This is one of the best videos I’ve seen on swinging a golf club. This is up there with the Malaskas videos on swinging. Everything makes perfect sense, specially the hip turning right up to the alignment stick. Wow, what a difference in feel, distance and control. Everything goes straight and far. Great job and btw, the best swing I’ve seen coming from you by miles. 👍🏼
@BEBETTERGOLF Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@DavidSkok13 жыл бұрын
This was really great.Particularly the part about the energy being created in the transition and first part of the downswing. That's a revelation.
@brendan93404 жыл бұрын
16:05 smoothest swing ive ever seen you do
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
Thx
@Soul_Freezer4 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I was thinking. Awesome rhythm...
@theohuioiesin65194 жыл бұрын
😎
@jstinnett234 жыл бұрын
Wish I would’ve paid attention to this video sooner. I think I finally just leaned how to transfer energy to the club head after 5 years of yanking the handle around. Freakin brilliant
@Eric-zk2hu4 жыл бұрын
In another video Martin said that the swing is really horizontal but with your body tilted. when you have this swing thought you can swing the rope better. So its kind of impossible to swing totally vertical but trying to swing vertically then switching to horizontal or combining the two is what throws the club off plane and makes you have to make compensations.
@BEBETTERGOLF Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@jack-hq7gr3 жыл бұрын
“You are never going to get better,”,perhaps the golf quote of the ages? Swinging or mastering all the torques and forces!
@kevinnurmi4084 жыл бұрын
The swing you make at 23:17 is the best swing I have ever seen you make. If this can be attributed to your use of this training aid, then, to my eye, it has smoothed out your tempo by getting you to take the club away in one piece, rather than immediately getting your hands active. That in turn allows you better rhythm and sequencing.
@frankmacdonell96663 жыл бұрын
I've been a subscriber for over a year. This is the first time I have seen a substantial change in your swing. Dan Martin is a great teacher. Take a look at Zen golf on KZbin.
@Ericksonbellgolf4 жыл бұрын
I made a homemade version and tried it. Right away added 5 mph club head speed with less effort. Then I made a homemade version that was the length of a driver where the grip end has 18 inches of shaft and then the rope and bag. Feels much more like a driver and has the same swing plane but still reveals if there is any hand action in the swing. I can send a video if your'e interested. I am also a fan of homemade training aids
@andystafford44633 жыл бұрын
Hi there so am I, what is the approx weight of the padded tube on the end please ?
@Ericksonbellgolf3 жыл бұрын
@@andystafford4463 I made it about 200 grams so overall it is like a driver in length and feel
@andystafford44633 жыл бұрын
@@Ericksonbellgolf thank you, I'm making one tommorow !!
@whbjHarley683 ай бұрын
@@EricksonbellgolfWhat did you use for the weighted part?
@TeddyCavachon3 жыл бұрын
There was trick shot artist in the 1930s to 1980s who called himself “Count Yogi’ One of his tricks was hitting perfect golf shots with a club consisting of grip and head connected with a linked chain. Not only did he get the kinetic sequence perfect he also kept the club face aligned perfectly at impact by starting the backswing with the dragging action which commonly used back in the early 1900s to counteract how the club head mass attached at the heel would twist hickory shafts like a swinging gate open in the backswing then slamming shut when lag released before impact. Count Yogi realized substituting the chain but keeping taut with momentum and seamless transition at the top to the opposite direction with no slack in the chain would keep the toe and face aligned with the swing plane predictably. George Peper the former editor of Golf Digest featured him as the last chapter in his great book ‘Th e Secret of Golf’ titling the chapter about him ‘The World’s Greatest Golfer You’ve Never Heard Of” I read about ten years ago. There are videos of him here on KZbin. After reading the book I remembered seeing him on TV as a kid in the 1960s swinging the chain club. I decided to try to mimic and perfect his unorthodox swing style using regular clubs keeping the chain club concepts in mind and discovered the things you teach .
@nickbaker11892 жыл бұрын
I may buy the Pro training aid. I use a rope similar to Dr. Kwon and love the feel.
@bernardsamson23653 жыл бұрын
Watch particular what happens around 8:45 in the video as Dan tries to get Brendon not to pull the handle down but to move his hands “outward” from the top to create that “orbit” Dan is talking about. This outward movement of the hands is exactly as described by Ben Hogan as how he initiates his downswing: “I feel like I’m taking an arrow out of a quiver.” So, imagine you have a quiver of arrows across your back like Robin Hood and you reach up with your right hand for an arrow. You wouldn’t pull straight down because the arrow wouldn’t come out, it would get hung up. You’d pull up and outward (and backward along the target line) so the arrow would clear the quiver. Another way to think of it: if Brendon’s head is at 12 o’clock, he moves hands NOT toward 6 or 7 o’clock as he begins his downswing but toward 11 o’clock. That’s the “outward” Dan is talking about and demonstrates. HEY: I just watched a little further into the video and sure enough(!) Brendon quotes Mike Malaska as using the arrow out of the quiver metaphor! Well, Malaska didn’t originate that: it was Hogan.
@grahamjones73714 жыл бұрын
Ive got something like this in my garage! Its a yard of rope with some sponge insulation on the end (thats for beginners to stop wacking themselves with the rope )I used to use it a lot, maybe thats why Im a low hcp! must dig it out again.
@swardmusic4 жыл бұрын
I made simmilar with a small tubular shaped bag stuffed with tshirts and a stretchy workout band instead of rope! Very interesting and fun too
@patg42464 жыл бұрын
Mike Malaska's club handle down, club face out. Golden! Kinda like...when Malaska says opposing forces...off setting forces.
@x40684 жыл бұрын
exaclty !
@brendan93404 жыл бұрын
Can you link this
@pedrooliveros30854 жыл бұрын
Rotational, perpendicular, centrifugal angular acceleration swing not hit. I have been trying to imagine my arms and shaft are ropes and finding its consistent path where i put the ball has been my goal this last month. Thanks for clarifying these. At 10:24, the butt of the handle is pointing 45 degrees at back of the target line, when the lead forearm is parallel to the ground, then to the ball before sweeping the rope, swinging off the fulcrum/butt.
@dogloverjb68734 жыл бұрын
I love watching this instruction of Dan. I ordered his "Pro" .
@jeffepperson994 жыл бұрын
Good video! I found it interesting when you swing this training aid it reminded me of Steve Pratt, (Mike Austin)throw from the top, which some say don’t do that, when in fact that’s what this training aid is teaching you to do, that motion is so clear in the swinging of this aid, it change my hole golf swing for the best it’s ever been! To feel this is to swinging the club in the top of you backswing allow the wait of club pressure your left thumb and you should feel that pressure to impact if you are using the the body and arm to turn through, as soon as you force it with you hand you lose that feel, that just me I’m no pro, I would love to have one of this type of training aid! Thanks stay well!
@jeffepperson994 жыл бұрын
Yes! Pull the arrow, but without a good shift and pivot it’s casting I think, at the time I start back down to plant left heel I think it feels like pulling an arrow at the top but also up and back because my right palm is facing the sky as it turns clockwise unhinging as I get into the skip the stone feel (lateral bend) and then my right palm has the feeling of what I call slap your girlfriends bottom😃Passed impact area, accumulative speed, All generated from a good rotation of shoulders and relaxed arms. Not forcing anything! I’m going on 59 my average swing speeds on a swing caddy is 105mph so something’s working for me! And I hit it straight! I also think the weight of the club adds to my feel at the top because you don’t feel that with this training aid with it you don’t feel anything tension till after the rotation has started some. I hope that explains what I feel! 😃
@johngreenhalgh44284 жыл бұрын
Seems like 'wide' and 'ride' - a more circular motion from the top. I think a lot of the Korean lady pros use this kind of action - they are not as strong as the men - but it really works for them. A good swing will look smooth and effortless.
@spmerrell634 жыл бұрын
This morning I went out to practice this “pull the arrow out of the quiver” feel. With a good turn and proper position at the top, this swing thought is awesome. Great video!
@SameBasicRiff4 жыл бұрын
I didn't get that part :/ ?? The quiver is what holds the arrow. "knocked" is the term for an arrow on the bow string. Pull the arrow out of its holder? My bow has a side mounted quiver so in golf terms that would be weird....
@michaelsliwinski80444 жыл бұрын
Interesting... I would like to understand how this swinging versus leverage concept relates to lag tension and DST Compressor. Seems it could be at odds with the straight rope/shaft concept. I get the high MOI with "the Pro" but does it reduce lag tension and shaft lean? Also how golf club shaft stiffness (regular/stiff/X-stiff) relates in all this. Thanks once again for the leading edge concepts and aids!
@spencertaylor63303 жыл бұрын
Most things you try to do during your swing mess it up. We watch the still pictures of top tour pros and go about trying to achieve those positions in the wrong way. Great teacher
@nicostrik87884 жыл бұрын
I am very content with this video; it explains clearly a complete different approach that works for me. Last Sunday I had a drive of 267 m where I used to hit it 200 m. Thank you for this paradigm switch!
@dry5094 жыл бұрын
Please advise the difference between this and the orange whip? Are they similar?
@mikeobrien15594 жыл бұрын
Brendon, you guys just got to the bottom of everything I've been struggling with since I took up the game again, plus, you also confirmed what I wondered might be a possible solution. Thanks for this in particular and your work in general.
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
Thanks to you for subscribing
@vaughnwoodruff36094 жыл бұрын
I love swing concepts but I've seen these ideas packaged in other iterations before. I would have no chance bringing this feel to the golf course.
@DLudGolf4 жыл бұрын
the "bad" move that he shows is the "good" feeling Malaska teaches on standing the club up, no wonder golfers are messed up.
@louispounds74864 жыл бұрын
So are you saying as you begin the downswing you turn as hard or as fast as you want for the most power but only make about a quarter turn or less and then stop turning and the momentum carries you through impact into the finish?
@D-Mack82914 жыл бұрын
I think the "Tension" Dan refers too is the same tension when throwing a ball. The body begins to uncoil while the hand is still going back. Same for the golf swing. The downswing uncoiling starts while the club head is still going to the top. I would love to ask Dan if he agrees.
@555Trout4 жыл бұрын
There is a long history of such training aids. I think of the great teacher Ernst Jones and his pen knife on a hankercheif. I used a club with a floppy shaft to great effect with my students . Also the famous jointed Medicus. These ideas are ancient and useful. Probably more so for most of golf's history of floppy hickory shafts. This swing method is very good and quite effortless for most golfers though it is limited in speed production. And it is not what great modern players are doing. I say that with certainty. Here's why: This method requires significant deceleration to get the release to occur. As we saw with you, when you didn't decel your pivot and arms the tool didn't work properly. As there were no compelling physics for it to release. The wrist angle is going to release in a golf swing one of or a combination of three ways. Manual, the worst, ie flipping. Deceleration of the above levers. Or Hub path shift, ie snapping a towel. The great player throws(not casts) the clubhead from the top with his right hand and then stays ahead of it with his pivot then uses a dramatic hub path shift to cause the release.(ie Mike Austin) And that is not what this tool teaches. This tool teaches a pivot stall decel to release the club. Though I will say again, the method this teaches is quite good for almost all casual golfers. As the superior method of the modern great golfer is rather athletic and immense forces come into play. This method there are minimal forces in play and they are quite manageable for most average people. And effortless sufficient distance can be had . I write this long missive because I suspect there are some ambitious players on this channel. There is a tool I like for teaching the superior throw out, It's a ball on a golf shaft, and the proper motion gets the ball to move from the grip to the end of the shaft very early from the top. It's a clockwise rotation of the firearm, a throw. Then a good pivot pressures it and the hub path shift(ambitious golfers will research this) releases it. That magical double pump you see in say Rory. Rory would hit it 75 yards less if he was a true swinger, as this teaches. So make your call which way you want to go, but let's not mix apples and oranges. This young pro was quite an excellent teacher I might add . I wanted to add that Mike Dunaway is the ideal example of what I speak of here. Quite possibly the best driver of a golf ball in history and just a phenomenol motion. For those of you interested. We just don't see this basic swinging action taught here in top golf now. In the past though it was the dominant method. And as I said, still the best option for casual golfers . Steel shafts changed things in top golf though.
@Jonny4fingers4 жыл бұрын
Great post. I stopped watching the video as it’s teaching a cast and coast through impact. It’s not what modern golfers are doing.
@555Trout4 жыл бұрын
@@Jonny4fingers 👍
@marcussheldon92204 жыл бұрын
Thank you what is it with all these coaches on line? I wasted 4 years learning this game and I have learned more in 3 months studying Mike Austin’s methods then anyone else. If you want to be the best you have to follow the best. God bless you MA fans.🏌️👏
@rangetime58474 жыл бұрын
Hey Trout - You nailed it-
@penguingolf28054 жыл бұрын
Great post 555trout! The hub shift, I.e. snapping a towel is not manual? Thanks to or because of Brendon, my last 4-5 years have been hell. My PGA approved swing went through a complete overhaul listening to Monte, Tony and Mike M and finally adopting the Mike Austin method. 3 years I couldn’t break 80 (old swing will haunt you at the worst possible times) but for the past several months, my MA swing has finally become MY swing. Left hand like flinging a frisbee, throwing with the right, Dunaway “I could break your hand” backhand action. I just think of a long light sledgehammer pounding a spike with one blow (Melhorn.) Ernest’s pocketknife and the “Pro” I’m sure help a lot of people feel a fundamental objective in the golf swing. Along with Ernest Jones, Hogan, Jacobs, Nicklaus, and Dante are foremost books on my shelf. Never did agree with “no leveraging” but “hips follow” made sense after Tony Luczak’s ABC and Anticipatory Synergetic Activation. Hogan wanted 3 right hands and watching Bobby on video I see (or perhaps can imagine) a subtle yet enormous application of power by the right hand. So thanks to Brendon, at 67 I can carry my driver over 250 and my 5 hc has new hopes of getting to scratch. My rope and wood grip training aid I made ages ago helped me feel very subtle fundamental actions but hitting far means hitting hard with muscles.
@user-wf7vs3hd9n4 жыл бұрын
I've been using this idea since I saw a tip from Chris Ryan a couple of years ago that was advocating a similar thing - moving the club away at the start of transition. This makes so much sense to me - and when I watch the top players swing (not all, but many of them) you see a very wide, full arc coming down into the ball. For me, it gives me more time to get a better impact position as I've always been "armsy" - good stuff.
@cranium333334 жыл бұрын
The easiest way to explain it is take your arms out of the swing. Your arms are an extension of your upper body/shoulder. Using not your arms to swing but your entire body.
@ranmangolf4 жыл бұрын
Had good results with this at the driving range. Something fell apart on the golf course (slice-a-roni). Regrouped again on the driving range and concentrated more on beginning with the lower body bumping to begin the line tension before pulling the arrow out of the quiver. This seems to be working better. Looking forward to trying it on the golf course
@golfdoc1950 Жыл бұрын
I've been seeking a golf instruction system that uses physics to explain a repeating swing.
@soupra224 жыл бұрын
@danmartin Is there no ulnar deviation of the wrists through impact using your training aid? When do you let go of the lag and does it follow what kelvin Miyahira teaches?
@darrellshort56964 жыл бұрын
I like this training aid, it seems to give you great feed back and teaches you not to snap/torque the club at the ball. However, your best training aid swings start with a little forward movement. Hard to get it moving from a static start... I would/will try and find some sort of forward press or kick start to start my back swing...
@amihanov3 жыл бұрын
This is brilliant. Thanks Brendon for finding this guy for me. That aside, I think you still need improvement on that first "sit" move. It should be a little faster and needs a sudden subtle "break".... I don't like your initial "stretching" of the left arm. It's easier than that. But I think you already know this...
@florianredecsy49974 жыл бұрын
Lee Cox told me if I want to swing the club fast I should feel like I would pull the grip of the shaft to accelerate the club
@mrkipling38414 жыл бұрын
I've had this feeling in some swings, where it feels like the club is swing me (so to speak). It usually ends up in a really decent, effortless strike. I wonder if I have accidentally felt this swing before? Interesting stuff B.
@MarshallSavage11 ай бұрын
Dan, I’m interested in buying several of those white balls that came with my Pro. Do you where I can buy them ? They don’t ruin anything when they hit my home unlike the yellow ones. Thanks, Marshall
@chubbychequer15124 жыл бұрын
I notice you like me pick the club up with the hands in the takeaway, has no pro addressed this how it will impact the swing. If you lose the sequence this early in the swing will it not impact the transition? Or does it not matter I keep thinking o need to fix it but it's so ingrained it would be hard
@gzman14 жыл бұрын
ok so I think this fix is gonna be great for u (us), been following your channel for a while and your timing does seem to be off some how(me too), it is much much smoother with this tool!!!
@jw2par3 жыл бұрын
Back in the day, some of the golf message boards had folks putting a large knot below a thick rope .
@Eric-zk2hu4 жыл бұрын
Its swinging horizontal but with your body tilted and having the club swing and pull outward away from your body. So its more of a swinging with long arms feeling. It seems like you would have less force towards the target but actually you transfer more momentum out to the clubhead, whereas in baseball you dont hit the ball off the end of the bat, the sweetspot is well inside the end of the bat. So in golf you are a lot more extended and swinging than in baseball you are using more leverage straight forward. your right arm feels extended but if you saw it on video it would still be bent at impact but not as much as in a baseball swing.
@Tigersmundo4 жыл бұрын
*OMG, this was a GREAT lesson excellent foundation and tool don't try to kill every shot that will come with a repeatable square contact. A very heavy part of what Eric Meichtry philosophy and pace. Can we talk about THE HAT Gregg Mchatton with the rope and Dan Martin. 0:11 SAVAGE *
@vinhgolf3 жыл бұрын
wow ...great video.....never thought about it....thanks.
@tonefingerz71174 жыл бұрын
I have a revolutionary way to swing. Eliminate 1st 4 positions just start from impact address ball rt elbow already low left hand and rt hand gripped like an axe like chopping down a tree. Keeps club face square the entire time and swing plane is always club exactly in line flat with left arm. Using this I went from 110 to last 3 rounds 77 78 81 in 1 week. So dam simple now. Its truly a 1 piece swing. Every amature doesnt realize the rt elbow cannot go over left elbow until after impact. Rt elbow gotta be lower. Just like if you had an axe chipping at the golf ball but the face stays square. Way more distance with a shorter swing . works perfect driver thru PW no back or shoulder pain. This is the beest way to ever hit a ball
@richardoakley65604 жыл бұрын
post a vid
@gzman14 жыл бұрын
are u chopping the ball in half from noon position(like down) or from 3 o'clock like hitting the ball forward? id where is the blade of the ace pointed?? "face stays square" = blade of the axe or side of the axe?
@florianredecsy49974 жыл бұрын
Tone Fingerz I do the same at set up and also feel that the clubhead stays square to the arc (target) all the time... but why do you call it revolutionary? Look at Shawn clement, especially savannah his daughter, she does the same also the grip... leading elbow at set up higher than rear elbow is something mike Austin shows and was already pictured in Power Golf by Ben Hogan even demonstrating it with a Golfclub at elbow height to demonstrate it visually better...
@voyager81954 жыл бұрын
So basically it’s the left shoulder leading the swing a bit like square to square?
@gzman14 жыл бұрын
How did he figure this out?? more please. "the swing wants to go there" nice. It seems it makes it super simple . how goes your golf contact now Brandon??? straighter? more power? Higher?more draw or slight fade?
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
Derek Gzaskow started with the old movies of Bobby Jones explaining the swing with a ball on a string.
@mattgarr572 жыл бұрын
Just a thought, when you swing the pro, your left arm was totally bent and folded at the top. With an actual club, you were more straight with the left arm. It seems that a straight left arm would help with the “tautness” of the rope as you start the down swing. Just a thought.
@arjanpetersen4 жыл бұрын
Great swings ... thanks for the video. Really enjoyed it,
@maamold4 жыл бұрын
Back when I started playing I soaked up information from books, In one book an old pro (99% sure it was Harvey Penick) made a training aid by tying a string to a penknife and having his students swing the pen-knife just like this training aid.
@vinceschiavo53854 жыл бұрын
Excellent comment, but the first instructor to document that drill was Ernest Jones; although Penick may have used the same drill with his students.
@maamold4 жыл бұрын
@@vinceschiavo5385 yep, you are correct. I just found the book. "How to feel a real golf swing' page 24 Toski and Love credit Ernest Jones with that.
@swardmusic4 жыл бұрын
@@maamold yep. Check out Swing the clubhead- ernest jones
@JMichael55774 жыл бұрын
This is your best video
@jonathansmith97054 жыл бұрын
Dude, trust that your camera is working.
@brianwalker47603 жыл бұрын
This is the same concept as Malaska's , just being conveyed differently. Malaska says Nicklaus always talked about releasing the club early. But the golf world took that as casting which he wasn't, he was redirecting momentum as Malaska terms it. If you watch how Brendan learns to get the Pro to go he has to "cast or release it early" by pushing his hands out. This is a perfect visual of what Nicklaus meant by release and Malaska means by redirecting momentum.
@chudgolf21124 жыл бұрын
Best one by far.
@6-4-3gaming33 жыл бұрын
There is an exact same thing for baseball swings. I made my son one. I didn’t think to use it for golf.
@ulster77174 жыл бұрын
This is a very interesting video and I look forward to more. This “concept “ would challenge the Manzella/Jacobs principles allegedly proven by 3D that in elite golfers swings they are torquing the shaft. The pro training aid is effectively a flail. A golf scientist I follow says the golf swing is not a flail. He used mathematical models and states that a pure flail if used by long drivers would result in only 100mph swing speed. Whereas is reality these guys can swing at 140+ mph. Look forward to more videos to see where the speed comes from in this concept.
@555Trout4 жыл бұрын
Bingo.
@junjeon87513 жыл бұрын
SOUTH KOREA/ CAN I BUY?
@alanharwood48432 жыл бұрын
So it's ok to have such a bent lead elbow? Is this not habituating a bad habit?
@JeffPassageCPA4 жыл бұрын
Excellent video!!
@exitar14 жыл бұрын
This was great thanks!
@bigwill69744 жыл бұрын
Brings to mind those the info that’s out there that shows the pros hands reaching their max speed at waist-high or so in the downswing.
@CoryLancasterYT4 жыл бұрын
Think the Athletic Motion guys did this... Super interesting!
@Mcweeever4 жыл бұрын
23:51 nice
@bengreen12624 жыл бұрын
Brendan ~ great video ~ I think the last six months you have got to the bottom of your own problems ~ the next course vlog will be interesting to see if the confidence and scoring are good...👍👍
@chriswillis71544 жыл бұрын
Manuel Del La Torre, Moe Norman, Mike Austin, Ben Hogan, Freddy Couples. Among others. Nothing new. Cool training aid. It is and always will be a throw.
@roe21233 жыл бұрын
Fixed my hook. I was forcing through the entire swing.
@mitchy70514 жыл бұрын
Has alot of similar concepts to rotary swing
@mmmmerlino874 жыл бұрын
So you understand that "thanks for watching" is usually said in the end part of the video?
@richardoakley65604 жыл бұрын
Sounds allot like what Mike Austin taught?
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
Richard Oakley left arm As a rope. He used a well timed late torque to add something extra that other guys couldn’t do I think.
@SwingLowLeft4 жыл бұрын
Agreed. There’s a clip of him “teaching the teachers” where he demonstrates this to one who seems to be really getting it. The pupil steps” into his lead side, has the handle pointing at the ball around P5 and MA has the player freeze there. Then Austin whips the club through to the finish from that position for the student without further impetus from the body. First thing that came to my mind when viewing this.
@deanw0rmer4 жыл бұрын
Love all these videos but do you ever get confused with all these different teachers? One is telling you to use your hands (AJ) and this guy is telling you not to lol
@lutzchoco14 жыл бұрын
Pull the arrow out of the quiver...
@bretwells36103 жыл бұрын
Who knew nunchucks could be used as a swing aide
@mikerichardson50224 жыл бұрын
If you really want to understand forces and torques, you should go to Jacob3d.
@mikerichardson50224 жыл бұрын
sorry Jacobs3D
@bxlawless1002 жыл бұрын
You didn’t listen to him at all.
@jeffmartinez2622 жыл бұрын
Great video, but super aggravating to watch you try to cling on to your preconceptions instead of listening to what is being said. It seems to be a recurrent theme as I've watched you work with several instructors, and every time they try to convey a new concept, you keep trying to reconcile it against what you previously thought or have been trying to do in your swing. It's almost as if you require each instructor to win a verbal debate with you before you attempt to absorb what they have to teach. In this particular video, you kept trying to unnecessarily swing the thing as fast as you could, which made your poor habits prevail. You needed to grasp the concept that gentle and subtle motions with the body, arms and hands are what create a violent motion with the clubhead. Swinging slower at first and then gradually adding speed would teach you that in a shorter time period, but persistently trying to swing as hard as you could was delaying the re-education of your sequence. I would think that someone trying to brand themselves as such a constant learner and student would make more of an effort to be malleable and coachable, instead of constantly putting up resistance by clinging to preconceptions.
@jstpa3215 ай бұрын
$500 dollars for this thing. The most absurd price on any golf device I've ever seen. And the money is not the issue, this is just straight up insane.
@erykvonkeith2 жыл бұрын
Did you guys give Wally Armstrong any acknowledgement after duplicating his product?
@soupra224 жыл бұрын
Will there be a discount for BBG? 20%?
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
Just free shipping for BBG rn
@jaxortjackie054 жыл бұрын
Heard somewhere that there are different types of wrist torque forces. Alpha, Beta, and gamma? Pure uncocking is alpha, the push pull you demonstrate is beta, wrists torquing the club out. Dan only shows alpha and you beta. What’s strange is alpha torque turns into beta torque later in the downswing when you flip! I think I’ve been doing both at varying degrees for 40 years! Guess I’m pretty good at compensating, not swinging...😳
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
I think Dan would be in the camp with Sasho McKensie and day there is negligible beta force needed. Others like Michael Jacobs and Neff say pros are using a LOT of beta torque late
@jaxortjackie054 жыл бұрын
BE BETTER GOLF thanks for the info!
@Darren-df2wn2 ай бұрын
The only problem, is that the club is a "SPRING", not a "STRING". 😅
@Darren-df2wn2 ай бұрын
The physics, are different 😊
@Labgorilla2 жыл бұрын
That biophysics instructor , Kwon, uses a rope to do the same. I’m also hearing a lot of jargon.
@chubbychequer15124 жыл бұрын
This is a very much the same as that last teacher you had a lesson with there saying the same thing
@Griot194 жыл бұрын
Interesting
@johnelliott58594 жыл бұрын
Very Ernest Jones.
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
Yes it’s the evolution of that
@appydaze94194 жыл бұрын
This is the same as rope bat.
@guessmyname11044 жыл бұрын
Sold out. Well, I guess I can make one in my garage for less than $104.99
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
Not sold out. Bdevore76@gmail.com free shipping
@BEBETTERGOLF4 жыл бұрын
80 and free ship
@djp35254 жыл бұрын
Jeff White you can also just go to the guys website and skip Brendan’s.
@jamiekferguson4 жыл бұрын
“Release from the top as fast & hard as you can”.
@Frazer204 жыл бұрын
Jack Nicklaus
@georgesmith46394 жыл бұрын
But according Malaska’s talk with Jack, that statement doesn’t mean what most people think it does. It has nothing to do with casting the club or the feel of casting. It’s getting the club head back out in front.
@djp35254 жыл бұрын
This seems like the exact opposite of you in your quest to create lag tension.
@AverageJoGolfInstructionTracy4 жыл бұрын
This is a brilliant teaching aid and I plan on ordering it and using it in my instruction. If you don't get the "physics" of golf and how to use it to your benefit, you won't 'get this'. How do you think those little girls that weigh 100lb hit the ball 300 yds. Efficient, effective swings using the mixture of physics and body mechanics. When you walk have you tried to tell your foot "lag back or else you'll make me fall!".. I doubt it. Your body mechanics and physics dictate that without a thought. Micromanaging the swing is often the kiss of death. Sometimes lag happens when you learn how to use physics rather than fight them. I love that I'll be able to have a gadget that will give my students another means of feeling of the concept. Thanks!
@shawnrandick80774 жыл бұрын
This promotes casting of the club. Lose all lag
@bengreen12624 жыл бұрын
Shawn Randick This was addressed within the first minute of instruction ~ the trouble with trying to retain lag is you try to hold onto the angles to long ~ consistency suffers
@swardmusic4 жыл бұрын
@@bengreen1262 and power/speed suffers
@nonobebert76464 жыл бұрын
Can't you do and feel the same with an Orange Whip ?
@danmartin84334 жыл бұрын
You can, but it’s weight makes it very difficult to train the hands from taking over.
@markrizzo22834 жыл бұрын
Hey man I’m just curious.... you know deep down your not another person, you are you. Why do persist on taking advice from random people. Just do you mate. Listen to Marcus. Do your swing for your unique body and swing style and perfect it. It’s like telling Lebron to be Jordan.
@margiepargie1982 Жыл бұрын
Why are you trying this training aid out on Brandon? He is a decent golfer. Why not do this video on a chronic over the topper? I am sure you can find someone at the range. Also, why don't you add some women to your videos? We like to golf, too.😅 Overall, it's a great video.
@BEBETTERGOLF Жыл бұрын
REALLY hard to find women to come on the channel. I will double my efforts!!!
@liukang88902 жыл бұрын
“Air elbow” 🤦♂️
@truthseeker77693 жыл бұрын
Air elbow.. wack
@marcussheldon92204 жыл бұрын
Your body swings your arms not your arms swing your body. Sorry you go and have advice from many different golf coaches and it’s screwing up your game. For christ sack there is only one best coach in this world and he was the late Mike Austin. I know you are growing your channel to make advertising money but the only way is MA way. Stop screwing around with your ability to play golf and stop wasting your time.
@djp35254 жыл бұрын
I had never heard of Mike Austin before people commented on him in these comments. And I have watched and followed most KZbin teachers-not sure how I missed him. Anyways, I spent 5 hours and Saturday watching all of his videos, and yes, his info is the best. I was always looking (including lessons from teaching pros) someone who could help mold my natural athletic ability from playing baseball etc. well, this was it. I practiced in my yard on Sunday and then played yesterday and struck the ball the best in my life....not even close. I had at least 30 more yards on all of my drives. Thanks for Mike Austin Fan and the guys here who recommended him.
@gbaum264 жыл бұрын
Enough with gimmick toys. Get better by going to rotaryswing .com
@John-wg1jh Жыл бұрын
Dan- I threw the hammer in high school. Same idea?