke retraining body to play golf is all about reminding parts of the body what to do. Need better job done explaining the stop signal with the right hand?
The palm down on the downswing is exactly the same action when making the forehand in tennis. The wrist is bent also.
@mikal, you absolutely make a forehand in tennis with the palm pointing downward... pointing upward is called a lob shot🤦♂️
@@dtgps there is a dramatic difference in how beginners learn to just hit a tennis forehand and how tournament level players entire arm, elbow, wrist, hand and racket move to generate massive power and spin. Not only is the racket faced down, it is actually faced backwards and behind you as your elbow comes wiping through first to generate speed before the trailing hand and racket creates a dramatic Sergio like move accelerating the racket up and at the ball. This right hand video is the closest thing to actually showing you what is happening in a proper tennis forehand I have ever seen. Watch it a 100 times and then go out and practice
@@dtgps if you go on to any public range and watch 99% of neutral grip non right hand facing down coming into impact amateurs slicing the crap out of all their golf shots unless the can time a flip at the ball then yes you are correct. As this video so accurately points out, pros look nothing like amateurs in this aspect.
@@dtgps Not sure what you are arguing any of this for but this video is factual that the Pros have a vastly different right hand than nearly all amateurs. And slicing the ball has nothing to do with an Out to In Path - zero. In fact many better amateurs have an over the top (Out to In) swing path and play a trap draw as they have begun to incorporate some of what this video was all about. If they are able to incorporate more of it and for the most part what is pointed out in the Right Arm video (keeping the angle at 80 to 90 degrees) and not collapsing to 120 degrees - then more would be able to hit slightly from the inside and start the ball slightly right of target as well. Go watch some videos of Trevino hit the ball - arguably top two in history of quality of strike - and look at that right wrist. He chose to hold off at impact and hit a fade from that position as he grew up playing on hard dirt and didn't want the ball running off the fairways.
@@dtgps out to in has zero to do with a slice - zero - if you don't understand you can't understand anything - you can hit a out to in draw - out to in straight and out to in fade - they are unrelated entire
Triveno describes his own swing as holding off at impact - just do some RUclips searches it's easy to find - he later in life senior tour type stuff when looking for more distance and when his leg flexibility started to go he deliberately started to release his hands - his swing is the definition in golfing history books of holding off
Sorry, but you’re incorrect about what happens with the right hand on the downswing with pros. Go to GolfswingHD and watch what the right hand really does (at least for the 20+ pros I watched). On the downswing, in all the ones I watched, the right hand leads the club down towards the ball. It looks as if their right hand is trying to Karate chop the ball, not slap it, as you suggest. Only after the hand has passed the ball (by several inches) does it roll over or turn under the left. This is true from John Daly to Tony Finau, with grips as strong as Daniel Berger’s and as neutral-ish as Christie Kerr’s. Think about where the club would be pointing were you to turn the right hand down where you suggest.
mike obrien that’s why we rely on measured data instead of video. Video is great but there are many things that it does a very poor job of accurately showing... this is one of them. Look vs reality can be VERY different. We like sharing as much of the real as we can then it’s up to the viewer to decide what they want to do with it.
Athletic Motion Golf Sorry, your data is wrong. If the palm of a golfer’s hand is turned down toward the ball as early as you suggest, the club will be pointing nearly perpendicularly to the golfer and well outside the swing path. Look at the very slow motion videos on the GolfswingHD channel and tell me if you really still think looks are deceptive.
We work with several pros out there on Tour... we have hundreds of their swings in super slow motion inside the ropes, and back at our facilities... we also have their swings capture on 3D... guess which of those represents what is actually happening? Measurement trumps looks, it's why we invest the capital into systems that can measure.
Athletic Motion Golf Look at the 5:47-5:49 mark of your video. If he had a club in his hand, it’d be pointing at the beer girl.
A club is in his hand here ruclips.net/video/PRrPPbZTxXE/видео.html as he demonstrates what to do... this is what you have a problem with?
Stop sign move = Kelvin Miyahira
Wasn't aware of that, Doug... hope he is doing well.