Discover new ways to elevate your game with the updated DGCourseReview app!
It's entirely free and enhanced with features shaped by user feedback to ensure your best experience on the course. (App Store or Google Play)
I could be wrong, but I think you want to pivot on your toe, not your heel. If you're on your heel, your weight is back. Pivoting on your toe will give you a better weight transfer and get your body moving forward.
OP: work on pulling straight through a bit. Your arm was bent on your reach-back, and it swung out instead up through. 450' is still fun, hill or no!
This is where we differ I guess. I'm not talking about run-up speed, but short light quick feet(happy feet) is better than long flatfooted footwork that is slow and stopping momentum/fluidity/balance. You can't use your hips with a long plant and pushing off the rear heel like that.Hold on SW, I think you're jumping the gun here. Everything you posted is correct, but he's just not there yet.
SW is right you don't get a whole ton of momentum or speed in your form, but that's something you should work slowly up to. What would be tragic is if you take a good foundation (which I think you have) and wreck it by trying to all of the sudden upping the quickness.
This is where we differ I guess. I'm not talking about run-up speed, but short light quick feet(happy feet) is better than long flatfooted footwork that is slow and stopping momentum/fluidity/balance. You can't use your hips with a long plant and pushing off the rear heel like that.
Again thank you guys for all the input. Ive watched that video alot but obviously needed your guys outside opinion to tell me my flaws im going to work on all thats been discussed. I know it will be a slow road but atleast with all your input ill improve. I watched a bunch of videos at the beginning of last summer and they helped but i needed people like you to actually pinpoint the flaws that i couldnt see. so thank you again. headin out thursday, prolly gonna post a putting vid so you can rail me on that too.
I'm not talking about accuracy here, as that is something will eventually come with practice and time, so why try to perfect accuracy at a lower distance potential. I'm just talking from a pure power perspective like Marty Peters here:I'm just saying it's a pretty advanced technique that can really screw up timing and accuracy.