Best explanation i have heard, I was experiment with cocked left wrist at the range and I found that the I was hitting solid and straight shots, but I have always heard this was not proper that you should have a bowed left wrist. Thank for confirming
The down and through without having to go down and through! I can't get enough of this vid. If I'm right, I think this goes nicely with what sevam1 was talking about when he said how to slap someone with your left hand.
would a good thing to practice be delaying the pivot as long as possible? Try to hit the ball with your back to the target? how do you start down with your lower half in doing this?
This one's hard for me to fully understand. When I look at Sergio approaching and through impact, he really appears to be driving everything through pivot with his whole backside nearly square to the camera in a DTL view by the time he reaches impact, and shoulders pretty well open to target line. Following this, I would expect to see hips and shoulders more square to target line at impact... I think I'm probably just misunderstanding something?
i just discovered Brad about a month ago and quite by accident. i've already bought his lesson series and i luvit....watch that wrist cock and that right elbow....boys and girls, concentrate on watching this guy and if your goal is to play good golf(after practice), you're gonna be a happy camper!!!
What Bradley shows at 1:15 about is not forearm rotation. It's bowing motion (PF in anatomy). Also he shows how stalling the shoulders makes the face close more and that's another mistake. In that demonstration all other relations are changed also so it got not much to do with reality. It's very easy to see how much abduction you show there. And by that it's 100% sure to get open face at impact. Unfortunately that video is full of biomechanics mistakes and very fell shows he hasn't understood much about my videos. When Bradley shows full shot, everything works well and he accelerates through impact as we should do. But there is no way to accelerate pivot and have that much abduction in left arm... just physical impossibility. Sad to see this
You seem to be saying that "this can't be happening because my theory says it can't be happening". But Hughes is hitting the ball straight. So maybe it's your theory that's not correct?
Is it not difficult to time the squaring of the club face if you are doing it by rotation of the forearms? Doesn't this require an immense amount of timing to pull off consistently?
The natural thing to do when hitting a ball aggressively (the way a child does) is to rotate the forearms. It happens automatically. Baseball players never had to be taught to roll their forearms when taking a cut at a pitch. Simply swinging the bat at the ball aggressively produces that motion. We screw up a natural swing by suppressing the desire to "flip" the club at the ball as the club is well into the downswing. All this focus on "lag" has caused that pervasive error. Monte Scheinblum has some great teaching videos on this and has clearly shown that deliberately flipping at the bottom actually causes the brain to speed up the arms which ends up maintaining shaft lean at impact. Seems completely counter intuitive but it is true.
Most teaching pros don't teach this because they don't know enough about the golf swing and have never played in high level competition like Bradley and to test it out under the gun !
PGA pros don't teach this because they want to teach a method that is impossible to consistently repeat. That way you keep coming back to them for more and more lessons. Mr. Hughes teaches how Hogan, Trevino and the really great players of the past played. Watch how even the Golf Channel focuses in on how Sergio hits the ball, which is how Hogan hit it. PGA pros know more than Hogan did? Don't think so.
Forearm muscle are finger muscles. ie hands There is no power in the hands and to try to square the clubface in DS that takes less than 1/4 second and time impact that takes 5/10,000 second is foolhardy. Ben Hogan kept his right palm facing the sky and let his body rotation square the club. NOTE: the clubhead is also a lever. The hosel is the fulcrum; so when the shaft decelerates the clubhead lever automatically squares to the ball, if we sweep the inside quadrant of the ball. We dont need to try to time use of the hand muscles to time impact. it happens automatically when we understand the physics as Ben Hogan did.
I think maybe you are disagreeing, but I think maybe you are both saying the same thing and just expressing it differently? The notion that squaring the forearms requires timing is wrong. It's a natural sideways motion. Like scything grass.
@@DavidNums or like true baseball swing eg Babe Ruth ruclips.net/video/1bUvU4gH1GI/видео.html Physics causes arms, then club shaft, then clubface to accelerate proximal to distal when it is a true radial motion of the body, starting from the feet.
I’ve watched this video so many times. Excellent video. Thank you Bradley. 🇨🇦💝🥰
great stuff. you are the best.retired pga pro ,mentor Garner Dickinson talked about laying off shaft .Never explained like this.
That wrist grip has sorted my right out, eliminates my bad hands wrist action. Thanks.
Wrist grip? Please explain?
Best explanation i have heard, I was experiment with cocked left wrist at the range and I found that the I was hitting solid and straight shots, but I have always heard this was not proper that you should have a bowed left wrist. Thank for confirming
The down and through without having to go down and through! I can't get enough of this vid. If I'm right, I think this goes nicely with what sevam1 was talking about when he said how to slap someone with your left hand.
would a good thing to practice be delaying the pivot as long as possible? Try to hit the ball with your back to the target? how do you start down with your lower half in doing this?
This one's hard for me to fully understand. When I look at Sergio approaching and through impact, he really appears to be driving everything through pivot with his whole backside nearly square to the camera in a DTL view by the time he reaches impact, and shoulders pretty well open to target line. Following this, I would expect to see hips and shoulders more square to target line at impact... I think I'm probably just misunderstanding something?
i just discovered Brad about a month ago and quite by accident. i've already bought his lesson series and i luvit....watch that wrist cock and that right elbow....boys and girls, concentrate on watching this guy and if your goal is to play good golf(after practice), you're gonna be a happy camper!!!
His lesson plan is a must for every golfer especially beginners.
What Bradley shows at 1:15 about is not forearm rotation. It's bowing motion (PF in anatomy). Also he shows how stalling the shoulders makes the face close more and that's another mistake. In that demonstration all other relations are changed also so it got not much to do with reality. It's very easy to see how much abduction you show there. And by that it's 100% sure to get open face at impact.
Unfortunately that video is full of biomechanics mistakes and very fell shows he hasn't understood much about my videos.
When Bradley shows full shot, everything works well and he accelerates through impact as we should do. But there is no way to accelerate pivot and have that much abduction in left arm... just physical impossibility. Sad to see this
You seem to be saying that "this can't be happening because my theory says it can't be happening". But Hughes is hitting the ball straight. So maybe it's your theory that's not correct?
how many masters tournaments have you played in T?
@@mikewhitlow9636 how you come anatomical expert or learn biomechanics by playing Majors? Do you also get doctor and engineer diploma by that?
Do you have any more Bradley Hughes videos?
It may be a myth, but I heard that Ben Hogan was once asked for a one-word description of the golf swing. "Sideways," he said.
I heard Trevino say he setup open then moved his feet to a closed position so that he was actually closed?
Is it not difficult to time the squaring of the club face if you are doing it by rotation of the forearms? Doesn't this require an immense amount of timing to pull off consistently?
The natural thing to do when hitting a ball aggressively (the way a child does) is to rotate the forearms. It happens automatically. Baseball players never had to be taught to roll their forearms when taking a cut at a pitch. Simply swinging the bat at the ball aggressively produces that motion. We screw up a natural swing by suppressing the desire to "flip" the club at the ball as the club is well into the downswing. All this focus on "lag" has caused that pervasive error. Monte Scheinblum has some great teaching videos on this and has clearly shown that deliberately flipping at the bottom actually causes the brain to speed up the arms which ends up maintaining shaft lean at impact. Seems completely counter intuitive but it is true.
freddy ol
Awesome, simply awesome.
Is it possible that, by rotating the forearms in the backswing, they automatically or unconsciously, rotate in the downswing.
I’ve been wondering the same thing, from my trials I seem to believe that it does
Most teaching pros don't teach this because they don't know enough about the golf swing and have never played in high level competition like Bradley and to test it out under the gun !
12:30 is me unfortunately
Why don't regular PGA pros teach this stuff, it's so obvious once you hear it, but millions of golfers never get to hear it! Crazy.
PGA pros don't teach this because they want to teach a method that is impossible to consistently repeat. That way you keep coming back to them for more and more lessons. Mr. Hughes teaches how Hogan, Trevino and the really great players of the past played. Watch how even the Golf Channel focuses in on how Sergio hits the ball, which is how Hogan hit it. PGA pros know more than Hogan did? Don't think so.
Forearm muscle are finger muscles. ie hands
There is no power in the hands and to try to square the clubface in DS that takes less than 1/4 second
and time impact that takes 5/10,000 second is foolhardy.
Ben Hogan kept his right palm facing the sky and let his body rotation square the club.
NOTE: the clubhead is also a lever. The hosel is the fulcrum; so when the shaft decelerates
the clubhead lever automatically squares to the ball, if we sweep the inside quadrant of the ball.
We dont need to try to time use of the hand muscles to time impact. it happens automatically when we understand the physics as Ben Hogan did.
I think maybe you are disagreeing, but I think maybe you are both saying the same thing and just expressing it differently? The notion that squaring the forearms requires timing is wrong. It's a natural sideways motion. Like scything grass.
@@DavidNums or like true baseball swing eg Babe Ruth
ruclips.net/video/1bUvU4gH1GI/видео.html
Physics causes arms, then club shaft, then clubface to accelerate
proximal to distal when it is a true radial motion of the body, starting from the feet.
Are your beliefs aimed at players with limited time to work on their swings ?
Audio is terrible. Can't hardly hear what you're saying