So you have now understood what the faults are of a late release, what the late release is, that little exercise drill there to try and help you improve from your late release. I guess the last thing just to in there would be, what are going to be the anticipated benefits now we’ve made that change. So if you can now get into a good impact position, where your club head is releasing down to the golf ball to create a straight line, not a hands ahead line, and not a hands behind line, but a nice impact position, you should now get the expected height, direction, and distance from each club.
So for example I have my 8-iron here, if we had a late release, the club is hitting the ball slightly getting low from what I anticipated. Now with a good release, I am tying my hands to release the club to the right point. The ball should go at the right height, if my late release was causing me to hit the ball down the right hand side, because the face was open, I should have now released the club online. It points a bit straighter. The ball is going to fly more than the intended target line and the last thing is, if I am releasing that club head, better into the golf ball, the chances are that club head is accelerating rather than keeping this potential energy and not using it until after impact, and they're going to be using to the right point of the impact that should encourage the golf ball to fly a little bit further.
So who wouldn't want to get that timing of the release right, if the anticipated benefits are going to be higher, straighter and a little bit further. So if you can use that correct releasing pattern to get the club at the right point, you really are unlocking the full potential as available to you, from within your golf swing.