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25 Comments

  1. Hey Andy, its probably a lot harder, but is it the same for the driver?
    Thanks!?

  2. Lag in the golfswing is the load in the shaft, is all about storing the
    potential and not necessary to be visible by our naked eyes. As long as
    you can drag the shaft forward and the mass of the clubhead is lagging
    behind.. that’s lag. Lag is not a shape of holding on to your wrist and
    arm. In TGM, one of the imperative is CLUBHEAD LAG pressure, and not about
    holding on to your wrist and arm.
    Kenny PGA GSEM?

  3. what a difference this makes to your game when done correctly!! Keeping
    this in the swing consistently is hardto maintain although you do know when
    you have done it right!!?

  4. Please comment on this idea from a friend: “That’s ok if one has a large
    thumb yield.Most big hitters can bend their left thumb back to an acute
    angle in relation to their left forearm.”

  5. Great video! If you have the correct lag you also have the correct grip
    which is a must. I like the way you broke the video down from short shots
    to a full swing. Keep up the great value.

  6. Hey Andy I watched this clip and went to the range and was crushing my
    irons with awesome feel of compression. I loved it! I went to the driver
    and hitting of the tee I started to struggle, ball started to fade on me.
    Off the grass with irons I had instant feedback with the divot being ahead
    of the ball flying beautifully with a slight draw. Any tips with the
    driver? Its the hardest club for me to hit right now. Lots of inconsistency
    with too many penalty strokes ruining my round Thanks

  7. You can’t realease too early if you are swinging correct. That is
    especially true with the driver.

  8. Continuing my post, Sam Snead was belting a balatta ball with a persimmon
    club 350 yards on a regular basis, and he hit it 410 on one occasion.

  9. Great drill which really works. Good video and well explained by the pro.
    BTW the pro must have nerves of steel – if i was him i would have expected
    to get balls thump me on the back of the head by those 4 guys in driving
    range with awful swings; they should have been watching the pro instead of
    hitting balls!

  10. another cracking video mate. so many people try to explain this badly, this
    is the first time I’ve understood it. nice one

  11. I have a question about shaft plane. At the top of my swing the plane of my
    left arm and club is not paralell to the shaft plane at address. It is much
    flatter. What type of problems would this cause and how do I fix it? Is it
    my posture at address or shoulders rotation too level? I see all the good
    players have these planes paralell. Than ks!

  12. I think perhaps the term lag has been confused with the “conscious delay of
    the wrists”, mainly because of video playback. What the person in this
    video is talking about is delaying the wrist action, please could you
    explain to me how you can do this when swinging the club at 100mph? Also,
    the modern aggressive swing is why so many players have injuries these
    days. Also if delaying the wrist release increases power, why is it that
    Rory Mcilroy can only hit the ball 310 yards?

  13. Hi, thanks for your comment. It is slightly different with your driver as
    we don’t create as much shaft lean at impact and we aren’t trying the ball
    the turf. Although we still want to create lag I wouldn’t actually think
    about it with your driver as it can lead to directional issues. I would
    definitely work more on direction with the driver which will be down to
    swing plane or face position.

  14. A simple video showing how the weight shift to the left makes room for the
    “magic move” (right elbow back to right side) to be made, the parallel to
    the ground delivery position to be attained, the hands to come back level
    to the ball prior to the natural unleashing of the conserved lag. Very nice
    indeed.

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