Ryan Moore: Nothing Loopy About His Results (Video) - by Pete Styles
Ryan Moore: Nothing Loopy About His Results (Video) - by Pete Styles

Now here is a swing analysis from one of the breakthrough players of the last few years, a gentleman called Ryan Moore; now not the biggest player in the world but a real powerhouse. But probably more noticeable when you watch Ryan Moore is the movements he has in his golf swing. He doesn’t have one of the sort of identical traditional golf swing straight up and down the line, it’s a little bit more in mold of the Lee Trevino the Jim Furyks. But it works for him, he has a big loop in his swing, but there’s nothing loopy about his results, he wins some big money out there. Now, when we see Ryan Moore address the golf ball very, very close to the ball, hands really quite low, really squatted down here. Now from that position there’s only one way you’re really going to take the golf club, and that would be out. And his hands stay in, and his club goes out and the club is way outside the line of his hands and from there again only one place to go, pretty more straight or vertical, massively vertical up into the air. Now the fifth mark position is that will then result in a chop down, and then outside the line or casting down swing producing pulls and slices. Difference with Ryan Moore, is once he’s here and he’s gone up, he then has the big drop down, the big looping side, and actually plays the club downswing sort of quite well on playing if not slightly inside the lining from the inside attacking the golf ball, very much like a Jim Furyk kind of move.

Now, very rarely would we ever encourage anybody to swing the club in that fashion or to swing the club with the Jim Furyk or the Ryan Moore move. But actually, if you’re a slicer of the golf ball, there’s maybe a feeling in your swing that you would be too flat in the backswing, and over the top casting looping forward in your downswing. Therefore, the Jim Furyk the Ryan Moore kind of move, might be something that we could actually incorporate into your, into your game, certainly the feeling of. Because if you’re very much inside and then over, I now wish to encourage you to be, outside steep, and then under, guaranteed you wouldn’t actually exaggerate as much as you think you are doing. You wouldn’t get into Ryan Moore’s position, chances are you’d find a happy medium, a middle ground, and you’d be more or less swinging the club up and down on kind of the right line, which is ultimately where we’d like you to be. So the feeling of exaggerating the steep Ryan Moore up looping back in, might actually be a good feeling if you’ve been slicing and casting the golf ball over the -- casting the golf, -- I’m sorry, over the top. So it’s not to the swing necessarily to copy exactly, but the feelings, the visuals, could be a good way of changing your slicing swing to more of a drawing inside swing. And that’s how you can improve by watching Ryan Moore’s golf swing. [playerProfile url="https://golf-info-guide.com/pga-players/ryan-moore/"][/playerProfile]
2015-03-25

Now here is a swing analysis from one of the breakthrough players of the last few years, a gentleman called Ryan Moore; now not the biggest player in the world but a real powerhouse. But probably more noticeable when you watch Ryan Moore is the movements he has in his golf swing. He doesn’t have one of the sort of identical traditional golf swing straight up and down the line, it’s a little bit more in mold of the Lee Trevino the Jim Furyks. But it works for him, he has a big loop in his swing, but there’s nothing loopy about his results, he wins some big money out there. Now, when we see Ryan Moore address the golf ball very, very close to the ball, hands really quite low, really squatted down here. Now from that position there’s only one way you’re really going to take the golf club, and that would be out. And his hands stay in, and his club goes out and the club is way outside the line of his hands and from there again only one place to go, pretty more straight or vertical, massively vertical up into the air. Now the fifth mark position is that will then result in a chop down, and then outside the line or casting down swing producing pulls and slices. Difference with Ryan Moore, is once he’s here and he’s gone up, he then has the big drop down, the big looping side, and actually plays the club downswing sort of quite well on playing if not slightly inside the lining from the inside attacking the golf ball, very much like a Jim Furyk kind of move.

Now, very rarely would we ever encourage anybody to swing the club in that fashion or to swing the club with the Jim Furyk or the Ryan Moore move. But actually, if you’re a slicer of the golf ball, there’s maybe a feeling in your swing that you would be too flat in the backswing, and over the top casting looping forward in your downswing. Therefore, the Jim Furyk the Ryan Moore kind of move, might be something that we could actually incorporate into your, into your game, certainly the feeling of. Because if you’re very much inside and then over, I now wish to encourage you to be, outside steep, and then under, guaranteed you wouldn’t actually exaggerate as much as you think you are doing. You wouldn’t get into Ryan Moore’s position, chances are you’d find a happy medium, a middle ground, and you’d be more or less swinging the club up and down on kind of the right line, which is ultimately where we’d like you to be. So the feeling of exaggerating the steep Ryan Moore up looping back in, might actually be a good feeling if you’ve been slicing and casting the golf ball over the — casting the golf, — I’m sorry, over the top. So it’s not to the swing necessarily to copy exactly, but the feelings, the visuals, could be a good way of changing your slicing swing to more of a drawing inside swing. And that’s how you can improve by watching Ryan Moore’s golf swing.