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@richardc6932
@richardc6932 Күн бұрын
JMHO , transferring your weight to the front foot in the downswing will bring your shoulder forward towards the target. Hanging back on the back foot only produces a fat weak shot. Weight transfer is the key. This guy is a legend, always enjoyed watching him as well as the other greats.
@carlbaumeister3439
@carlbaumeister3439 Күн бұрын
As good a middle iron striker as I’ve ever seen!
@paulopaul157
@paulopaul157 2 күн бұрын
I find these pros not proper addressing practical golf swing and shape of ball flights to the intended targets . You cannot tell us that what you are teaching is one size fit all. It lacks the fade or draw shape with regards to stance ie the two feet positions. I have tried to put the two feet in an equal position. It gave a different result to ball flight. It faded the ball slightly. The teacher should add or explain what the shapes of the flights of that teaching. I conclude that there is no fixed feet stance, but can be fixed lead hand position and trail hand position only. I have tried to play with pros who teach golf and I noticed that many if not most don’t play consistently well all through the 18holes because they have one fixed feet position in their golf address positions all through the 18 holes. It requires a proper debate to get to accept that the two feet must not be in equal position all the time at address. Golf swing at address is an adaptive, flexible shapes and geometry. Its should NEVER be taught as a fixed structure. I wish I could show or demonstrate this with 3 professional teachers without them knowing what we are discussing here. Thank you for you time.
@chrisbrimhall1613
@chrisbrimhall1613 2 күн бұрын
Everyone talks about greatest shots in major championship history…..my vote for number 1
@tom5776
@tom5776 3 күн бұрын
Wow, Pete owns a shirt that's not black! lol. Great video Pete. Very helpful.
@sal4856
@sal4856 3 күн бұрын
Lee said Moe Norman greatest balls striker of all time,swing is 90 percent Moe
@indianaguy6941
@indianaguy6941 5 күн бұрын
Hey Phil how's that dirty Saudi money taste? Have you won anything? Nope, just taking money.
@DaveStarks-ku2jd
@DaveStarks-ku2jd 5 күн бұрын
Awesome
@charlesstinehour1985
@charlesstinehour1985 8 күн бұрын
Great idea!
@LowerMyHandicap-today
@LowerMyHandicap-today 7 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@jeffhodge7333
@jeffhodge7333 9 күн бұрын
Terminate LIV Golf.
@andrewportman2575
@andrewportman2575 10 күн бұрын
Gold
@jfboomerang1310
@jfboomerang1310 11 күн бұрын
His swing looks like Mo Norman's.
@jamesbaine580
@jamesbaine580 13 күн бұрын
I Miss watching you play Brother
@stevenklinkhamer9069
@stevenklinkhamer9069 13 күн бұрын
As good an analyst as he was a champion golfer. Miss his wit, golf knowledge and charm on those broadcadts. The best.
@abuhamza1970
@abuhamza1970 14 күн бұрын
Love Pete Cowan but the camera work is awful. Keeps missing key elements of Pete’s hands and the resulting shots. Very frustrating 😡
@davidjohncox7333
@davidjohncox7333 15 күн бұрын
Johnny Miller is such a nice guy!❤
@justbreakingballs
@justbreakingballs 16 күн бұрын
I this is good but I prefer a Makita
@johnaustin635
@johnaustin635 20 күн бұрын
Love or loathe him he knows what he’s talking about.
@ScrewyDriverTheMan
@ScrewyDriverTheMan 20 күн бұрын
Dude is 6 FOOT 4 INCHES!!!! He LOOKED like he was swinging smoothly because he was HUGE!!!!
@joeidaho5938
@joeidaho5938 20 күн бұрын
Dubai just looks wierd....lol.
@ScrewyDriverTheMan
@ScrewyDriverTheMan 21 күн бұрын
I love how he cheated by making sure he stepped forward so that ball is back in his stance LMAO
@Rd-bi7vr
@Rd-bi7vr 24 күн бұрын
Modern instructors don’t give lead hand the respect it deserves
@bluesfunk902
@bluesfunk902 24 күн бұрын
レッドベターに教わる前かな?
@frankrichards3089
@frankrichards3089 25 күн бұрын
G$
@jamesdavidson3259
@jamesdavidson3259 26 күн бұрын
thanks
@TheGoodGadfly
@TheGoodGadfly 26 күн бұрын
The ball is not compressed into the ground, that is for sure .
@rainzoro
@rainzoro 27 күн бұрын
I tend to swing with my arm. At first I hated this drill. It doesn’t feel natural to me as I have to squeeze my entire upper body to backswing. But at the same time, this drill is the only way I can hit the ball clean.
@arielluna4399
@arielluna4399 27 күн бұрын
👍👏👍👏
@arielluna4399
@arielluna4399 27 күн бұрын
👏👍👏👍
@arielluna4399
@arielluna4399 27 күн бұрын
👍👏👍👏
@LowerMyHandicap-today
@LowerMyHandicap-today 27 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@arielluna4399
@arielluna4399 27 күн бұрын
👏👍👏👍
@part1801
@part1801 28 күн бұрын
That was Nicklaus's best era for his swing. The power and the way he uses his lower body is insane.
@joneastelow3242
@joneastelow3242 28 күн бұрын
I always laugh...When I retire I'll take up golf....😂😂.
@tommyspeed1434
@tommyspeed1434 28 күн бұрын
these videos were made by Johnny Miller nine years ago. How can you rename it?
@patrickmadlala4614
@patrickmadlala4614 29 күн бұрын
Love these tip
@sevesellors2831
@sevesellors2831 29 күн бұрын
The best coach a genius.
@3putt548
@3putt548 29 күн бұрын
Yeah Johnny Miller didn’t pull any punches. He was so honest with his commentary good and bad. I like Faldo also but Johnny was the best.
@chetroberson8023
@chetroberson8023 13 күн бұрын
Absolutely the best!
@jgroend
@jgroend 29 күн бұрын
I've watched videos from everyone you mentioned. As I mentioned to a comment on another channel, you have to find an instructor that fits your game/style. Not all do. A couple of the guys mentioned here don't really fit my game as a 71y.o. One of the better ones for us seniors is Todd Kolb, at US Golf TV.
@LowerMyHandicap-today
@LowerMyHandicap-today 29 күн бұрын
I like Todd Kolb as well. I'm getting up in age as well and you are right he has some good tips for us older folks. Definitely good stuff on US Golf TV.
@bygeorge4340
@bygeorge4340 29 күн бұрын
He’s teaching in the middle of a tournament round lol
@SAMeeru_
@SAMeeru_ Ай бұрын
Master class by the master
@johnhewlett2720
@johnhewlett2720 Ай бұрын
Using a 3 iron. Love it
@stevenburton7922
@stevenburton7922 Ай бұрын
For me, Jack's swing is both beautiful and savage. Man, did he rip at the ball...a very repeatable swing.
@jaydee5447
@jaydee5447 Ай бұрын
Fantastic swing. RIP Brotha!
@keviniwankow8294
@keviniwankow8294 Ай бұрын
He's a wristy delusional nincompoop if you ask me.
@jamesthain980
@jamesthain980 Ай бұрын
Crazy how much SNF's technique fell off a cliff; from one of the best bunker players in the world to a steep, choppy motion.
@wrenfan
@wrenfan Ай бұрын
Did "not" win the US Open in 1972! Nicklaus did. He won the "Open" again in 1972 (British). Just showed that in the info before saying he did.
@jellybaby9630
@jellybaby9630 Ай бұрын
1 Sam 2 Jack 3 Seve
@pigslefats
@pigslefats Ай бұрын
Sam Jack Ben Bobby
@TeddyCavachon
@TeddyCavachon Ай бұрын
The more precise terms are extension and flexion for the hinging / slapping aspect of wrist movement and radial vs ulnar deviation for the cocking up and down movement. Not mentioned but also critical is how the rotation of radius around ulnar in the forearms can pronate (palm down) or supinate (palm up) the hand. Also not mentioned except in the Lob shot is the critical importance of using the Vardon Style Grip correctly. Vardon gets credit for popularizing it but it was first used with great success by Scottish amateur champ Johnny Laidlay in the late 1890s in the era were golfers transitioned from using smooth ‘Feathery’ balls which had little in the way of directional control to the dimpled Gutta Percha balls which generated aerodynamic lift / drag and could be steered in the air and spun sideways after landing by using a swiping blow on the back of the ball that tilted the spin axis causing the same effect as when an airplane wing banks to turn. The reason the Laidlay/Vardon grip works ideally for controlling the face of the club is that it maxes out the travel of the wrist in several direction at impact very much like a swinging door hitting a doorstop IF USED CORRECTLY and allow the club to turn over 180° without being pulled up from the body. Much attention is paid to where the Vs created by thumb and forefinger point when setting up the grip but the underlying cause and effect for doing than is rarely explained. As mentioned in the LOB shot pay careful attention to how Pete overlaps the pad of his trail thumb over the lead thumb. That overlap high up on the lead thumb is what allows the two hands to act as a unit to rotate the club 180° back to front without the club force pulling it further away from the body as it turns over, a swing fault that occurs when the two hands get separated on the grip; e.g., when the hands are placed in a Vardon style grip but the pad of the trail thumb winds up lower over the thumbnail of the lead hand which will cause the butt end of the club to be pulled in an arc and slightly outward by the club forces. Bend elbows 90° and tuck them onto sides so there is no rotation at the shoulder joint then turn forearms only so palms are upward (supinated) and then rotate them as much as possible palms downward (pronation) and you’ll see that with the shoulder joint immobilized the range of motion between maxing out both directions is 180°. If you the hold arms out straight so shoulder joints are engaged you’ll observe it is possible to now pronate the palms of the hand way past 180°, another 90° so palms face forwards and back. By comparison the range of motion from neutral (hand in line with forearm) and maxed out hinging/slapping action extension and flexion is about 45° in each direction for most people and there is a similar 45° range of motion up / down in radial vs ulnar deviation (cock up / down). What the Vardon grip accomplishes, brilliantly, is maxing out extension / flexion and radial-ulnar deviation at key waypoints in the golf swing. In the backswing it is the trail wrist reaching maxed out extension which forces the trail arm to bend elbow down creating the ‘server lifting tray’ leverage with the trail arm that is necessary to keep the lead hand from pronating and swing the club so far inside the force bend the lead elbow instead of keeping it pulled straight and causing the cocking to occur instead at the wrist. What controls when the trail wrist reached maxed out extension is how much it overlaps the lead hand in the grip; i.e. the ‘strength’ of the trail hand. Why is it called ‘strength’? not because of muscular action but rather the incredible control the leverage of the trail wrist extension maxing out and forcing trail elbow down creates, why a sever can lift a tray food over their shoulder and hold it there effortlessly. But if the hands are separate too much in the grip or trail hand supinated (palm up) too much at address the maxing out of extension in the trail wrist and forced hinging of the elbow doesn’t occur at the ideal time. What increasing the pronation of the trail hand for a lob shot does on a cause and effect level is force the trail wrist to reach maxed out extension and force the elbow to bend sooner. A trail hand which is too ‘weak’ (supinated) at address will not cause extension to max out and force the elbow to hinge in consistent manner leading to lack of control of the club and a ‘whack a mole’ club head path up and back down to the ball. PROPER GRIP IS CRITICAL for ideal automatic biomechanics because it is what determines when the range of movement in the wrist maxes out in both directions. What the Vardon grip does without most realizing it is put the ulna and radius bones in the forearm in the middle of their range of motion at address. Try gripping the club this way: 1) Bend elbows 90° and tuck into sides (limiting supination / pronation to 180°). 2) Holding shaft vertically in the trail hand put the lead hand on the handle of the club with thumb and index finger held together 3) Holding club in lead hand overlap pad of the trail hand up over the base lead thumb also with thumb and index finger held together. You should find that with the club up in the air vertically with elbows bent is is very easy to get the trail hand positioned properly. 4) Hinge body at the hips into the address position and allow the arms to straighten, maintaining the grip established up in the air. What will happed as the arms straighten is a rotation of radius bone around the ulna which stretches the muscles as the forearms counter rotate. That counter rotation caused by the lowering of the club will increase the pressure of between the hands forcing them to rotate into a more pronated position with the force exerted by the trail hand controlling how much the lead hand can pronate. 5) DO NOT GROUND THE CLUB - let the ‘dead’ weight of the club pull the lead arm straight, then exert a slight downward pressure on the thumb with the pad of the trail thumb to push any ‘slack’ out of the arms. 6) Waggle the club down until both the wrists are in maxed out ulnar deviation (cocked down) and notice how the extension and supination of the hands will change in response and how firm the hands and arms feel. Repeat that ‘grip in the air’ procedure with thumbs not overlapped optimally at address (trail hand too supinated or hands separated too much) and you’ll understand how critical grip is to successfully executing any golf swing. Also something Pete didn’t mention is that his stance is open to the target by about 45° the same position they wind up in during a full swing which is the reason there isn’t any hip rotation in the backswing and downswing. You need to ‘pre clear’ the lead hip in partial shots.
@yoda4ce
@yoda4ce Ай бұрын
And yet you still have a 28 handicap