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This is cool!
Great examples showing impact fix, mid-hands address and on-plane right forearm. |
Good work man...that's mint. You should put a little legend at the address positions.
i.e. yellow=shoulders black=left arm red=right arm I figured it out after looking at the next few slides but looked at it crosseyed for a bit...the impact fix one looked weird at first (when I didn't understand what the lines were). That's just nitpicking tho...really is good stuff man...a picture is worth 1000 words. I like the way the hitting and swinging stickmen demonstrate the different plane angles of the hitter and swinger. |
Stick Man Swinging
I'll repeat what I said about the Hitting Stickman:
Wow! Great stuff, Rob. This is work unprecedented in the history of The Golfing Machine. Hagen taught Hogan to test his understanding of the Golf Stroke by drawing stickmen. Front View and Down the Line, Rob has tested his understanding -- Hitting and Swinging -- and has earned Three Thumbs Up! Learn from him, and then take the test: Stickmen, anyone? |
I am confused regarding frames 5 and 6. Why do the hands/forearm shift from the forearm / shaft plane to a steeper shoulder plane? Why not keep the shaft on the forearm plane?
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Or am I misunderstanding the Sitckman? The introduction page reads single shift ? Shift on the way up and no shift on the way down.
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Because in a single shift you begin on one plane shift to another and then come down on the plane you shifted to. In this case Stickman started on the Elbow plane and then shifted to the Turned Shoulder plane, then made the downswing on the Turned Shoulder plane. Hope this helps, Hunter |
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i would say at the very least POINTING to the base of the plane on the ground. my .02$ canadian.
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That might as well have just been from a video of my swing.
:rolleyes: |
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