Instruction
The Starting Position has the right shoulder lower than the left, the right elbow bent, and the hands in the middle of the body.
The Impact Position is delivering the shaft before the club face as a result of a bent right wrist, flat left wrist, a bent right elbow or a right shoulder going down and out to the ball. One of those four allow the other three to occur.
The right palm lifeline covers the first joint and nail of the thumb of the left hand. The thumb of the right hand is placed just left of the golf club’s centerline. The index finger of the right hand is curled around the club grip and the pinky overlaps the index finger of the left hand.
The overlap grip aids in unifying the hands so they function as a single unit.
STARTING POSITION & THE START OF THE SWING
The tailbone is up and out, the shoulders are over the toes, and the weight is on the balls of the feet. This is the braced position needed, to create your athletic golf swing. The aim of the body is always on the inside of the target line. The upper body starts the golf swing.
ON PLANE POSITION
BACK SWING POSITION
The continued rotation around the angle of the spine places the left arm parallel of the shoulder place which is pointing at the baseline.
DOWNSWING PLANE
The shaft returns on plane, due to the rotation around the spine angle created at the starting position.
IMPACT PLANE – THE MOMENT OF TRUTH
POST IMPACT
Let the eyes follow the ball to the target.
SHAFT ON SHOULDER PLANE
FINISH IN BALANCE
Next, the grip is held by the middle fingers of the right hand, at the lowest joint, near the callus pad of your hand, just under the golf club’s grip.
The thumb pad of the left hand placed on the top of the golf club, to the right of the grip and held in the fingers of the left hand.
The triangle of the shoulders and arms are being moved by the back.
The shaft of the club is on the body lines left of the target. The eyes are following the ball to it’s target.
The feet are at a 45 degree angle left of the target line, the shoulders are 30 degrees left of the target line.
The keys to successful putting and strokes off your score are:
- balance,
- touch
- hand-eye coordination.
Putting begins with a message transmitted to the brain through the eyes. When the eyes are over the ball, a signal is sent to the brain and the inner ear for interpretation. Balance and hand-eye coordination are achieved as a result of this messaging system.
Putting control comes from balance, when you are balanced over the ball you can maintain a proper putting stroke throughout.
Distance control is a result of the ball striking the center of the putter face. The smallest stroke possible with the center of the putter face striking the ball is all that is generally required. The shoulders and arms do all the work, one motion, one speed.
What affects the roll of the ball is: texture of the green, the roundness of the ball (not all balls are perfectly round), and swing speed on the putter.