Down the Line Plus Top View Transition by Tom Stickney
Down the Line Plus Top View Transition by Tom Stickney Tom Stickney - A Top 100 Golf Teacher Tom Stickney – A Top 100 Golf Teacher

Hi I'm Tom Stickney Golf Magazine Top 100 Instructor and today I want to show you a uniques golf swing from the down the line view as well as the overhead view. A lot of times people take it to the top they are unsure about how the right shoulder hands arms and the club should work. A lot of time what I tell people if you need it kind of feel like your hands arms the club stay behind this line for a couple of clicks into the downswing.

If you see as I start to transition down you can see that there's more of a drop in the hands arms right shoulder as opposed to the spin on the right shoulder and this hands arm and club right shoulder drop keeps the club behind that line for just a split second of the downstroke and when that happens now the club can transition from the inside you can see it coming from the inside of the golf ball right there and a draw can ensue. So a lot of times if you need to feel as if your hands arms the club stay behind this line going down and if you do that you will find the club shaft coming more fomr the inside coming down and when you do that you have a lot more control over your ball flight.

2019-06-06

Tom Stickney - A Top 100 Golf Teacher Tom Stickney – A Top 100 Golf Teacher

Hi I'm Tom Stickney Golf Magazine Top 100 Instructor and today I want to show you a uniques golf swing from the down the line view as well as the overhead view. A lot of times people take it to the top they are unsure about how the right shoulder hands arms and the club should work. A lot of time what I tell people if you need it kind of feel like your hands arms the club stay behind this line for a couple of clicks into the downswing.

If you see as I start to transition down you can see that there's more of a drop in the hands arms right shoulder as opposed to the spin on the right shoulder and this hands arm and club right shoulder drop keeps the club behind that line for just a split second of the downstroke and when that happens now the club can transition from the inside you can see it coming from the inside of the golf ball right there and a draw can ensue. So a lot of times if you need to feel as if your hands arms the club stay behind this line going down and if you do that you will find the club shaft coming more fomr the inside coming down and when you do that you have a lot more control over your ball flight.