Greetings Scorum.

I Relaxed at home. I am going to post one article on golf theory. A lot of enlightenment will be my joy and reward. One of the things many professional golfers advise amateurs is the Transition action. A common mistake many golfers experience is that they swing clubs at the top of the backswing. This flaw invokes several bad shots.

Even if you do not understand this transition action, there are some golfers who learn the body and hit the ball. If you are not a beginner, you are performing some of this transition behavior. However, learning the correct knowledge of this switching behavior can further improve the quality of the swing.

Beginning to throw clubs from the top is an error in the start. If you are one of the clubheads from the top you lose the chance to get a good impact.

In my opinion, the most important step in a golf swing is when the club and head swing to start a downswing when the club head is thrown. The switching action is the action of turning the lower body toward the target direction just before reaching the top from the backswing.

Good switching behavior improves mainly two aspects. One improves the correct downswing and the second improves the torso angle. It is important to bring trains to orbit.

Once you do that, you can eliminate one of the game's most fatal flaws and improve your ability to hit the ball without thinking about where you should be at the point of contact with the ball. If the conversion is done automatically, the swing will be processed automatically.

You must set six major angles during the transition to fully affect the transition behavior. Much of this angle depends on maintaining the angle of the spine as it moves from the backswing to the downswing. Keeping your spine angle well out of the other positive things will allow you to move your right arm towards your right hip and target without straightening your right arm.

Many golfers tend to stand up during the downswing. If the spine angle set at the address changes, some problems will occur. One should move the body away from the ball, straighten the right elbow and wrist, and reach out. This causes the club head to get too far into your hands before being hit by the ball.

Switching behavior is important to be smooth and without hurting. Even a slugger in baseball is not difficult to change direction from a backswing to a downswing. Switching smoothly from the backswing to the downswing depends heavily on the movement of the lower body, especially the legs. The legs are stabilized by a golf swing (a shock absorber in the car) to relax and balance the torso. To make a good transition, your body must move in two directions at the same time. When the upper body moves in the opposite direction of the target, the lower body must already begin to tense toward the target.

The lower body leads the upper body to the downswing. You can use Sequencing Drill to improve conversions.

Put the club shaft behind the back of the shoulder, put the soccer ball between the knees and take the address posture. Just before your shoulders climb up, move your left knee towards the target to drop the soccer ball. This movement gives you the right transition and sitting feeling to your lower body.

Body Angles

Moving in the right order is important for creating a very good golf swing. The aforementioned sequencing is a good first step for a better golf shot. However, if you do not maintain a vertebral angle throughout the swing, it is difficult to hit the ball exactly.

If you want to get good quality shot results, there are three angles your body should create from impact. There are three club angles. To create a good shot, the three body angles at collision are a constant vertebral angle, a bent right elbow, and a curved right wrist. If you keep your spine angle well during your transition, you can hit the ball exactly. There is a way to keep the angle of the spine correctly using a chair drill.

Keeping your spine angle at the start of your downswing can do a lot of good things. First, we will keep the distance from the class constant. Then the contact with the lesson becomes stronger. Second, the right elbow is the target of the right hip - it provides the space needed to move forward without straightening, which helps to hit the ball with more force.

If you lose a consistent spinal angle in the wind that happens in the downswing, your right elbow is often trapped in your right hip. As you get up from the golf ball, your right elbow and wrist will be upright and close to the golf ball. Poor contact is a typical result.

If you lose your spine angle, you can lose your spine angle by straightening your right arm and your right wrist too quickly, just as you can straighten your right arm and your right wrist too quickly. In any case, the right elbow bent with a constant vertebral angle and the bent right wrist retention are essential for firm contact.

There is another way to train a chair. If you put the chair back and take the address posture, you can feel the back of the chair touch the hip. When swinging, try to reach the back of your chair, especially during the transition. This allows you to maintain the spine angles throughout the swing and create two other body angles.

Picture

One more shaft over hand introduces drill drills.

Place the head cover on the end of the grip of the club shaft and have a friend hold this shaft so that the head cover is in the address position. The goal is to create a swing without hitting the head cover on the hand or club. Keeping the spine angles constant will not cause shaking without touching other shafts.

On the other hand, when the spine angle changes and the rear moves, the chest and vertebrae arise. This will cause the shaft to collide when you raise your arms and hands.

Good switching action keeps club angles accurate.

The three most important impact club angles are: 1) the shaft is tilted toward the target to strike (downward impact on the ball), 2) the shaft maintains an angle similar to the angle set at the address (the ball at the center of the clubface Helping to beat). 3) Controls the movement of the club face in a direction perpendicular to the ball moving direction.

You can hit good shots by doing good switching action like this. You can upgrade your swing quality one step.

As mentioned earlier, when the lower body leads and the downswing is switched to maintaining the angle of the vertebra, the right elbow and right wrist are able to absorb the shock while maintaining the bend. The bent elbows and wrists help keep the position of the forward tilting shaft in place.

It is important to remember that only when you keep your wrist hinge you will see a tilt forward as you see from the swings of all great hitters. The club heads ahead if the club is shaken too early and thrown to the top. This causes a reverse slope, which results in a sharp downswing, resulting in a shot that is too short and flies to the right.

Keeping the spine angle during the transition creates a collision shaft angle at the same angle that the shaft maintains at the address. It is not possible to create a similar address and collision shaft angle unless the spine angles are actually maintained. If you make a mistake in your downswing (ie, when your butt falls off your chair), the angle of the club shaft will be straight and much more vertical than the vertical axis. Bad shots will always come out. We recommend using the Shaft Over Hands Drill to practice keeping the spine angles and positioning the main club shaft.

I realized that in order to hit the ball perfectly I had to be good at switching. Above all, do not damage the spine. When you lose it, you grab your right arm and release your right elbow and wrist too early. This will cause the shaft to tilt backwards, creating a weaker flare contact that golfers do not want. However, sequencing the downswing so that the bending of the right elbow and the hinges of the right wrist are in contact with the posture without compromising can result in ball strikes of a level never seen before.

Practice your training and keep in mind three key body angles and three main shaft angles. In the near future, you will get better results by eliminating errors such as club head casts.

The switching action is the action of turning the lower body toward the target direction just before reaching the top from the backswing.

You can also try it in your office or office at any time. The back of the back to the wall to reach the hips, and the backswing, the bottom of the backswing before the goal is to move the direction of the target (it is important to keep the hip from falling off the wall)

If you are well versed in this transition action, twist to the body will also be better and will improve the tempo of the homeostasis. The ability to strike the ball constantly improves your ability to improve.

Golf, you need to know a lot can hit well.