Improve Your Swing With The Medicus Driver

Improve Your Swing With The Medicus Driver

Article by Jeremy Winters









Statements by Medicus Golf that their unique dual hinge, which happens to be present on the Medicus Driver, will give instant feedback from a bad swing are legitimate. This is the very best swing trainer in the entire world, and here is why. When the player learns to swing this particular driver without breaking it down at the hinges, he knows his swing is on plane and also in cadence. Now the player is well on his way to getting rid of hooks and slices, as well as producing longer, much more accurate shots over and over.

The head of this particular club is heavy, and as a consequence of this your swing likewise can feel heavy. Expecting it to break pretty much guarantees that it will, but then several methodical swings reinforces self confidence and the anticipated mishaps begin to vanish. Following this routine, pick up a standard driver. It feels light, very easy and mysteriously the previous swing errors are usually fewer.

The Medicus Driver is fashioned to break any time swing flaws are discovered; these can arise in six unique parts of the golf swing. To begin with, it could possibly break on the backswing about a foot higher than the ball. The golf club needs to be taken back with arms and shoulders though with absolutely no wrist twist. Once the player learns to take their club back gradually and with a lower plane, his golf game should begin to greatly improve.

The second break will possibly occur while in your backswing when the club head is waist high. If the toe of your golf club is not aiming up, your club will unhinge. Also, when the swing is way too flat or when it really is too much over the top, your club will additionally break down.

Break 3 will occur near the top of the backswing. Break 3 may also be close to the top of that swing. This occurs whenever the golf club face is not square.

Break 4 happens at the start of the down swing. This takes place simply because the player stops his wrist way too quickly causing the club to unhinge. This can additionally take place when the arms aren’t close enough to the body.

The fifth break position is at contact. The reason is that the golfer sways moving his weight backwards. When he is too far behind the ball during impact, the golf club will break.

And finally, the Medicus Driver will become out of balance on the follow through when it doesn’t stay on plane. A flat follow through could be responsible for this.

So, here is an effective training aid that instantly recognizes the flaws in a golfer’s swing. Not only will it break down in a flaw, it helps in fixing the error if it does not unhinge. By simply repeating your swing without having the break, your muscle memory is established and then the ideal swing can be repeated repeatedly.



About the Author

Are you looking for equipment that will help you improve your golf? Be sure to visit my site to learn more about the Medicus Driver and Medicus Dual Hinge.










Why An Early Break Is So Important In Golf

Why An Early Break Is So Important In Golf

Article by Gerald Mason







Whenever we go to a golf tournament and see a really good player hit the ball, we receive two vivid impressions. The first is how far the ball goes with seemingly so little effort. The second is of a certain measured cadence in the upward and downward movement of the club. Both are accurate impressions.

Now if we happen to be on the practice tee, where we can watch this player hit shot after shot, we will notice two other things. One is that he swings all his clubs at about the same speed; he doesn’t seem to hit the 3 wood any harder than he hits the 7 iron. The second thing we notice, when we let our gaze wander to other players practicing, is that while most of them are deliberate, there are differences in their swinging speeds.

Timing is the answer to the first accomplishment–the long hit with little effort. Rhythm produces the measured cadence in the upward and downward movement of the club. And the differences we notice in swinging speed among other players are differences in tempo.

The hands will take over soon enough, as an automatic, reflex action. The problem is to keep them out while still keeping them moving. If we keep them out while our body moves the club from the top, our timing will be far better

Yet the ball still flies out much farther than it should, for the effort the player seems to be putting into it. This is very marked in the graceful players of smaller stature, such as Gene Littler, 1961 National Open champion, and Dow Finsterwald, former National PGA champion.

Timing

The answer to the effort-distance puzzle being timing, just what is timing? For one thing, it is a word that has been used more loosely, perhaps, than any other in golf literature. We have been blandly told that we should work to improve our timing, that our timing is off, that without good timing we cannot hope to play well. But there, having given the word the once-over-lightly treatment, the oracles have left us. They have never adequately explained timing or told us what we should do to improve ours. Our private guess is that they don’t know themselves what it is.

A dictionary will tell you that timing is: “The regulating of the speed of a motion, stroke, or blow, so that it reaches its maximum at the correct moment.” In golf, obviously, this would mean regulating the speed of the club head so as to cause it to reach its maximum as it hits the ball.

The key phrase is “regulating of the speed.” The better the speed is regulated, the better the timing; the poorer the regulation, the poorer the timing. It is here that at least 95 per cent of all golfers have their worst trouble.

They have it because the regulation of the speed depends not on how the club head is manipulated by the hands but on how and when other parts of the swinging system operate: the hips, the shoulders, the arms, the hands. If these move in the right way and in the right order, they will automatically regulate the speed of the club head so that it reaches its maximum as it hits the ball. It is, in effect, a chain reaction of movement, with the club head getting the final effect.

The reason the vast majority of golfers have such trouble timing a shot satisfactorily is that, subconsciously or consciously, they try to regulate the speed of the club head directly with their hands, without using the intermediary links of the hips, shoulders, and arms. When they do this they get an early but never very great reaction, in terms of speed, from the club head. This is the old familiar “hitting too soon” or “hitting from the top.” When the intermediary links are used and the chain reaction is allowed to take its course, there is a late reaction by the club head, which then accelerates to great speed at impact. There is a common expression to describe the player who uses the chain reaction: “He waits on the club.” It may not be grammatical but it is descriptive.

What this all comes down to is, the expression of good timing is the late hit. The expression of poor timing is the early hit. We have already, in previous chapters, explained the moves that produce the late hit and the early hit. Here, as we discuss timing, we isolate one key move that leads to good or improved timing. It is this: Let the body not the hands start moving the club on the downswing.

Once you can do this you are on the road to vastly better golf. You will have the feeling that you are starting down with arms and club close to the body close to the axis where they should be at this time.

So much has been written over the years about the importance of the hands in swinging the club, that many of us are entirely too hand conscious. A standing vote of thanks is due Bill Casper for stating, in a description of his swing as it reached the hitting position: “At this point my body is still swinging the club.” Many of us have been sure of that for years, but Casper, to our knowledge, was the first of the top tournament pros with the courage to say it.

Nearly all good players will give us impressions of timing and rhythm. The more graceful the player, the more vivid the impression will be. Sam Snead, among the moderns, is the perfect example. Among the giants of the past, Bob Jones’s swing was once called the “poetry of motion,” and the late Macdonald Smith was probably the most effortless swinger who ever played the game. The players of today swing harder at the ball than did their predecessors, with the result that theirs is more of a hitting than a swinging action.



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