Yesterday I did a post about how J.B. Holmes swings, using a video lesson from instructor Brian Manzella. I also included some GC footage of Holmes from a Playing Lessons with the Pros episode, comparing the two. At the end I wrote "As you can see, you don't have to make the moves quite as big as Manzella does... but it might be fun to try it with your driver."
Little did I recognise that I would emerge as doing just that the very subsequent day. Here's the story:
I occasionally play golfing with a pal who used to be a Tour caddie (and became a quite true player himself) however had to prevent caddying due to scientific problems. Tuesday (the day I wrote the Holmes submit) he invited me to play with him on Wednesday. I have not had a hazard to play considering December -- we've had a few awful climate right here -- but I've been swinging in the outdoor whilst climate authorised, trying to training session a extra traditional swing based totally much less on energy. (I'm in my mid-50s, in case you're curious, and had lost far the usage of a contemporary swing.) I figured this will be a terrific threat to peer how the new conventional swing clearly labored beneath real lifestyles situations.
The hassle is that I've evolved a awful case of tennis elbow, courtesy of walking our very huge canine who is been getting friskier as the climate improves. It's in my lead elbow (I'm right-passed so it is my left elbow), but I figured I'd simply swing less complicated and I'd be okay.
WRONG. I'd barely hit greater than a handful of balls earlier than the round once I realized I couldn't get the ball up within the air -- not even with my 7-timber, which is my preferred membership and which I nearly always hit well. Every time I hit down on the ball, the surprise grew to become my lead elbow into jelly. (Painful quivering jelly. Even with the ball teed up.)
At the closing second I determined to try the Holmes swing, which could use my trailing arm greater. I only had time to hit one greater shot earlier than our tee time and, in spite of the dramatic rerouting of the club on the way down, I hit the ball stable, first-rate and high and with out plenty pain. Although many people might imagine of the Holmes swing as a contemporary swing, I approached it nearly like a traditional swing, with my palms doing a variety of the work. It regarded to work (after a style) with what I were practicing, so...
So there I went, out for 18 holes with a swing that I'd never practiced and a sore elbow. Let me say upfront that I don't recommend this but damn, I wanted to play some golf! To do it, I had to make some allowances:
- I've already mentioned that I had to slow my swing down. I simply didn't have the strength in my lead arm to swing fast, especially with that reroute move. For those of you who don't know what I mean by "reroute," the club starts back on a fairly upright plane, then drops (reroutes) onto a lower plane on the downswing. It also causes you to lay the club off; Manzella explains it in the video on the other post. Yes, the Holmes swing is a two-plane swing.
- Because I had to concentrate on getting the rerouted club face to hit the ball, I couldn't make a full shoulder turn. (Bigger shoulder turn = bigger reroute.) That also cost me some power.
- I had to have even more patience than usual. Because I hadn't used this swing AT ALL before I hit the course, I had to figure out how to control the ball on the fly. That meant I hit a lot of squirrelly shots I normally wouldn't.
The three-wood lasted maybe 5 holes earlier than I commenced "dropkicking" the ones drives as well (hitting fat and bouncing into the ball). At that point I went to my 7-timber, which I hit pretty properly for the rest of the spherical. My score became horrible -- howdy, I had tennis elbow, hadn't performed for five months, and needed to use an improvised swing! -- but I changed into pretty inspired with how easy this swing became to use. After my elbow improves, I plan to work with this swing a few more and notice just what it is able to do.
For the ones of you who need to try the Holmes swing, I can now give you a few concrete guidance on what troubles you may face in addition to some of the benefits I see.
- Although I've used a slightly strong grip for years, I had to go back to a neutral grip with the Holmes swing. That reroute move adds more wrist movement than I really like to the swing, with the result that you can flip the face closed at impact if you use a stronger grip. I actually hit some good shots early on (before my elbow got tired) using a weak grip.
- Ball position is very important. I tended to hit the ball higher than normal off the tee with the Holmes swing, and attempts to find a spot where I hit it lower were tricky. If I moved the ball forward in my stance, sometimes I would hit a pull hook; when I moved the ball back a little, I tended to hit a slight push fade. I didn't settle on a good position but that's probably because my elbow was getting so tired I couldn't hit the ball consistently.
- How close I stood to the ball caused almost as many problems. When hitting the ball off the ground, I heeled a number of them -- not hitting the face off-center toward the heel, but actually hitting the ball with the heel of the club like a reverse shank (the ball bounced away like a pulled shot rather than a pushed one). That happened often enough for me to think it might be a tendency with this swing since I only hit one ball off the toe of the club all day. You may need to stand a couple of inches farther than normal from the ball with this swing.
- I also had a tendency to set my weight too much on my trailing foot during address; that might have contributed to those pull hooks off the tee I mentioned earlier. I might not have that problem as much once my elbow heals up and I can make a fuller shoulder turn, but I certainly had it during Thursday's round.
- Finally, given how much power this swing can potentially develop, I didn't feel any stress in my back at all. Will that change once my elbow heals and I can make a bigger turn? Maybe, but given my experience Thursday, I don't expect it.
Except that J.B. Possibly has no concerns that I'll be incorrect for him.
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