Fighting an over swing within your golf game can be a frustrating endeavour, as often you are unable to see the position the club reaches during the backswing phase. If a golfer is encouraged to utilize less leg action during the backswing, to create a stronger arm position, and to maintain a 90° shoulder rotation and no more, the golfer should see a powerful and wound up, coiled backswing position that retains a certain degree of control over the length of swing. This should produce more consistent and reliable golf shots.
During the golf swing Matt it is important the golfer does shift their weight at certain times in the golf swing to maximize their power meant to maximize their release of the power they generated to build. Moving the body weight not just to simplify somebody's are right off you go Matt and if you can forwards the process he's not going to deliver the right amount of power and probably not inconsistent amount of power and consistent quality of strike. So to move the body weight the right way you use the process of loading and not swaying.
Yes if you could tell me what a load is what a sway is and then give me a drill for it please. OK OK so for on this camera here what we would do are just take my set up now and I'll just pop a line up on screen here what we tend to see you know of people's thoughts of a golf swing is you know in your backswing a right handed player you go into the right side and then on the way through the left side. So instead of it being rotational base we got the one where you are going right you can see now outside of the line on the screen and as I'm going left and will fall over not actually any point turn my hips and my chest away from target and back around to target.