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Posts Tagged ‘compression golf swing’

Keegan Bradley Golf Swing Analyzed

Friday, September 30th, 2011

 

Man, is this a cool swing to watch. I don’t think I have ever seen a player move so much from their heels forward during the swing and not have all sorts of issues getting to the ball. Once again it is proven that you can almost never say “you can’t do this and be good”. I would never in a million years encourage a player to start with their weight far back in their heels and push the whole body forward in the backswing and in transition. However, Bradley does just that and produces Ben Hogan-like positions approaching and passing through impact, which I demonstrate in a side-by-side comparison. Bradley’s hugely full backswing pivot and the incredible rotation called for to save him from the “cross-the-line” position he gets at the top of his swing combine to produce huge amounts of power, and Bradley can truly bomb it. The other item I focus on here is his exit past impact, which is way left as he achieves an astoundingly open position with his body (upper and lower) at impact. He is the poster child for moving 45 degrees left, even as he pushes forward in the backswing. Golf will never cease to amaze me.

Nick Watney Golf Swing Analyzed

Tuesday, August 30th, 2011

In Nick Watney we see what I would call the “prototype” of the new Tour player, namely one that is tall, strong, talented, and technique oriented. Watney is as conventional as Bubba Watson is not, and it is evident that he is technique oriented as he has managed to improve his golf swing over the last 3 years by fixing a faulty takeaway and working into a much less crossed position for the shaft at the top of the swing. We see here another “right load” backswing, meaning that he moves somewhat off the ball laterally with both the upper and lower body in order to “load” the right side, then recovers beautifully with lateral drive and a tremendous amount of corresponding rotation in the forward swing. Watney again shows evidence of the compression golf swing by lowering somewhat in the backswing, then significantly in the forward swing. He also demonstrates the right arm movement that I have been noting in a large amount of great ball strikers, a technique that I am now including wholeheartedly in all my lessons. It might seem surprising to see that a player of Watney’s build would have such a rotary swing, but the more I study this combination of upper and lower body rotation, facilitated by the outward movement of the hands in transition, the less surprised I am.

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