Simple 2 Inch Move Gives You The Perfect Golf Takeaway

This one drill has helped thousands with their golf swing – It’s the last drill you’ll ever need – See it here

Your brain and your muscles move that golf club. And so what you should focus on is the stuff that’s moving on the inside first, and that during the takeaway, all you need to focus on is two inches of shoulder blade movement.

You’re going to take your right shoulder blade and pull it in towards your spine a couple inches and look at how much I’m turning. I’m moving my shoulder blade two inches, that moves my shoulder six to eight inches, that moves my hands a couple feet, which in turn moves the club 8ft.

I’m moving two inches, the club goes 8ft, which is going to be a better payoff. Obviously. All I want to do is learn how to move as little as humanly possible, and that’s exactly what rotary swing does.

We teach you how to move the smallest moving parts humanly possible, the most efficient way to move to get that club to go where you want. And we simplify the swing dramatically, so all you need to do to worry about getting a perfect takeaway, two inches of shoulder blade movement, which you’ll learn more as you enroll at rotary swing.

– Focus on internal muscle movements, particularly a small two-inch pull of the right shoulder blade towards the spine, to efficiently control the golf club during the takeaway.

– This minimal movement (two inches) results in a substantial effect, moving the club about eight feet, demonstrating the efficiency of moving the smallest parts optimally.

– Rotary Swing instruction simplifies the golf swing by teaching the most efficient way to move minimal body parts, ensuring better control and payoff.

Learn more about how the body moves in the golf swing here

Chuck Quinton

is the founder of the RotarySwing Tour online golf instruction learning system. He played golf professionally for 8 years and has been teaching golf since 1995 and has worked with more than 100 playing professionals who have played on the PGA, Web.com and other major tours around the world.

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