Why You Need This: In this video, you'll learn how to have a long, flowing golf swing just like top pros...
...such as Davis Love III, Ben Hogan, and Adam Scott.
You discover 3 tips to lengthen up your swing and get that free-flowing feel...
And gain more distance.
Let's get started!
There 3 keys to a free-flowing swing.
Key #1...
You need a big arc in the backswing and also as you start the downswing.
From a face on view, imagine your swing is on a hula hoop.
Your hands travel on this circle in the backswing...
And your hands keep on this circle at the beginning of your downswing.
Key #2...
In your follow through, allow your arms to finish nice and high.
Key #3...
Let your right arm extend fully in the follow through.
Summary...
Watch this video to see these 3 keys in action.
These are great tips for how to have a long, flowing golf swing...
and you'll be shocked on how much distance you'll gain!
Golf Pros Featured:
Instructors Featured: Clay Ballard
Video Duration: 4:11
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Video Transcription:
Hi guys. We all want that flowing swing. Think about a David Love III, a Ben Hogan, Adam Scott, how do they get these good, free-flowing, long, smooth swings that create those huge amounts of club head speed.
Well I’ve got three tips for you guys that’s really going to help you lengthen up your swing, to get that free-flowing feel, plus you’re doing to get distance with it. Let’s go ahead and get started.
All right, so there’s three keys to a really free-flowing swing. Number one, we have to create a big arc on the way back with our hands and on the way down as we start down we’ve got to create a big arc there.
If you can imagine the swing as like a hula-hoop, imagine what my hands are moving as they’re going throughout the swing. I want them to be traveling back on this hula-hoop. As they start down they’re working out away from your body from this hula-hoop also as we build some lag.
Let me show you how this would work. On the takeaway, we’re going to have a nice, wide takeaway. Not very much wrist set at all. Then as we go to the top of the swing, that’s the top of our hula-hoop.
As we start to work down our hands are actually working out this direction as we start down. We want them to stay really wide, and if you stay soft with the hands, as you start to go wider that’s actually going to increase your lag.
So as I put some pressure going this way, that club naturally wants to lay down and sharpen out that angle of lag.
I have a great video on this talking about how you can almost feel like if your club was a bow and arrow, it was an arrow that’s on your bag, you’re going to feel like you’re pulling it out of the sheath to get those arms going wide and to increase your lag.
That’s going to look something like this. So wide takeaway, really wide arms as you’re increasing lag and then as you’re coming on through. That’s the first key. Keep that wide arc in the hands.
Go ahead and do some reps, really practicing on that wide takeaway. Feel like your arms are stretching away from your body, almost like you’re letting the momentum of the club head pull your arms away from your body.
As you start down, imagine that you’re trying to get your arms as wide as you can go this way away from your chest as you start that downswing as you’re building some lag.
Step number two, this is where a lot of people go wrong. Do you make some practice swings in your house? I did this a lot growing up, swing with an iron inside the house.
You’ve got those eight-foot ceilings, you don’t want to put a hole in the ceiling because you know your mom is going to be super mad if you do that.
You grow up making these shorter swings where in the follow through, you kind of do one of these motions. You let the wrist fold back up so that the club head stays nice and low and doesn’t bust through the ceiling.
Well if we want to have that long, free-flowing swing, just take a look at Ben Hogan, or Adam Scott, they’re going to let those arms fly away from their body.
The body’s going to keep on rotating on through, and as their club is perpendicular to the ground this way, it would be busting through a nine-foot ceiling with a driver.
So I really want to have those arms very long as I’m coming on through, as my club’s perpendicular to the ground, I want my hands to be above my head.
So I’m staying in my posture, and letting my hands reach up above my head. That’s the second key. That’s really going to help you to get those long arms coming through there.
You’re really going to feel like you’re getting that extension, and getting the ball to stick to the face for a long way through the contact zone.
Now third, we want to let our right arm really extend on through as this is happening. This is going to tie right in with that.
So as I’m swinging through the shot, I want to feel like my right arm really extends up and my right shoulder touches my chin as I’m coming all the way on through.
I can almost imagine my arms being like a rubber band, and as they’re being pulled down the fairway getting longer, and longer, that’s going to get me that nice, free-flowing swing. My right shoulder is going to touch my chin, just barely, as I rotate all the way on through and I’m facing to the target.
So it looks something like this. There’s that nice, free-flowing, long swing. Now let’s put it to the test. I’ve got my FlightScope out, let me turn it on. I’ll hit a shot, we’ll see what kind of speed this long, free-flowing swing can create.
All right, not too bad. Right down the left side of the fairway. See what kind of numbers the FlightScope picked up here. 115.9 club head speed, 319 total distance, so hit that one pretty solid.
You guys get that long, flowing swing. Work on those key checkpoints, you’re going to be the best driver in your foursome.