Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Q&A Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 8,188 Authors
71,873 Quality Articles
& 5,204 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Linda DeWitt (1,997)
Edward Rhymes (7,667)
Brianna Popsickle (2,495)
Teresa Ortiz (10,864)
Julian Price (13,927)
Stephany Springer (41,578)
Abigail Richards (9,835)
E. Raymond Rock (3,120)
Terry Mitchell (5,410)
Mark Parsec (16,584)
Nenita Wells (1,718)
Ira Coffin (12,151)
Krystal Kuehn (1,183)
Michael Ramzy (705)

View All Featured Authors
Most Recent
Acer Hybrid Irons - Easiest Hybrids to Play

History of the Golf Ball

Trust your Unconscious Golf Mind to Align Your Club for a Better Pre-Shot Routine

Speed Up your Pre-Shot Routine Transition for Better Golf Psychology

Adjust Your Golf Swing According To The Bunker Sand's Texture

Choosing the Right Golf Bag

The Golf Psychology of Going on a Pre-Shot Routine Journey with your Right and Left Brain

Mental Foursomes Practice with Golf Hypnosis for Better Golf in your Mind's Eye

Acer Golf Drivers - Meet the Latest Generation

Acer Irons - Golf Digest's Best Value Irons in 2009

Home » Categories » Sports » Golf » The 16 Motors of the Golf Swing: Part 2 - Hitting Power » Printer Friendly

The 16 Motors of the Golf Swing: Part 2 - Hitting Power

Rated 3.5 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by John Matherly
Submitted Wednesday, January 25, 2006
John Matherly (539)
The perfect golf swing
Log in to become a member of John Matherly's Fan Club!


We all want more power and more distance in our golf swing. And very fortunately, there are several options for creating power. If one does not feel good or suit your body type, there are still many more that can be used.

This report is about hitting.

Hitting, as contrasted to swinging, is when the player accelerates the clubhead by PUSHING ON THE SIDE OF THE GOLF CLUB. Technically, this is called a “radial acceleration" of the club meaning the right elbow and right wrist are pressing against the side of the club (radius) to achieve club head speed. This is hitting like with a hockey stick or tennis racket.

In hitting, the right elbow, right wrist, and right shoulder all play very critical roles.

The right elbow - How is power created? How is it used? When the right elbow is bent, energy is stored. This is the potential energy to open the elbow and move the forearm forward. This is the same action as a piston cylinder on an old steam locomotive or the piston action in a car engine. It is the action of a hockey player standing still on the ice and shooting the puck. It is a hard forward push on the club coming from the right elbow.

(As an aside, this is also probably why we take a stand to the ball with our left shoulder to the target. This stand allows us to use our dominant right arm and right elbow with the best angle to hit the ball, like in tennis with the forehand swing.)

The right wrist - The right wrist keeps pushing on the club during the milliseconds while the clubface is compressing and deforming the golf ball. The right wrist helps to resist the slowing down of the clubhead during impact. To keep it short, by resisting the clubhead tendency to slow down throught the hitting zone, a player can gain up to 30% more clubhead speed WITH THE SAME INITIAL CONDITIONS. So this is not trivial. Also, to be clear, this is NOT flipping the right wrist at impact. It is a passive but strong resistance to the slowing down of the club.

(Resistance to deceleration of the clubhead through impact will be discussed in more detail in the report - Swinging from your feet.)

Aha!!!!

The right shoulder - We know that better players rotate the right shoulder very nicely down the plane and down the target line. Yes, that has been said and observed thousands of times.

But WHY?

The right shoulder performs two functions - one is putting body mass behind the piston movement of the right elbow. So connecting the body weight into the right elbow with put enormous more momentum into the contact with the ball and transfer more energy to the ball. It is like being hit by a bicycle or a 10-ton truck both moving at the same speed. Which is going to do more damage and transfer more energy?

Obviously, the 10-ton truck. So get your body weight better connected and behind the right elbow for more power. OK - that is easy to understand. But the second function of the right shoulder is more subtile. Imagine a dog leash. The dog is free to move for a certain distance. But when is gets to the end of the leash, it is suddenly stopped. The rigth shoulder is similar. IF the right shoulder moves down the swing plane and down the target line, the right elbow can stay bent with all of its power for a very late hit.

That is the dog leash is still loose enough to allow the right elbow to explode into the ball. However, if the right shoulder turns on a plane flatter than the swing plane, the right elbow will start opening up - that is loosing power - before it is even near the ball. The right elbow is “leaking power" because the unconscious minds says “You must hit the ball!" and the only way to hit the ball with a shoulder rotating more flat that the swing plane is by opening up the right elbow. The right elbow cannot explode into the ball because it is already opened up and can move only a short distance before it is at the “end of it’s leash." Don’t believe what I am writing here.

Try it yourself.

Do it now - even without a club in your hand. Am I right or not? And now you know why rotating the right shoulder down the swing plane allows a golfer to keep the power stored in the right elbow until the last possible second before impact.

About the author:

Article written by John Matherly. This is the first part of a 16 part series. If you want to be sure to get access to all 16 reports, please register your email address at http://www.swingofchampions.com/ - Receive a FREE Joke Ebook!



tweet this!



Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of John Matherly's Fan Club!

No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

This Article has been viewed 6,549 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on 1/25/2006 10:54:38 AM.
View other articles written by John Matherly (539)


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
5 Easy Steps To The Correct Golf Grip

Choosing the Right Golf Balls

How to Cure a Golf Hook

Beginners Guide to Buying a Set of Golf Clubs

Learning The Correct Golf Swing Sequence

The 16 Motors of the Golf Swing: Part 2 - Hitting Power

Golf Grips | The Wrong Size Can Affect Your Swing and Cause a Slice or Hook

Learn How To Do A Proper Golf Ball Comparison

The Cure for a Fat Shot

Match Golf Ball Compression to your Swing and Hit the Ball Further!

Viewed from Cache. Load Time: 0.016.

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Questions & Answers  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company