3 - Downswing difficulties:-
The classic swing has many planes, all different, involving
the rotation of the several parts of the body and the club. The sketch below shows an expert golfer having just
struck the ball with a driver:-

There are 6 principal ellipses in the golf swing –
feet; knees; hips; wrists; arms; and shoulders – that have to be on the right plane, unique to each and in proper
sequence. These will vary for each and every player, and must be individually tailored.
The torques on the club can be considered as five, including
one from gravity acting on it. The torques on the arms are generally five as well including a shift towards the
target while rotating the body.
These complex motions are extremely difficult to do for all
but the talented few. Even they require constant practice to hold their swings together. As we know, even top Tour
players lose their swings suddenly and have great difficulty correcting the problem.
Symple Swing is essentially a single axis swing that
eliminates these complications, as can be seen in the sketch below with the player using a five
iron.

By establishing a plane to the top during the backswing
the player then swings by rotating his upper body on the same plane to impact with the ball. The hands
automatically uncock into a position of a powerful “late” release, as can be seen in the hand position above just
after striking the ball.
The right calf automatically thrusts forward, adding
horizontal thrust and added mass to the shot. The combination of movements turns the front hip
slightly out of the way, while the left leg also forms a solid post against which the right side is fired with
power. Any troublesome lunge is eliminated.
The only variations, from player to player, will be in ball
position – distance from the body and location along the target line in the stance. Once the basic setup and
takeaway are learned, these can be readily determined.
Strictly speaking, the wrists do form a
second axis. However, the Symple Swing unique grip and front arm setup forces the wrists to be in the same plane of
rotation while cocking in the backswing; and to release along the same line during uncocking in the
downswing.
4 – Accuracy
Accuracy is vital to good scoring. If we take a case of a
clubhead at a small 3 degree opened or closed position at impact ( which is barely noticeable to the eye ) we can
see the offline spray is considerable:-

On a shot traveling 150 yards :-
-
A 3 deg. closed face pulls the ball to the left of target by 24
feet.
-
A 3 deg. open face pushes the ball to the right by 24
feet.
-
A pulled hook sends the ball much farther off target and may
propel the ball too far as well.
-
A slice sends the ball much farther off target and will probably
come up short as well.
On a shot traveling 250 yards :-
-
A 3 deg. closed face pulls the ball to the left fo target by 40
feet.
-
A 3 deg. open face pushes the ball to the right by 40
feet.
-
A pulled hook sends the ball much farther to the left, mostly
likely in the rough, or worse.
-
A slice sends the ball much farther to the right and will
definitely be short, probably in the rough, or worse.
Not shown is
the pulled slice. This may drop somewhere near the target line but will certainly come up short.
During a typical round, the average player
often strikes the ball with more than a 3 degree face angle error. The results are
proportionately much worse.
The unique grip (PowerThumb) and left arm setup solves this
problem. The clubhead remains square to the ball from setup through the backswing and finally through the
downswing. At no time is it off line. The downswing orientation of the club face is depicted
below:-
sket ch #5
(The drawing has a slight perspective error, deliberately
done to show the square face position at all stages more readily).
Failure to hit fairways, and greens in regulation, are the
most common faults of the average player. Straight shots down the target line will lower the score faster than any
other improvement he can make. Even if the player cannot reach the very long holes in regulation, in spite of the
added distance he will get from Symple Swing, he can expect very accurate pitches and chips that give him a
reasonable putt for PAR.
Shots with open or closed faces are generally glancing blows
as well and impart less energy to the ball. This produces shots shorter than he should get from the energy he is
using while swinging. Square contact increases distance with no additional effort.
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