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Bobby Clampett BM#22
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the baseball player's swing through the ball has to do with the golfer's "as flat as possible" Backstroke Shoulder Turn away from the Ball? |
Bobby Clampett BM#23
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Following your golf logic, the batter's shoulders after the 'tap and turn' would be on or near the same plane as the bat, right? Let's pause for a moment to get this picture: The shoulders are horizontal and the bat is... ...almost vertical? Oh me, SuperDave. Pass the peanuts and crackerjacks! |
Bobby Clampett BM#24
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That pretty much sums things up. :oops: |
Bobby Clampett BM#25
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Well, SuperDave, that one was just too obvious. I mean, c'mon. Of course they rotate on two different planes. There needs to be at least some challenge! But, since you've brought it up, and since your latest post is crying out for meaningful debate to educate the golfing masses, let's reprint your self-described "examples" and see just how willing you really are to engage in constructive debate. My comments are in bold. One of the main reasons you don't want a flat as possible shoulder turn is because such a turn will tend to position the club inside the line when the club is parallel to the ground which even HK knew was undesireable. You have described a Pivot-Controlled Hands procedure wherein the Shoulder Turn pulls the Hands below Plane. This is the polar opposite of TGM's Hand-Controlled Pivot wherein the Hands maintain the On Plane alignments and the Body responds accordingly. That is true even if shoulders turn passively as a consequence of hand/arm action. Well, I guess that pre-emptive strike shoots down my above Hand-Controlled Pivot response. Now, you can avoid that by various means such as taking the club outside initially, but such maneuvers have drawbacks as well. "Taking the club outside initially" is merely a Hands-Controlled Pivot deliberately executing the Start Up Off Plane instead of On Plane. But, I'm glad you covered that base. Don't want to give the 'debating' adversary any 'wiggle room,' right? The are other solutions, but that is not the subject here. But, just in case I had anything else in mind, let's just slam the door completely! The fault of too flat a backswing with the clubhead inside the hands when club is parallel to the ground is one of the most common faults in golf. I would guess it plagues probably 95% of all golfers. "The fault of too flat a backswing with the clubhead inside the hands??" And all this time I thought we were discussing a Shoulder Turn executed "as flat as possible," a concept totally independent of the Clubhead's Inclined Plane of Motion. I really don't understand why anyone would recommend it unless they were your opponent. At no time did Mr. Kelley recommend "too flat a backswing." He recommended a Flat Backstroke Shoulder Turn to place the Right Shoulder on the Inclined Clubshaft Plane of Motion at the Top. Now do you see why I didn't respond? No, I didn't think you would. Which is why I didn't in the first place. |
Bobby Clampett BM#26
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Sorry, SuperDave. You're exactly $1,490 short. But... We'll miss you at Pine Needles! :oops: |
Bobby Clampett BM#27
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"Hello Clarisse." The Boss is back. |
Bobby Clampett BM#28
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"Hello Clarisse." The Boss is back. |
Bobby Clampett BM#76
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All this from the same guy who today posted the following under the topic Bobby Clampett Swing Analysis -- The Real Deal: "This is where I'm coming from, and frankly even the stuff in TGM is not detailed enough for me. I guess I'm not talented enough to get by on "good enough". I need precise details, zero ambiguity, and 100% accuracy of instruction." |
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