Improve Your Arm Connection In The Golf Swing - (Video) Lesson by PGA Pros Pete Styles and Matt Fryer
Improve Your Arm Connection In The Golf Swing - (Video) Lesson by PGA Pros Pete Styles and Matt Fryer

In this video tip PGA golf professionals Pete Styles and Matt Fryer encourage you to keep your arms connected in your golf swing. This can sound a little bit like golf swing jargon, however, Matt and Pete aim to create a good understanding of the connected golf swing by encouraging you to feel like your chest is in charge of the golf swing and in turn keep your hands quite passive during the backswing and downswing motion. Keeping the hands and arms lined up in front of the chest as the chest makes the ideal 90° rotation back and through should encourage a more connected and therefore more consistent golf swing.

I must say Matt I think this is a good look for you around the golf course with a towel long held over your shoulder I'm sure you'll explain any second now what is that for. Definitely, hopefully it relates this to this tip because it's the tip we are here to talk about. Now going to be feeling connected in your golf swing connecting that to the chest passive movement chest and a good solid one piece take away. So hopefully the towel is the tool of the trade for this tip.

Indeed I've not just become a caddy it's more of a coaching aid for what you know I like it. So what we were talking connection is so you know a bit of a buzzword almost at the moment we're hearing a lot about connective golf swings and you know some of the benefits of what they can bring. So ounderstanding what we mean by connection is instead of the arms working independently from the body and sort of going off on their own tandem we want them to be working in sync with our bigger muscles like the chest like the hips the torso if we can get these being you know the driving force of the golf club the arms can just catch a free ride and deliver back to the golf ball a lot more easily and a lot more consistently.

2019-07-22

In this video tip PGA golf professionals Pete Styles and Matt Fryer encourage you to keep your arms connected in your golf swing. This can sound a little bit like golf swing jargon, however, Matt and Pete aim to create a good understanding of the connected golf swing by encouraging you to feel like your chest is in charge of the golf swing and in turn keep your hands quite passive during the backswing and downswing motion. Keeping the hands and arms lined up in front of the chest as the chest makes the ideal 90° rotation back and through should encourage a more connected and therefore more consistent golf swing.

I must say Matt I think this is a good look for you around the golf course with a towel long held over your shoulder I'm sure you'll explain any second now what is that for. Definitely, hopefully it relates this to this tip because it's the tip we are here to talk about. Now going to be feeling connected in your golf swing connecting that to the chest passive movement chest and a good solid one piece take away. So hopefully the towel is the tool of the trade for this tip.

Indeed I've not just become a caddy it's more of a coaching aid for what you know I like it. So what we were talking connection is so you know a bit of a buzzword almost at the moment we're hearing a lot about connective golf swings and you know some of the benefits of what they can bring. So ounderstanding what we mean by connection is instead of the arms working independently from the body and sort of going off on their own tandem we want them to be working in sync with our bigger muscles like the chest like the hips the torso if we can get these being you know the driving force of the golf club the arms can just catch a free ride and deliver back to the golf ball a lot more easily and a lot more consistently.