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Body Sway for the Dance Floor, Not
Your Golf Swing
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by: Sean
Cochran
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Body
motion in the swing is necessary, but
too much of a good thing can wreak all
kinds of havoc with your golf swing.
I received a question over the weekend
from a BioForce Golf subscriber about
“body motion” in the swing.
The question from our subscriber asked
how not to fall into the trap of too
much movement backwards during the
golf swing.
What we are really talking about is
weight transfer during the golf swing.
Too much weight transfer onto the back
foot during the take-away and
backswing causes difficulty in getting
back to your front foot on the
downswing.
This creates some difficulties in your
timing during the golf swing.
Oftentimes, this type of swing fault
is termed “body sway.”
So how do we fix this golf swing
fault?
Let’s take a brief look at golf
swing mechanics.
Optimal golf swing mechanics are both
a rotational (rotating around a fixed
spine angle) and linear (weight
transfer backwards and forwards)
movement.
It is the sequencing (proper order)
and combination of these two
biomechanical movements that develop
the great foundation of your golf
swing.
Amateurs often have difficulty
performing these two biomechanical
movements simultaneously and in the
correct sequence.
Discussing “Body Sway” in Relation
to Linear Weight Transfer of the Golf
Swing
Amateurs often shift their weight too
far onto their back foot. Once this
occurs, they are never able to get
their weight forward, causing them to
“spin out” and leave the clubface
open at impact.
A conversation I had with top teaching
pro Rick Smith on body sway
enlightened me on one of his teaching
points: the weight transfer in the
backswing cannot go past the inside
arch of the back foot.
In order to limit your weight transfer
in the swing to this position, you
must “feel” it in your swing. You
must be able to feel your weight on
the inside of the back foot and not
allow it to move any farther back.
If your weight transfer exceeds this
position, your timing will be off,
your golf swing mechanics will be
flawed, and compensation of the
downswing will occur.
Now knowing what we need to know about
golf swing mechanics and the problems
resulting from “body sway,” how do
we go about fixing it?
The golf swing is one of the most
intricate athletic movements performed
in sports today.
It requires precision in every
biomechanical movement involved in the
swing, the correction sequencing of
each movement, and the correct timing.
As a whole, the golf swing is a very
difficult movement to perform.
Attempting to “fix” a swing fault
when swinging the golf club at full
tilt is almost impossible.
So what are you to do?
Simply, it is much easier to break
down the golf swing into parts.
Working on pieces of the golf swing
and then re-building the swing is the
way to go. This is a much easier task
to achieve.
Once you have broken down the golf
swing into pieces, then you can focus
upon the area of the golf swing that
is giving you difficulty.
Fixing the area of the golf swing that
is giving you problems can be
addressed by implementing swing
drills.
Swing drills introduce and re-enforce
the proper swing mechanics into your
body and allow you to eventually cure
your swing fault.
This will eventually return you to a
position where you can “feel”
every position in the golf swing.
So, if you are struggling from “body
sway” in the golf swing, break down
the swing into parts and address the
area of the golf swing that needs help
through swing drills.
Sean Cochran
About the Author
Sean Cochran is one of the most
recognized golf fitness instructors in
the world today. He travels the PGA
Tour regularly with 2005 PGA &
2004 Masters Champion Phil Mickelson.
He has made many of his golf tips,
golf instruction and golf swing
improvement techniques available to
amateur golfers on the website
www.bioforcegolf.com. To contact Sean,
you can email him at support@bioforcegolf.com.
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