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Never Keep Your Head Still In The BackswingBy Paul Wilson
I still remember years ago when I first started to play golf, the tip you heard the most was "keep your head still". My father used to say it to me at least 50 times a round. He thought he was doing me a favor, when really, he should have been telling me to do the exact opposite. He should have been saying "move your head a little on the way back". |
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Why move your head as you take the club back? You want to move your head because in order to swing in a circular motion you need an axis to swing around. An axis has a top and a bottom. When you set up to the golf ball, you have 1 top to an axis (your head) and 2 bottoms (your legs and feet) to an axis. This means that on the way back your head should be moving 3 - 5 inches to the right in order to create your first axis to swing around. Your head will stay there as you come down and fall even further back through impact. Then, after the ball has been hit, your head will move forward over top of the left leg to create a second axis. This second axis will allow you to complete the circular rotation in your golf swing allowing you to finish your swing. So what you have is a floating top to an axis. Your head floats back and forth to create 2 axis when you swing. This allows you to swing in a circular motion. It's not a perfect circle though. It's a slight oval. Because your swing is a slight oval, you will never hit the ball 100% perfect.
The only time you would keep your head still is if you had one leg. If you had one leg, you would have 1 top and 1 bottom to an axis. This means that if you moved your head you would destroy this axis. So maybe we should all be playing standing on one leg and keeping our head still? Unfortunately, this will never work because you will not generate enough power and you will probably fall over. Most people have enough trouble keeping their balance with 2 legs never mind 1 so it's best that you keep both legs on the ground and learn to move your head.
Continued below ...
Most people I
teach try to move their head back when I tell them to but they have a
hard time actually doing it because it feels so uncomfortable for them
to move their head. To get the proper feeling, you must feel like your
head is moving about 1 foot to the right. If you feel like your head is
moving 1 foot to the right on the way back, it will actually only move a
few inches.
Try swinging regularly towards a mirror. As you watch
yourself swing, you can clearly see if your head is moving back 3-5
inches. As your head moves back, feel how your weight loads into the
right leg. This is the tell tale sign that you have created your first
axis in the backswing. If you don't have a loaded, powerful feeling in
your right leg, you will have to move your head a little more as you go
back. If you are wearing a hat when you play golf just take your
backswing and look to see if the brim of the hat is level to the ground
not tilted to the left. If the brim of the hat is level to the ground
at the top of your backswing your head will have moved the proper
amount. As a final check just ask a friend to watch your head to see if
it moves back a few inches or use a video camera to see for yourself.
If your head is too still then constantly remind yourself to move it
back or have someone constantly remind you to "move your head". |
Golf Tips
Here you'll find some very informative free golf tips based on my Swing Machine Golf instruction technique.
2. Move Your Head in Your Backswing
3. The Most Important Lesson in Golf
4. How to Practice Your Golf Swing
6. Speed Kills Your Golf Swing
7. Taking Your Game to the Next Level
9. Is Your Swing as Good as You Think?
11. Play the Best Golf of Your Life!
13. The Pros Make It Look So Simple!
15. How to Practice in the Winter
16. Tension In Your Golf Swing?
17. What Is the Perfect Swing?
18. End of the Season - A New Plan
19. The Worst Swing Flaws In Golf
20. Making the Right Choices in Golf
21. Divot Details
23. Stop Topping
24. Is Learning the Golf Swing So Tough?
25. How to Build a Consistent Swing |
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As you move your head back, beware that it may cause you to hit behind the ball a little. This is a good sign at first. It's telling you that you are moving your head back but you have too much weight on your right foot at impact. To remedy hitting behind the ball (fat shots), all you have to do is feel a little more weight shift off of your right foot through impact. If you do, you will hit the ball perfectly and with much more power than you are used to.
Paul Wilson
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