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Originally Posted by EC
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Yoda,
Is the bending of the left wrist in the TGM post (above) the same undesireable bending referenced in your's and Brian's recent posts?
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No, Eddie. The referenced Bending would take place
after the Hinge Action but
before the Finish Swivel (back to the Plane) is completed. Admittedly, these are split-second differentiations, but they are necessary for Precision Golf. Why? Because the Ball knows.
However, programming correctly in this area requires that you know
exactly what you are trying to achieve and
how it looks. There is a gross misconception here -- striving to retain a visually Flat Left Wrist when the Left Wrist Re-Cocks On Plane during the Finish -- that really hurts a lot of players.
Remember, the Left Wristcock is a Vertical Motion, even when executed on an Inclined Plane. This is the same Motion the Left Wrist makes when hammering a nail, and the Cocked Left Wrist should look identical in both cases. And any degree of Left Wrist
Turn when the Grip is taken (in Impact Fix) must be retained as Left Wrist
Bend when the Wrist is Cocked. This is true
wherever the Cocking takes place -- during the Backstroke Cocking or during the Finish Re-Cocking. In other words, the key thing is that the Left Arm and Club remain in the same Vertical Plane, the Plane of the Left Wristcock Motion, i.e., the Plane of the Left Arm Flying Wedge. Only in this manner can the Left Arm and Clubshaft remain In Line and the Stroke have true
Rhythm (6-B-3-0).
In this circumstance, then, attempting to maintain a visually Flat Left Wrist during the Re-Cocking will actually result in an
Arched Left Wrist. This
Horizontal Grip Motion (4-0) puts the Clubshaft out of the Vertical Plane of the Left Arm and thereby disrupts the Left Arm Flying Wedge. In other words,
you are trying to make the Club do something is simply does not want to do.
And that's not a good thing.