HI Shaun and mike, Another great video, with rotation when we mention balance we are relating that hip turn in the back swing 40 -45 deg to hip turn at impact
You both have the most clear instructions that I have seen. I have followed Paul Wilson, Sean Foley, MeandMyGolf, and many others. They are all somewhat good, but you both gave the CGI visual from different angles and have cleared up many myths. I used to rotate my hips as fast as I could and had such loose floppy arms that I had no control. However, I started staying more in control and now know what it feels like when people say to have a "slow transition" and then increase speed right before impact. It's all relative. Thank you for what you do. You both have made a significant difference in my game, and I cannot thank you enough for your work.
Absolute gold, thank so much for your channel. Along with Shaun's magic move: drift to the left this has transformed my golf. Wish you fellas would come down to Australia.
The President's Cup is only a few months away and as I am only a few k's away from RM and situated in the heart of the sandbelt : sublime golf courses are plentiful! And you fellas are most welcome!
@@AthleticMotionGolf Indeed I will, my very good friend is the head pro at RM. Hope you can join us, and you are most welcome to enjoy our hospitality. Best. John Lyons.
Question: Is the turn flatter (less shoulder tilt) the longer the club? My instructor wants me to be at 30° tilt on the backswing but that’s seems harder for driver vs. wedge.
Stop, you had me at any age 0.04, that was a Boss way to start a video LOL, 2 thumbs up. also liked that you can turn so much on the back swing and not be able to open the hips on the down swing.
Never been called boss before, we'll take it😊 yeah, that's probably one of the most common combos we see daily... to much going back, not enough coming through.
Allowing the right leg to straighten a bit is key. I hurt my back "sitting" as well. The only key I concentrate on now is NOT rolling my weight on to the outside of my trail foot. Great clip guys.
Being open at impact helps to get the face angle more around and square. It also allows for a more neutral club path. Could you explain what you mean by "rotation late"?
For me rather than thinking hips, I am right hip/glute dominant on the backswing until between club parallel and left arm parallel to the ground then the I start to feel the pressure of the left hip/glute dominant building to max dominance at impact and through the ball
@@AthleticMotionGolf Well if youre big in that department make the most of it! Seriously tho what muscles turn the hips, If I think turn the hips I overturn or sway them.
Great video guys! I have been on K-vest many times and my hip turn back swing is 57-65 degrees and at impact I am 62-70 degrees open. Do you see a problem with this since I am able to maintain speed, stability and get back open at impact?
Dude, you gotta email us a video of your swing (support@athleticmotiongolf.com). I've not seen a swing that gets the hips 70 degrees open from 65 closed. I'm just really keen to see how all that looks. What are your torso numbers? The only potential problem I see with that much hip is if the torso lags too far behind.
what im trying to say is you use the leg muscles and ground pressure to work on the right hip/glute then the left hip/glute rather than turning the hips as 1 unit
Between 15-20 degrees is a great range to be in. Turning or tilting? That's not a bad visual or thought, but they don't really don't match in terms of the numbers.
I think I blew out my hip watching this! Seriously though, you were dead on about my biggest flaw...I use my ankles to rotate and am always flat Need to hit the range now
I think you guys did a pro vs am vid on this where us Ams don’t have to have a ton of rotation to have a very functional golf swing. Not even all of the Pros use max rotation if I’m remembering correctly.
so PGA Tour players habitually in the mid-high 30 degrees for hip rotation whilst many senior ams you've seen (you said) have hip rotations all the way up to the 60's... if you get a 98 degree shoulder tour - isn't a mid 30's (or more) hip rotation almost a given?
Athletic Motion Golf honestly, look at intermittent fasting on RUclips. Dr Fung has a great explanation, as well as Thomas DeLauer. I started a 16:8 intermittent fasting schedule and I have lost 4 pounds and 1% body fat over the last 2 weeks. The first 4-5 days is the hardest, but I haven't felt any better in my life than I do now. I'm even hoping to gradually get off of my cholesterol medicine in the future if my blood work is good. It helps with weight loss and improves your overall health. Hope that tidbit of info helps anyone that reads this. Also, if you have any physical limitation questions, I have my doctorate in physical therapy and am certified by the Titleist Performance Institute (I may not be on their website anymore because I refused to pay the exorbitant amount of money to "maintain" my certification. I know and remember what I was taught, lol). Anyway, I can offer any advice anyone needs, no charge 😀
This video is interesting considering I asked you guys the other day on Instagram when you were comparing am to pro, I mentioned that flexibility could possibly be a contributor to lack of rotating open in an efficient manner. You replied that the am was much more flexible in the demonstration you provided, which may be the case, but now you seem to be accepting the idea that flexibility in the average player be definatly be a factor. Which is it boys?
If you're going to reference something on instagram, you should probably at least represent it correctly. Here is the link for anyone interested in the comments: instagram.com/p/Bqr-PecFgve/ Not really interested in answering the same questions here as well... they're still the same as they were then. The two videos are pretty self-explanatory, it's up to you to decide if they're useful for you or not.
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HI Shaun and mike,
Another great video, with rotation when we mention balance we are relating that hip turn in the back swing 40 -45 deg to hip turn at impact
Thanks for always making the videos simple and easy to understand. Plain English with excellent video instruction.
We struggle enough with plain English😉
You both have the most clear instructions that I have seen. I have followed Paul Wilson, Sean Foley, MeandMyGolf, and many others. They are all somewhat good, but you both gave the CGI visual from different angles and have cleared up many myths. I used to rotate my hips as fast as I could and had such loose floppy arms that I had no control. However, I started staying more in control and now know what it feels like when people say to have a "slow transition" and then increase speed right before impact. It's all relative. Thank you for what you do. You both have made a significant difference in my game, and I cannot thank you enough for your work.
Wow, we really appreciate the kind words🙏 . We're so glad it's helping your game!
Absolute gold, thank so much for your channel. Along with Shaun's magic move: drift to the left this has transformed my golf. Wish you fellas would come down to Australia.
We're glad it helped! We hope to make it down there, we'd love to get on some of your incredible courses
The President's Cup is only a few months away and as I am only a few k's away from RM and situated in the heart of the sandbelt : sublime golf courses are plentiful! And you fellas are most welcome!
@@rejuve50plus59 Will you be going to the PC?
@@AthleticMotionGolf
Indeed I will, my very good friend is the head pro at RM.
Hope you can join us, and you are most welcome to enjoy our hospitality.
Best.
John Lyons.
@@rejuve50plus59 If we can pull it off schedule-wise, you'll def being hearing from us😊
Exactly what me and my instructor have been working on. Great visuals.
Love hearing that. There are some really good instructors out there doing really great things with their players. It sounds like you found one👊
Question: Is the turn flatter (less shoulder tilt) the longer the club? My instructor wants me to be at 30° tilt on the backswing but that’s seems harder for driver vs. wedge.
Stop, you had me at any age 0.04, that was a Boss way to start a video LOL, 2 thumbs up. also liked that you can turn so much on the back swing and not be able to open the hips on the down swing.
Never been called boss before, we'll take it😊
yeah, that's probably one of the most common combos we see daily... to much going back, not enough coming through.
Allowing the right leg to straighten a bit is key. I hurt my back "sitting" as well. The only key I concentrate on now is NOT rolling my weight on to the outside of my trail foot. Great clip guys.
That's a great key, Pete!
Can u please explain the benefits of the rotation late and beeing open at impact?
Being open at impact helps to get the face angle more around and square. It also allows for a more neutral club path. Could you explain what you mean by "rotation late"?
@@AthleticMotionGolf Late in the downswing. My thought is feel rotation from delivery to followthrough.
For me rather than thinking hips, I am right hip/glute dominant on the backswing until between club parallel and left arm parallel to the ground then the I start to feel the pressure of the left hip/glute dominant building to max dominance at impact and through the ball
That's some serious glute trainage there💪
@@AthleticMotionGolf Well if youre big in that department make the most of it!
Seriously tho what muscles turn the hips, If I think turn the hips I overturn or sway them.
Great video guys! I have been on K-vest many times and my hip turn back swing is 57-65 degrees and at impact I am 62-70 degrees open. Do you see a problem with this since I am able to maintain speed, stability and get back open at impact?
Dude, you gotta email us a video of your swing (support@athleticmotiongolf.com). I've not seen a swing that gets the hips 70 degrees open from 65 closed. I'm just really keen to see how all that looks.
What are your torso numbers? The only potential problem I see with that much hip is if the torso lags too far behind.
what im trying to say is you use the leg muscles and ground pressure to work on the right hip/glute then the left hip/glute rather than turning the hips as 1 unit
How much hip tilt is prefered, what’s the q to stop? Should like the hips match the shoulders?
Between 15-20 degrees is a great range to be in. Turning or tilting? That's not a bad visual or thought, but they don't really don't match in terms of the numbers.
I think I blew out my hip watching this!
Seriously though, you were dead on about my biggest flaw...I use my ankles to rotate and am always flat
Need to hit the range now
😁👊
Does trail leg straighten due to pressure increasing on trail heel?
not really. It doesnt really straigten all that much
I think you guys did a pro vs am vid on this where us Ams don’t have to have a ton of rotation to have a very functional golf swing. Not even all of the Pros use max rotation if I’m remembering correctly.
Do you guys advocate flaring trail foot out some to allow hips to rotate more freely if hip turn is restricted?
Sure. Some can be good.
so PGA Tour players habitually in the mid-high 30 degrees for hip rotation whilst many senior ams you've seen (you said) have hip rotations all the way up to the 60's... if you get a 98 degree shoulder tour - isn't a mid 30's (or more) hip rotation almost a given?
Hard to imagine it not being in that range if the should turn is 100%
Hey Mike, have you lost weight, heehee free swag 👍🏌️♂️
You win the grand prize😂
Athletic Motion Golf honestly, look at intermittent fasting on RUclips. Dr Fung has a great explanation, as well as Thomas DeLauer. I started a 16:8 intermittent fasting schedule and I have lost 4 pounds and 1% body fat over the last 2 weeks. The first 4-5 days is the hardest, but I haven't felt any better in my life than I do now. I'm even hoping to gradually get off of my cholesterol medicine in the future if my blood work is good. It helps with weight loss and improves your overall health. Hope that tidbit of info helps anyone that reads this. Also, if you have any physical limitation questions, I have my doctorate in physical therapy and am certified by the Titleist Performance Institute (I may not be on their website anymore because I refused to pay the exorbitant amount of money to "maintain" my certification. I know and remember what I was taught, lol). Anyway, I can offer any advice anyone needs, no charge 😀
@@bitario723 that's awesome man👊
If you use your legs/hips/glutes strongly and early this may look like your resisting but dont turn and resist or you will **** up you back
This video is interesting considering I asked you guys the other day on Instagram when you were comparing am to pro, I mentioned that flexibility could possibly be a contributor to lack of rotating open in an efficient manner. You replied that the am was much more flexible in the demonstration you provided, which may be the case, but now you seem to be accepting the idea that flexibility in the average player be definatly be a factor. Which is it boys?
If you're going to reference something on instagram, you should probably at least represent it correctly. Here is the link for anyone interested in the comments: instagram.com/p/Bqr-PecFgve/
Not really interested in answering the same questions here as well... they're still the same as they were then. The two videos are pretty self-explanatory, it's up to you to decide if they're useful for you or not.
"It's all in the hips. It's all in the hips" -Chubbs 1996
CLASSIC🤚
A man has to know his limitations