www.miracleswingexperience.com/ Welcome to my RU-vid channel! For the past 13 years, I've been playing mediocre golf, struggling to improve my game despite countless hours on the course and at the driving range.
But everything changed when I discovered a new swing method that completely transformed my game. With this new technique, I started hitting the ball farther, straighter, and with much more consistency than ever before. It was like a lightbulb went off, and suddenly I was playing the best golf of my life.
Now, I want to share this swing method with others who are struggling to take their game to the next level. Whether you're a beginner or a seasoned player, my videos will give you the tools you need to improve your swing and start playing better golf.
Join me as we explore the world of golf together and learn how to take our game to the next level. I can't wait to see you on the course!
My email is christo@myswingevolution.com in case you need additional info.
Amazing looking swing. I noticed he uses a somewhat closed stance with his driver, and even a bit with his irons. Is this on purpose, or just he do it more naturally for a better back swing and fuller body turn?
Totally agree. This “shallowing” fad can only work for players that have significant wrist strength to maintain the bow on the wrist through impact and have both strength and flexibility to clear their hips and their legs while maintaining your spine angle. 99.9% of golfers should never try shallow the club unless you have the above. The best guys that shallow the club do so because that is how they picked up the club it has never been instructed to them. Look at the state of Jordan Speith’s game and now wrist operation when trying to “learn” how to shallow.
Without a doubt, I have learned & improved my full swing 100% just from watching these short, 8 second Thumbnails of yours! Jeezus! Your swing here looks textbook & I’ve burned it into my practice range routine. Thanks, mate!
Well, the left side of his right knee moved towards the target, in the transition, that is for sure. But, it is worth noting that the whole of his right leg rotated to right; and, aligned with the angle of his right foot, in the backswing. And, this actually makes the left side of the right knee drive towards the target in the transition. This is something that the 'secret's in the dirt' guys touched upon; but, didn't quite grasp. Nothing to do with twisting the right foot to the right, in the backswing. And, unfortunately, the lesson Hogan gives in 5 lessons, on holding the position of the right leg, in the backswing, is duff advice. Probably where the phrase actually originates from.
Thank-you the legends just had it they knew the golf swing done properly will work. I believe we all have our own natural swing that works. Love your shows.
I got pain in my right elbow around the age of 40. Torquing my right elbow because I was using my hands and right arm to force the release through the hitting area. It’s an effective way to swing if your right arm is strong enough BUT eventually the right elbow might hurt (and probably will if you practice a lot). So I had to figure out how to swing without torquing my right elbow. I do a number of things to release and I did those things mainly with my right arm. Now I use the entire body and my left arm to do what I did mainly with my right arm. There are “pain free” ways to swing. And really just as good as the painful way to swing. If you got pain swinging you got to find a new and pain free way.
Mostly because of the sun. This is the only grass range around and the ball flies directly into the sun. So, from behind you can't see the ball and I'm a silhouette mostly.
He’s definitely not over the top which is what you like to teach. The reason he’s not shallowing is because he stays on plane the whole time (single plane swing). I would argue that what he’s doing by staying on a single plane the whole time much harder than shallowing the club and assuring your always coming from the inside or having an over the top swing like yours and coming more from the outside. Two plane swings allow you to remove one side of the course and eliminate the two way miss. Single plane swings are very fickle; you fall underneath you risk drawing/hook it you come over the top you risk a cut/slice. There are so many way to swing the club pick one and master it. Not fair to use Tiger as an example he’s playing chess while the rest of us are still trying to learn checkers
Dude your swing looks the exact frickin same as the first day. You stand super erect and swing super flat. Then wrist has zero supination through impact. Like it's a very un pro move. And it's not your flexibility. It's that you never actually change any motor patterns. It's like wtf????!!!!!
I think the only comment I think needs added is that with a stronger right hand you really have to clear the left side early almost from the top to avoid hooking but it certainly produces a shallower more compact impact position .
If your hands follow the same path on the way down, with the added rotation during the downswing, the club naturally falls behind you (aka shallow). Try this for yourself: take your address and just shift your hips to impact. The shaft will learn forward as the club falls behind you. A lot of people mistake Tiger’s swing for being “one plane” when in reality, even and especially with swing tracers, the visual is very deceiving. The only way for Tiger to not be shallowing on the downswing would be if he were to aggressively turn the clubface down and come over the top, which he most certainly is not.
Teachers are teaching that shallow move because 90% of amateurs turn hard with the back shoulder and come over the plane. Multiple ways to stop it and who knows if Tiger had to do drills to keep that swing so perfect.
@@MiracleSwingExperience Well, the golf swing is a diagonal motion so to mix in a vertical component would be chaos. Like swinging a weight on a string and then moving your hand up and down as well. The force you want to mix in should be either complementary or opposite of the motion you're making which would also be diagonal.
He is shallowing but a part of this video that ppl are not seeing is that- Tiger is hitting STEEL SHAFTER irons in 2000. Stiffer shafts require less shallowing than graphite shafts which MOST players use today to take advantage of increased club head speeds and distance. When the guys today are using graphite vs STEEL shafted irons they will have to create more shallowing to accomodate the lighter weight of the shaft to square up the club head. If you hit steel you dont have to force a shallowing effect- graphite will demand the super shallow as it will never be as stiff as Steel.
Yup. I've been exploring this lately and am playing really well. I find it allows me to keep rotating, keep slack out of the swing, and make more compressed shots. As soon as I straighten my front leg I feel the club head starts catching up. Imo this is good for the long ball but doesn't create the control and consistency I'm searching for. I carry this all the way to chip shots. You read my mind Christo
Most people just need their set up, grip and alignment looked at. See loads of people trying those pointless shallowing moves when they don’t even know how to address the ball
Trevino said as to the first move off the top “break the knees to the target” and “you can’t turn” and “it’s almost a lateral movement.” I don’t see it exactly that way. I think in the “first move” you go from hips closed (which was done to help turn back further for a fuller backswing turn, then shifting the hips to the target and planting the left heel, and no left leg extension in that first move, and the butt stays back, right heel stays planted (no thrust to the ball yet - reserved for later), and this “first move” ends (to name a point where it ends) where the shifting towards the target is concluded and the shaft of the club is about pointing at the ball. And the hips might yet be slightly closed at that point… probably not if you are hitting a fade, the shoulders are closed. For a short time the hips don’t turn much, the back stays closed for a hinging action, right shoulder and elbow and hands still dropping, and then at the second parallel a bit of turning begins (the right heel then starts to lift) and as the clubhead enters the “hitting area” (a Trevino phrase) that’s when the hips do the “turning” and the legs extend, all that.
@@MiracleSwingExperiencel am talking about the ones that maintain a bend in the forward leg the club is coming to the front and their weight is shifting rearward, even Kyle falls rearward..it is better than going vertical..