Learn What REALLY Matters Most for Effortless Power - Live Lesson

Want to learn how the pros swings look so slow, yet hit the ball so far? It's just one simple move that's missing in your swing! All you need to do to start hitting your longest shots is actually relax a certain muscle in your body!


Speaker 1:
So really at the end of the day, you just have to get the hips working properly. And if you understand what they're really trying to do, and maybe this will kind of help you visualize what you're really trying to do with the hips. So imagine this was my pelvis, but I'm just tilting it, looking at you this way. Right? So in the back swing, the hips move this way a little bit while they're turning, right? So if I exaggerated all this stuff, I'm going this way, but I'm also turning. So it looks like I'm not going anywhere that gets the right side loaded. But also what I was trying to get you to feel on the left side is, you know, that you're not just doing this right? And you're not just doing this. You're, you're trying to feel both sides loaded, a little bit engaged.

Speaker 1:
So once that pelvis shifts and turns to the right then during the transition, it's shifting and turning back to the left. So it's kind of doing this and this, this and this, but that's a little bit of an exaggeration, right? That's really all that has to happen. If that works then early extension and all of that stuff goes away. But when you're, you know, you've spent so much time going really, really slow trying to get all these movements, fine, fine tune. But there has to be that transition where you start doing it fast and dynamically and athletically to start to get the feeling of what really happens. Because if these muscles aren't engaged, you can do it slow when you go to speed, it won't work. So it's probably a little bit of that disconnect that I'm trying to kind of push you down that road to start going faster and faster.

Speaker 1:
So you start getting to be at the point where it's becoming more natural and athletic, because really it's, it's nothing more than that. Right. And if you're doing that, then everything else falls into place. It doesn't have a choice unless you're just overusing your arms. So, yeah. So when I was trying to get you to feel that that was part of the reason, it's just like, okay, obviously if I just completely disengaged this, then I've got to be really patient during the transition to try and wake this thing up and then get it to work. And it's just tough. Right. Whereas if you're going to move quick, this thing is just getting unweighted for a split second, and then it's getting ready to go back the other way. 

Speaker 2:
And in reality though, I, I mean you drill or not, I still need some more weight on my left than what I was doing. Correct.

Speaker 1:
What you showed in your faster swing, the non slow one was fine in terms of like mechanics and the, in terms of, you know, how much you're shifting off and that type of stuff, as far as what you feel. And what's really going to be loaded. That's what I'm trying to get to next is, you know, there's a difference, but like, I can make it look like I maintained all my angles and positions, but this leg is asleep. Right. Most of my weights hanging over here. So for me to like magically wake that up in a 10th of a second, it's just not going to happen. So yeah. So that's really kind of what we're trying to get is to get that natural movement. That's why I was kind trying to get you to understand the hip movement is the pelvis is shifting, it's turning, and then it's shifting during the transition and turning and that's the whole key. And if that works, then the upper body can then be, you know, follow along and be told what to do by the lower half.

Speaker 1:
Do that one more time. Yes. Can you turn down the line and do it? Okay. So backswing looks good. It's the downswing stuff. Which, which honestly, we've spent way more time on backswing stuff than we have on downswing. Yeah. So that's, this is okay. Like the backswing stuff looks really, really good. Good. So we just need to now spend the time to dial in this next piece, which is where we were trying to head anyway. So this is fine. So setup looks fine. Backswing is quite a bit of head movement there still. You see that? Yeah.

Speaker 1:
It's crazy. So the cure for this, watch your left shoulder. Yeah. Yeah. Shrugging up to your chin. You're losing that spacing. So here's what I want you to do. One little thing with the shoulder going back, and this will help this. Okay. I'll do it more in a second. But when you're going back, I want you to start concentrating on your shoulder going down. So you're going to feel it, your shoulder plane gets a lot steeper, right? As long as you're not tilting your shoulders, the shoulders are going to turn pretty steep. And as you go steep with your shoulders, that helps your hip go back there. One in the same, right? If you're loading up properly in the backswing, like we were talking about in that clamshell drill, where the hips going back a little bit. Well, that increases, I mean, if I really exaggerate it, right, that increases my spine angle.

Speaker 1:
Now we're not going to go that far, but we just need subtle changes. So instead of kind of doing this and your shoulder kind of going, this is a little left shoulder engagement, that's causing it to hike up and push a little bit. You're going to start concentrating on going down, which to you is going to feel at first like this. Yeah. But then once you get used to it, you're just going to see how this is getting you more coiled up. Whereas this is actually lengthening a lot of muscles that we need to be engaged. So that's just a little tweak on the backswing, otherwise. It's great. So a

Speaker 2:
Follow up question, which I meant to ask you. So on the top of my swing, as far as the access tilt nose right there on the top of my backswing, is that supposed to be equivalent to my access? Tilt at setup? Yeah. Basically. Okay. Okay. So yeah, I definitely flatten out then. Yeah. Yeah. You

Speaker 1:
Got a little bit more than we need there and it's just adding a little, it's not bad. Right. It's just a little bit of extra movement, but we can cut that in half. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. And this is a really powerful shift. There's the problem with that? So this transition move looks Beasley, man. I mean, you got a lot of muscle loaded up there, right? Like a lot. So that's really, I mean, your legs are working. Yeah. Watch what happens here. You stop, start pushing off the right leg and then watch your shoulders.

Speaker 2:
Yeah. Yeah. They're

Speaker 1:
Wide open. Right? So the only thing we need, this is why this is where the early extensions coming from. So when you do this drill body only no arms, every single time you're here. Not here. Okay. Cause now what's happened is you do this awesome transition, get super burly loaded, and then you stop with the left. And instead of using this left side to push the hips up and back, you then begin to push from the right leg, hip and turn your shoulders. Okay. That's where the disconnect is. So the tr so we've got moves one and two back swings. Great transitions. Great. Post up move is the, is the problem. Yeah. So that's causing all of the issues. Yeah. And I'm generally doing

Speaker 2:
Everything really hard. Yeah. And this is, I

Speaker 1:
Want to get this fast and quick. Not super burly. You could deadlift 300 pounds, but we're getting there. I mean, the movements are great. You did an perfect job, keeping the shoulder shut, but then you start to turn them. Gotcha. Okay. And then you're still up on the toes there, but it's just, it's moved three. That's it? That's all it is.

Speaker 2:
I actually, because of that exaggeration on that post, I was sweet a seven iron in my garage and I hit the ceiling. Cause I think it just shot me up in the air.

Speaker 1:
That would make sense. Okay. So setups looking better here. Hips are much better.

Speaker 2:
I'm still thinking about that, but I definitely yes. Have less, but sticking out. Yeah.

Speaker 1:
Way better. You're a lot more balanced here. I mean, you could come forward a tiny bit more with your hips to get just a little bit more sh shin lane, which will move your weight forward. Just a little bit more, put a little bit more in the middle of the foot, but we're we're really, it's way better, like way more natural here. This is all great. But yeah, you look, you're already stressing. I can see it on your face. Yeah. So we just gotta, we're gonna, we're we're gonna learn to make this quick, instead of thinking so much about power, but we're, we're, we're close. This left knee could come forward a little bit more and this will happen as your shoulder gets steeper instead of moving across. And I'll explain that in just a second, but this is, these are, these are fine tweaks, right? I mean, you can, you can play great golf from right here.

Speaker 1:
And then as we start down, I mean, that's really, really good. We just want to make it quick instead of so heavily loaded. But then yeah, right here, it's all shoulder turn. Yeah. All that's missing. So this is actually great news. We got one thing we got to do, which is the only thing we haven't really spent any time working on. Okay. So, okay. So a couple of little things on the backswing one, we talked about just getting steeper with your shoulders. Obviously look at that in the mirror, but I promise you, you're going to feel like this. Once you start just being here, you're going to feel like you're, you're leaning toward the target. Okay. So just watch it in the mirror. You only need, you know, five, 10 degrees of tilt. That's it. You start adding getting 15 or 20. And then we have a lot of going on.

Speaker 1:
As far as the knee, you know, as the knee goes forward, this is helping the hips rotate. Right? If the knee goes forward, the hips pivot. And there's obviously a balance point. I don't want to be like this, but at the same point, if I don't let that knee come forward, I'm not letting my hips turn and load as much as they could. So letting that come forward, but also this will happen as your shoulders get steep. As your shoulders get flat, it's pretty easy for my knee to not get out over my toe. But as my shoulders get steeper, then I start loading more. And then the bottom piece from that is just doing this and feeling light. What I mean by light? This is you, you have the movements down, the backswing and transition are there, but I want you to start to feel like, how could I do this fast?

Speaker 1:
And I want to feel light on my feet. I want to feel quick, right? Because the golf swing power is one thing and speed is another. And those don't necessarily mean a one-to-one translation. What I want you to start to feel as speed, quick lightness, right? Not Mike Tyson, but sugar Ray Leonard. Yeah. So we're going to start getting your feet moving lighter and that will help speed all this up and take down the muscular tension and all that. So the, and this, this is normal. When you're going really slow. Everybody wants to kind of exaggerate these feelings and they get really tight and it gets really tiring to do this stuff. And we're going to start swinging that pendulum the other way to be really quick and light on our feet. Okay. So then the bottom line is move three is the only piece that's really missing.

Speaker 1:
Yeah. So once we're here and you transition, then you've got to keep your shoulders shut. You don't do anything with them. And this is where it broke down is that you then started trying to turn your chest through and that will kill everything that you did on all this great work going back. So from here, here, shoulders are square. Arms are square because from right here, once you're posted up, the only thing that's gonna keep you moving is the of the club. So that that's going to be the big change. And once you have that, where you can get this quickly, then everything's going to be fine. So your shoulders from down the line, steep post, or transition and post, and then shut, and you should be able to get here with even your shoulders a little bit closed. That'll be the little bit of an exaggeration, but that will help you feel how little your arms and shoulders do in the swing.

Speaker 1:
Because as you're starting to feel fast and light through your hips and fast and light through your feet, then what you want to do is translate that feeling to the club. You know, right now, if you were, you know, if you had a club in your hand and you were hitting the ball with the way that you're coming through, turning your chest, you would feel really strong and powerful through the shot. You would feel like you've got a lot of mass into the ball, but we don't need it. We need speed. And so what I want you to feel is that your hands are quick. That they're light. That they're fast, that your arms are light and fast. But if this is turning through, then your arms have to tense up to keep holding onto the club. And that's at the point where we want to release the club. Does that make sense? Yeah. 

Speaker 2:
My shoulders opening up like that, is it because my shoulders are opening up or is it my right side? Pushing everything open.

Speaker 1:
You were turning your shoulders. The right leg helped a little bit, but it wasn't that bad. It's not like your left knee was like this. Right. It's pushing it a little bit, but it's more that the left side stopped posting up. It was still kind of here. And then you started taking it over with your chest and that's the bottom line. It was all re rib cage rotation. Okay. And so when you start doing this right, and you get to the point of hitting balls or even practicing with an impact bag, once you're posted up, like this leg is fully straight, you're going to swear. You're going to hit it 30 yards, right. With your chest. And that's going to be when you're like, okay, then I got it. Because then all you have to do is let your arms release. And once that happens, that's what straightens out the ball flight. But you're going to feel a thousand degrees more closed than you're used to right now. Okay. So let me see you try that with the transition. We've listened. Let's take some of that tension out and feel lighter on our feet. Lighter on our, in our legs.

Speaker 1:
Oh, it's the first, let me do the steeper. Yeah. Down with the left shoulder. Yeah. There you say, you probably feel like you're reverse pivoting, right? Yeah. Good. That's what's going to feel like

Speaker 2:
Naturally brings my knee out too.

Speaker 1:
Yep, exactly. There you go. Perfect.

Speaker 2:
Okay. And then here, here, and then here, basically.

Speaker 1:
So even there, your left shoulder popping up a little bit popping up. Yep. Don't move it at all here. Good. Here there. Nailed it. Let me show it to you real quick. So I want you to keep this and burn this in your brain. So here's first is that you still have tilt. Yeah. Right? So that's perfect. But that feels like a reverse pivot. But you saw how, as you got your shoulders, see how your left shoulder is not smashing up against your chin now. Yeah. And your left knee came forward. You look perfect. That's as good as it gets as a stacked centered turn. And then let me just watch your head here so we can use that leaf in the background. You still moved off inch and a half. Right. But it's not for yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. This is perfect. That's exactly what we want. Now let's look at the downswing. So now you sell your shoulders. That that amount of tilt in your shoulders right now is fine. Okay. All right. Once you have your hands on the club, that's going to get steeper, but you don't want to try and make them steeper. And that's what you did before. I'll show you just real quick, the first one that you did. Gotcha. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So now you said you felt something in the left hip?

Speaker 2:
Not bad. I mean, I could just be a little tight it's 7:30 PM.

Speaker 1:
Yeah. So will you, it looks like you're, you're snapping it back pretty hard right there. That looks pretty tight. So that looks like you're probably overdoing that just a smidge. Okay. Just relax that now again, keep in mind what we're trying to do here. This is going to be where you're starting to feel the difference when you do something at pace and you do something with the right amount of tension, the healthy amount of tension. It's not trying to force this hit back, which is what it looked like there. This actually hurts my head, I guess, posting up and I'm there and I'm out of it. And this is where again, that little hop off the, off the ankle, not off the toe helps because that helps open you up a little bit. Like when you're adding, when you're doing this really, really fast, right?

Speaker 1:
Like with a driver and you're really getting those hips to go through this opens up that hip a little bit. So it takes the strength. Cause you're, you know, there's only so much internal rotation you're going to have on this hip socket before. It's like, Hey, I'm at max range of motion. Right. And that's why you see these guys who are really trying to turn their hips fast, like tiger and Bubba and bill and those guys. That's why you see this, but it's again, it's this not this. Right. So I'm just trying to hop my hip back to take some of that strain off the hip, even letting the foot pivot. Right? Yeah. As long as I'm back on my ankle, the foot will naturally pivot and that will free up. So my hip doesn't feel like it's so locked in there, but that's all that was happening there. You're just really this thing back too much. Just relax. Make a little bit more neutral and natural.

Speaker 1:
There you go. Yeah. When you're transitioning, get more weight over to the left, more with the hip. So you're doing it. You have a tendency when you're back to do this a little bit, just getting that external rotation without the hip coming over with it there, the knee movement leading is tiny, but you've got to get more of the hip over there. Gotcha. There you go. Good. You remember, we're trying to just load that hip up, right? So we've got to get weighed over there. We can't just move the knee by itself and you don't even need to get your hips that open. That's really open. And w I mean, it's, it's fine when you're doing it at speed, but you don't need to practice it at that slow of a pace. Yes. There you go. Good. I, shoulders are getting a little steep and open there. You're activating them. You feel it? Yeah.

Speaker 2:
Okay.

Speaker 1:
So keep your chest pointing away from the target all the way into impact. There you go. And then your, your shoulders, if you think about it this way, right? If you're, if your shoulders during the backswing, you have, let's just say you have a 45 degree differential. Your shoulders have turned 45 more than your hips, right? And let's just say that you maintain that. And during the transition, it's still 45. And at impact, that stays the same, right? If you move your shoulders at all, you will end up open, right? Cause you're getting your hips about to 45 degrees open. So that's the key to understand is that once you're here, they literally don't have to do a thing. And that's where you're going to get that real effortless speed. But you're going to, when you start trying to move this at all, then that's when the golf swing feels like a lot of work, a little open to turn down the line for me one more time. I'm going to record this one. Go ahead.

Speaker 1:
Pretty close. Their backswing looks good. Left knees out a little bit further towards the end of the shoulders. A little steeper right here. Shoulders are starting to open a little bit. And this is where being really relaxed is going to make a big difference. And I'll explain that in a minute. Okay. So right now I'd say your shoulders are probably 30 degrees closed. So we've, we've lost some of that differential. Okay. And then I get little, tiny bit open, but not about the hip movement is, is spot on dude. So good posture looks good. Let me just check things.

Speaker 1:
We move the hip back slightly more. Oh, actually I think your hip is probably fine there. You're losing the tush line a tiny bit, but it goes back to set up, set up again. Okay. Just letting the hips come forward. Like an inch. Yeah. Yeah. We'll have everything dialed in on the money. Okay. But what I want you to start to feel is that you, I want you to start monitoring the tension that you have through the sides here in your obliques and your rib cage. Because if they're tight, then you won't get any dynamic stretching. And you want to start to feel as kind of an exaggeration as you loosen up and feel more relaxed. See, I'm, my shoulders are like still kind of going back. And then my hips are going the other way. I can't do that. If I'm tight, I can't do that. If I'm really rigid and trying to force all this stuff in a position, but as I relax and get everything softened up, now, it's very easy for my shoulders to be closed here. And that's going to be the next key is doing this stuff because you've got it. The technique is there. It's now making it fluid and relaxed so that you get these dynamic stretching, motions and feeling that your shoulders are not stuck together with your hips. Okay.

Speaker 1:
That's a lot better, even more. So try to feel like your shoulders are. Yeah, that was good. Do it again? Better getting there. All right. Quick look.

Speaker 2:
What did that feel like to you? It feels, it feels good. I have to just, if I think about not moving my shoulders, I can do it right now. I just need to get in the mirror now and have that be the thing. I am hitting my left tip pretty hard. Cause I used to have to do that, but it sounds like I'm overdoing it a little bit sometimes.

Speaker 1:
Yeah. So now what we're starting to see is a little bit of a dynamics. That's, that's critical to the golf swing and that transition to where ideally Sue we're a little bit late here in what I mean by that is see how the hips are starting to shift back to the left and the shoulders are still closed to this, right? The shoulders are still actually turning back while that weight shift is happening back to left. But this is the first step. This, when you start doing this for the first time, it feels super disjointed and out of control for most golfers. And then as you start getting to do it more relaxed and more comfortably, then it starts to happen really athletically. But this is the first step is that you go to the top and you kind of stop. And then you do the transition and you know, the shoulders are still they're static. Right? We want them to still technically be turning back. Yeah. But now you can see how they're shut and you're making this beautiful transition. And as you get into the post-up, you're hanging back there a little bit, but we're almost there just need to get more weight over there.

Speaker 2:
Yeah. Through the hip. Not the knee.

Speaker 1:
Exactly. Exactly. Well, you know, now watch your head. Right. So now we lost the focus on that. So now watch your head's going to shift off the ball. Yeah. See that. Yeah. So that's why it's hard to get, feel that weight over there. We just have, now we have way too much access tilt. Okay. But what we're really concerned about that's the easy part to fix is just getting those shoulders, that shoulder steeper. But what I'm really interested now is the actual dynamic.

Speaker 2:
So naturally once I start going fast, my shoulders will keep going back and my hip will start

Speaker 1:
Opening up. But I want you to practice it while you're doing this drill while you're doing without the arms and the club. Cause then once you do it with the arms and club, then you get a really big stretch because your arms and clubs are still pulling you back. Right? You've got all this momentum and then your hips are going the other way. And then it, then it becomes a lot. That's so much better. You can see now that your shoulders are chilled out and the hips are going. And now all we need to do, we've got to keep the head movement minimized. But the next key, and this is quite frankly, this is the part of the golf swing that most amateurs never ever get. One because they don't, their back swings are so bad. They're in such a weird position. They can't feel how to not use their shoulders.

Speaker 1:
They never get to the good stuff where they're learning how to use their hips dynamically while everything is still going back, right? Just like if you're throwing a ball, this becomes natural for your arm to go back while your hips are going forward, but you have to be loose. You, you can't be all stuck together. Right. And that's what I want you to start to feel. So your left shoulder is going down and your hips are going there ahead of everything. And that's, it's going to be, it'll be a brain challenge at first because you've spent so much time stacking these things in building blocks like this, where there's no dynamics in there. And now it's going to feel like, okay, I got to kind of let go of some tension and some what you associate with control to start letting everything happen at a true pace.

Speaker 1:
And that's going to be, that's the game changer. Now, once you have that, you've got the mechanics, you've got the positions. Now it's letting it happen. Fluidly and athletically and quickly. And now once you have that, then once you stack the arms back in there, then it all goes together. And that's when you get this speed that you're looking for. So, okay. So minimize the head movement with the shoulders, getting a little steeper, just like we, and the video that you have on this, you review this cause it's spot on, right? Your head spot on your axis, tilt spot on. And now it's that dynamic transition. So you can practice kinda going back while getting your hips to go first. I'm exaggerating a little bit, but that's what you kind of want to do. And like I said, you're going to feel a little disjointed at first because you're going to swing the pendulum over here and try to be like trying to make it really goofy.

Speaker 1:
It's not that big of a move. It's pretty subtle. But the key again is minimizing tension, especially in your obliques. If these are softer than those hips can begin to shift and move independent. But if they're tight, then it's going to drag your shoulders right along with them. And then once you have this tension here, you're going to then want to engage it and fire your shoulders through as well. Okay. To make sense with no exaggeration. This is a differentiator, quite frankly. I mean, this is the differentiator between a really good six handicap ball, striker, eight handicap ball striker, and a scratch ball striker in terms of distance and control and accuracy. Because once the shoulders chill out, you're taking these pivot points that you have like references for the swing in terms of, you know, this is a pivot point. This is a pivot point.

Speaker 1:
No, your, your rib cage, all of this stuff, that's reference points for where you're going to hit the ball. And you're, you're no longer trying to actively move them. And once that happens, now you have control over the strike. This is like, you know, that, that I talked about that fulcrum video and you know how the left shoulder is moving away and people hitting it off the toe and things like that. It's just because this stuff is active. It's actively moving. Once you learn to replace it with proper hip movement and the hips are what are actively moving the shoulders and the shoulders chill out, then everything unfolds. And that's really the key, but this is, this is the hardest part for people to get, right? Because it feels unnatural to do it, you know, in a golf swing for most people, because we're so fixated on the club, which is attached to our arms and shoulders, right?

Speaker 1:
So just doing little things to help you kind of get fluid with it and flowing with it more is going to be key. And it's just going to be all coming from your hips and chilling this out. You can do this. What we just did with your arms and club in quite frankly, the rest of the stuff doesn't matter. You can be a little bit off at the top. Your arms can be a little bit off playing. They can be a little too shallow. It can be a little too steep. It doesn't matter. And obviously that stuff matters when it comes to fine tuning, right? But it matters less. What really matters the most in the swing is the power source. That's it? Whatever the engine is, right? If your engine is on top, then all of this stuff is out of whack. And then you have to then start moving these pivot points that you use for striking the ball.

Speaker 1:
If your shoulder is here to address it here at impact, there's a problem. And so you start trying to control that stuff. What you're really going to feel is once you're posted up here and because there's no active motion in your shoulders, you feel like you're super static. And then it's just that to hit the ball. I mean, there's nothing you're, you're sitting still, you just had something else, accelerate everything. But once everything's locked in place, it's like shooting fish in a barrel. Like you don't have to hope that you make solid contact. Like it's a foregone conclusion. You're just, you've just moved into these impact positions, these impact alignments with the right parts of your body, but then everything slams on the brakes when you more or less when you post up. And so now, instead of these things, trying to, you're trying to compensate for these things, by doing something with your arms and hands, that stuff all goes away. But the mental crux is then feeling like trusting is what it comes down to trusting that you don't have to use your arms and hands and shoulders. And if you can get there, then the faster that you get to that point where your hips are, are the power source and your arms and hands aren't doing anything. Then if you can make that mental switch, that jump, the swing is there. This really is the swing. The rest of it. You can, you can cheat and get away with, but this part you can guess.

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Bill
Must say this lesson was a magic moment for me. By introducing a steeper shoulder turn on the takeaway I can see my body and legs in a better position for the transition. It just seems smoother and my body is more relaxed.
July 29, 2020
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Craig (Certified RST Instructor)
Great Bill! Thanks for the post.
July 29, 2020
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Rebecca
At the end Chuck says that everything stops at impact. That is the problem I’m having with rotary swing. In fact everything stops. When I started this program I had dynamic acceleration through impact. Now I find I’m getting over, into position, and stopping my forward movement. There must be something that had to engage and continue to happen after post.
July 6, 2020
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Craig (Certified RST Instructor)
Hello Rebecca. The body slams on the brake so that the club can accelerate through independently of the body. You shouldn't have to try a create a follow through. The thing I believe you are missing is there will be momentum to carry you. Take a look at Golf Swing Follow Through Video. You don't want to accelerate through impact. It is tough on the spine and the ball is already gone. Will be happy to help you get over this hump.
July 7, 2020
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Rebecca
I get the concept. But I’m decelerating the club head. This flaw started creeping in when my end point became impact. It’s as if my body starts preparing to put on the breaks early, I hold my right shoulder back, and I don’t turn through. I’ll look at the release video but my problem with the dead drill is it doesn’t give you the step/feel for finishing. Chuck continues through his swing. His shoulders keep moving. When I hit my best shots is when my thoughts are “turn right shoulder through “.
July 7, 2020
64x64
Craig (Certified RST Instructor)
Hello Rebecca. (For Right Handed Player) - I wouldn't recommend trying to turn the right shoulder through to any of my students. I am a little biased because that's why I had my right shoulder rebuilt. Take a look at Arms vs Body Release. Remember there will momentum because you are decelerating safely in the follow through. I think you may just be trying to over do the slamming of the brakes and flipping the club with the hands. The videos I referred you to will help.
July 7, 2020
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dick
Hi, I hit the ball further and more clean if I only use my left arm in the down swing rather than using both arms. I do not really understand the reasons for this. Is there a video on how to add the right arm for more directional control of the ball, without taking over the whole swing and in my case resulting in less distance than with the left arm only? Thanks, Dick
June 29, 2020
64x64
Craig (Certified RST Instructor)
Hello Dick. The right arm is only used to help transfer power. You don't use the right arm for directional control as that is the left arms job. Take a look at Right Arm Release in Golf Swing Video.
June 29, 2020
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Will
In the last moments of the video Chuck hit on something I struggle with: everything hitting the brakes at post up. After shifting and pulling left with the hips and body, my shoulder/arms want to join the party going left and open up. So how does one shift and post up athletically and then stop all the momentum you just built while the arms catch up? Hope that makes sense. Also, I want to thank Chuck for using the mic, makes a HUGE difference! (Now for better autofocus...)
June 28, 2020
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Craig (Certified RST Instructor)
Hello Will. You have to train slamming on the brakes and letting the club properly release. Take a look at Moving the Fulcrum and Play the Best Golf of Your Life in 6 Weeks Video 4 of 6. Great drills to make this happen easier.
June 28, 2020
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Paul
From the 10 min mark thru the 13 min mark...powerful wisdom! Thank you!
June 25, 2020
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Craig (Certified RST Instructor)
Thanks for the post Paul. Glad you liked the lesson!
June 25, 2020
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Tony
Always good and clear. Thanks
June 24, 2020
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Craig (Certified RST Instructor)
Thanks Tony!
June 24, 2020
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Kevin
Great video! The video that comes to mind is "You start the downswing before completing your backswing" video on the site. That video really help me feel a good wind up and also worked to correct my overswing issues and overloading the right side. The video really helps blend the backswing & transition - they are not separate events which is the mistake I was making while learning the moves independently.
June 23, 2020
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Craig (Certified RST Instructor)
Hello Kevin. Awesome. Thanks for the compliments of the material.
June 24, 2020
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Roy
Every video that comes out just adds to a more in-depth understanding of the process. This video is just plain "excellent". I tend to struggle with turning my visualization (i.e. the "exaggerated" moves) into the "real" swing. In other words, I'm over doing it. When I tone it down and view videos like this one, well, it just helps to build a solid foundation. Thanks Chuck for sharing these lessons. Pure gold.
June 23, 2020
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Bill
Ditto this comment....these live session videos are a HUGE help to my understanding!
June 23, 2020
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Roy
Chuck, getting back to the "exaggerated" moves and the "actual" swing. I keep thinking that it would be beneficial to see, for example, an exaggerated transition compared to the actual transition. I think this would help to clarify exactly how much movement there actually is in the real swing. I say to myself (when watching these valuable lessons) that, ok, I see what you're trying to do via the exaggerated moves but show me what it looks like when you don't exaggerate it. Your thoughts please.
June 25, 2020
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Kenneth
The more I hear it and see it while working hard at it the better it becomes. Today’s video provides some of the best clear language about getting at that untapped speed made accessible by the RST method. Awesome teaching Chuck! It’s like the dead horse I’ve been beating with the drills is finally ready to break out of the barn. Thanks, Ken Adams
June 22, 2020
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Michael (Certified RST Instructor)
Hi Kenneth. We all need to hear things different in order to get the aha moment. Looking forward to see your name on the Succes Story Board soon.
June 23, 2020
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Tom
Pure gold! This is by far your best explanation of the path to transition from practicing the dead drill to becoming a great ball striker. I have enjoyed watching your skills as a teacher grow exponentially over the last year. I thoroughly enjoyed this video and am sure it will help me immensely. Once again, thank you for making golf enjoyable once again. Tom N
June 22, 2020
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Chuck (Certified RST Instructor)
Thanks Tom. Its cool to see you’ve noticed because it’s true my passion for teaching was renewed during the RoadShow and I’ve been digging into figuring out how to help you guys as fast as humanly possible.
June 22, 2020
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Pete
Each live lesson is just getting better and better, and each time I find so many things that apply to me. For example the moving of the head caused by left shoulder not going down on a steep enough plane, the retaining of the shoulders at 45 degrees behind the hips, and the not shifting enough weight to the left before the post up. Awesome stuff.
June 22, 2020
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Michael (Certified RST Instructor)
Hi Pete. Glad you like it. Keep up the work.
June 23, 2020
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Arthur
Hi Chuck, Loved it. The insight you gave in the last couple of minutes of the video, the feeling when the arms/shoulders chill out, hips have done the work, post up, release, then the magic happens. Perfect. Regards, Arthur.
June 22, 2020
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Harold
Yes i caught that nugget of wisdom to because I bene real tight for years and I didnt understand that it was killing my power. I think I got it now thou.
June 22, 2020
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Anthony (Certified RST Instructor)
Thank you Chuck for sharing this video. Some of the nuances involving hip rotation and weight shift were made a lot more clear. Much appreciated, looking forward to putting these thoughts and feelings into practice
June 22, 2020
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Michael (Certified RST Instructor)
Hi Anthony. Great to hear you like it. Looking forward to hear about your progress.
June 23, 2020

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