The Motorcycle Move & SI Joint Mechanics
23h 53m
30 lessons
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Goals:
1 - 3D - The Motorcycle (more than just lead wrist flexion)
2 - Anatomy - The SI Joint (lower back & pelvis intersection)
Video Transcript
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As far as the the topics, we're going to cover the motorcycle movement, which I
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always demonstrate, kind of like this, so many people start thinking it's just
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the lead wrist, but I'm going to show you in today's webinar that it's more
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than just the lead wrist, what's happening at the club, and then we'll go over
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the the basic anatomy of the SI joint, so we're we're kind of working into the
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spine.
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From the pelvis, and that's a real key area for golf, at least for
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understanding kind of pain patterns and loading patterns and things like that.
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Okay, so when it comes to the motorcycle movement, one of the biggest keys is
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getting gradual face closing.
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So you've probably seen, I've done a bunch of things where I talk about the ax
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ial velocity graph. The axial velocity graph is what I'm going to use to refer
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to the motorcycle movement.
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And let's pull me up.
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Okay, so the axial velocity graph is looking at the speed that the club is
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rotating. So when it's positive, it's closing, and when it's negative, it's
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opening.
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And so what you can see with this golfer is as the golfer
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in the backswing, the club is opening slightly and then it gets to the top of
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the swing and it goes negative or goes positive. It starts closing
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early in the downswing and it's kind of got a real gradual slope to it.
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This is a pattern that I like to see or that I commonly see with really
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consistent golfers, really consistent ball strikers.
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Now, what you'll, the things that let me bring this up, the things that have
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the biggest influence are going to be the leader is flexion and the trail worst
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extension, but
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it took me a little while to kind of understand this, but what you'll actually
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see is if I bend forward, I'm not changing anything with my hands. If I bend
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forward, I can rotate it.
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Or if I pull my arms down, I can rotate it. So just from kind of changing the
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arc of the, or the angle of the shoulders or the angle of the chest, I can
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influence that graph.
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So it's not just lead wrist and trail wrist movement. It's also what's
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happening at the shoulders or what I have up here at the thorax.
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Now, it's a, I'm going to say it's a tricky one to see. What I did here was I,
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I'm playing the animation so you can kind of see it along. Unfortunately, on
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this first one, I opened the raw file instead of the smooth file.
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So it's not going to be at the same timing as the golf swing. You can see he
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already changed direction down there.
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Good. So if we flip back and forth, I just want you to watch the angle of the
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club right there.
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I want you to watch the angle of the club head and you'll see that as it's
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going down there, it's starting to rotate and point more towards the ground.
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Now, here's a golfer. This is a tour golfer. He's a very good ball striker, but
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he's a little streaky, especially off the tee, so with the longer clubs, and he
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has more of kind of that arm pull pattern.
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So you'll see the lead wrist is going to go into extension, but the trail wrist
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is also going into extension. So the trail wrist technically is closing it. The
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lead wrist is technically opening it.
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And then what you'll see is he has a fair amount of thorax lift. So even though
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he's kind of basically he'll have a look of more of a stand up and that stand
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up helps open it with that lead wrist pull down.
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So if we take a look at this golfer.
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So you'll see the club face as he does that, I'll go kind of a little bit
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slower frame my frame. You'll see that the club is slowly starting to point
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more up compared to the axis.
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Now, I'll talk about this. Actually, you know, it'll come up again when we look
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at shanking later in the video. That's going to be one of the big takeaways is
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I'm going to go through kind of my checklist and recipes when I'm looking at sh
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anking. But
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I bring this back up. So what some people feel is they feel more the shaft so
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that what they feel what they're holding. They don't actually feel the weight
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of the club, which is off of the shaft.
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And so when you pull down, like if I wanted to swing this thing as fast as
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possible and feel like I had control of it, I'd probably want the club head,
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the weight going right through the center of the shaft like this.
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If it was more like that, it kind of feels unstable. It doesn't feel like it
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can swing it quite as fast because it feels like when I apply force, there's
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this little reverberation I've got to handle.
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So the challenge for a lot of golfers is when you do more of this motorcycle,
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it gets the weight of the club no longer in the axis of the thing that I'm
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holding, it kind of gets it now more like a hockey stick, less like a baseball
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bat.
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It's a lot of golfers who are sensing a feeling of power, especially pulling
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with the arms and the shoulders tend to do more to get the club in line with
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the hosel.
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So we'll see that when we look at the shanking later.
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Okay, now we're going to look at a couple amateurs and this first one, I
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believe, yes, so this first one is one of the ones that really kind of
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got me thinking about the motorcycle movement a little bit differently.
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So this was a collegiate player, pretty good, could get a little streaky with
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the driver, but a pretty good ball striker.
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And you'll see that lead wrist, he got a little off with his arc width, so that
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's where he could get a little bit inconsistent, but
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the lead wrist is going into extension there during the early part of the down
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swing.
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So even though the trail wrist is going into extension, the lead wrist is going
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into extension as well.
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Now he, as compared to that tour pro, we saw who was opening it, the wrist aren
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't that different.
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So if I scroll back, you'll see lead wrist going into extension, trail wrist
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going into extension.
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A little bit of shallowing on both sides, but
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primarily the extension is the big piece. You'll see similar looking wrist
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grafts and very different axial velocity graphs.
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It's because of the difference of what's happening at the shoulders and what's
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happening at the body.
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This golfer has more of a kind of flexion upper body
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lunge or dive type pattern. So he gets up to the top of the swing and his upper
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body really goes down
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and that will tend to
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help close the face. So even though he shallows it a good bit, you can see this
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model is lowering
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two and a half inches and he's really going into flexion early with his trunk.
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So it's that movement of the upper body kind of covering the ball that helps
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close the face.
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So one of the ways that many amateur golfers close the face is not so much with
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the independent wrist movement.
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They do it more with a dropping down or lowering of their body.
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And the ones you don't, the ones who really stand up tend to open the face up
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even more and then
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kind of look more like this pattern. So the club gets really open and then has
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to slam shut fast
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late. So this golfer is extending the wrist but he's also flexing the trail
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wrist. So it's possible
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that I haven't seen that combination produce a more of a gradual curve. Oops,
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you can't see the
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mouse. I haven't seen that combination create more of a gradual curve. So
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typically if both wrists are
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rotating open the face doesn't matter what you do with the body, the face is
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going to open. And so
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now we'll watch that one. So this is kind of more of a classic get really steep
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.
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And actually I take that back, I forgot why I put this one in. He's actually
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flexing the
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leader is so he's doing a little bit of closing of the face with that leader is
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but the trail
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wrist was opening the face. We could find out down the road that perhaps this
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has to do with grip
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pressure and which hand is actually moving the club and which hand is just
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moving in response to
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the other moving. But you can see that his lead wrist does flex which should
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close the face but
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you'll see that he goes into more of a stand up move so he doesn't have a
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really big flexion move
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and that right shoulder or the right hand goes into more of a flexion move as
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well which opens
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the face. So well I think you can get a good sense by looking at video. I did
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want you to see on
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this with this graph, there's a little bit more interpretation than just
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looking at the movement
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of the wrist to see what's happening at the club. But if you start trying to
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look in transition at
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the orientation of the club compared to the shaft, you might get a little bit
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better at being able
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to read this. The key takeaway here is to look at the movement of the club not
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just the movement
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of the wrist. There are more things that influence the motorcycle than just the
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lead wrist flexion.
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That's definitely one of the big common ones but this last golfer showed a
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little bit going this
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way but still getting kind of steep and opening it more like this. So the
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influence of the shoulders,
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the influence of the posture, basically anything that rotates the club down
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that way is going to
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help close it, anything that can see me doing any that. So again the wrist will
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have the biggest
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influence but the body position, the shoulders, everything that rotates the
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club down that way
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can help close it and everything that would rotate it more this way can help
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open it. And what I see
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on 3D is that the more consistent golfers tend to have more of a gradual
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closing where
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the less consistent golfers tend to go really open and then slam it shut away.
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Okay so now on to the SI joint. So the SI joint is
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and yeah it looks like I'm having some issues with the the live stream so I'm
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recording this and
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we'll get it up on the site and you'll still be able to watch it and if you
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have any questions
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submit them and hopefully I can figure out what the heck went wrong this
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morning before the
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the next one in a few weeks. Okay so the SI joint is where the spine meets the
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the legs
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through the pelvis. So here we have the pelvis you can see it on the skeleton.
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This is the sacrum
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here and then these are the two ilium or the um you know basically what you
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feel as your pelvis.
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Now the the legs standing on the ground all that force wants to push the iliums
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up. Oops you can't see
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me. Okay so you've got the two ilium on the side and then these are the legs.
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The legs want to
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push the ilium up but the spine and everything up above it wants to fall down.
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So these these two
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want to kind of move past each other but there's a really intricate complex
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joint that manages how
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those forces work. The two like what keeps the pressure what keeps the the
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joint functioning is
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what's referred to as form and force closure. So essentially I've got the yoga
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block we'll
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use later. So form closure is basically the geometric structure so you can see
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here that this is
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basically sitting on there so as this pushes up and this pushes down that
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creates a tight
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junction. The next would be force closure so now there's nothing underneath
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holding it but I'm
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applying some pressure this way that is keeping this from falling. In the
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actual
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SI joint there's a little bit of both. There's some there's a little bit of an
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angle.
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The sacrum is shaped like this and the ilium are as well so this is kind of if
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it it's like a wedge
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kind of falling down. So over on the far right where you see SI stability you
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've got that
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that angle and then there's tons of ligaments and some muscles that are
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applying the tension
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which is creating the force closure. So essentially you've got form closure
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from the shape of the
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joint. We'll look at that a little bit in more detail because these are it's a
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it's a complicated
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joint. It's very tricky but and it's a common source of back pain and it's a
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common source of
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abdominal dysfunction. So if you have a hard time transferring energy from your
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legs using your
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glutes using your abs there's a chance that this is out of order. And then
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force closure is the
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compression caused from both the body weight and the ligaments and the big
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muscles in that area.
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We'll look at that a little bit more as well. All right so I'll actually move
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that down a little bit.
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So we're going to look at the movement here. I reordered it. All right so we'll
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look at that
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here in a second. Okay so if I jump back up this is kind of a rough kind of
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schematic of the body
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weight of the pelvis is going down and pushing through this joint and the the
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force coming up from
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the ground is going up and these arrows are kind of all meeting and creating
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this harmony where the
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forces from above and the forces from below are balanced in this really elegant
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structure.
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Kind of here's another image of it. So looking at it more from face-on
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because the interesting thing is it's actually shaped like this where the pel
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vis, the pubic
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synthesis is way in front of the sacrum so you've got forces being managed in
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this kind of complicated
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3D structure. And there's a lot of muscles at play. I'm going to keep
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referencing various
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muscles. I recommend just kind of pulling out an anatomy book and studying it a
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little bit
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because what you'll see is there's a lot of little small important movements
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going on.
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In fact if you want to look at what the spine is doing rotation-wise, getting
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an idea as far as
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what the sacrum is doing is a good place to look. Now one of the hard things is
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some of these
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movements are really small so therefore it's impossible to get their
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measurements on a 3D system.
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You get more of a global movement, not these little small micro movements.
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So we've got all these muscles influencing how the SI joint is functioning and
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how the hip skin
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function but we also have a ton of ligaments. So this is what the pelvis looks
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like if you strip
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away the skin roughly. There's some really big important ligaments. We're going
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to talk primarily
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about these ones up here called the ileolumbar ligaments. There are two of them
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, they go from
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L4 and L5 to the ilea or the pelvis. So it looks, here's that ileolumbar lig
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ament up here and we'll
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you'll see some when I get to the animation of being able to show you how this
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movement looks.
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You'll see why that's such a common source of pain. Now these ligaments, if you
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've ever
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had an ankle sprain you know how painful that can be. Well these ligaments in
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your back can
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basically get mild sprains or severe sprains and that's one of the main causes
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of back pain.
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And so having exercises like the aldoa or therapies where they can pump these
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ligaments
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is really helpful for golfers experiencing lower back pain. If you can reach
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down and kind of touch
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it right on the point of where your pelvis or your lower back is, the PSIS, it
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's a good chance
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that pain is originating from the SI joint being a little out of sorts. Because
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in addition to
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all those muscles and ligaments you can see that there's a large number of
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these yellow things
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or nerves. So there's some really important ligaments. If they get tight they
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can pinch
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on the nerves and then the brain sends a signal of pain. So here's the ileolumb
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ar ligaments
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from in front. That's the main one we're going to talk about today. And then
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from the back you
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can see it over here. Now one of the or two of the common muscles that are also
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influenced in
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this lower back pain especially like sciatica are the piriformis and the obtur
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ator internus muscle.
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If these two get really tight you can see that there's a really big nerve
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adjacent to them and
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that can get impinged and create a whole lot of pain. So that's one of the more
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common
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muscles I teach people how to stretch when we're doing when anyone has a pelvic
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issue.
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Piriformis obturator internus. There are some big muscles that help with the
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force closure.
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Glute maximus, the hamstring and the glute medius. We'll talk about it when we
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look at
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gait here in a few slides. But basically in order to move you need to create a
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fixed point.
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So you're either going to have a fixed point at the spine and then the leg can
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move or you're
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going to have a fixed point at the leg and then the spine moves. We'll see how
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these muscles
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kind of help coordinate that depending on if they are the fixed point or the
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open side.
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Alright so here I'll actually jump this one up. So I said it was a complicated
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joint. We'll see
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about when we look at the structure but essentially there are different axes
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that that bone can move
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on. The givoie who I study from he talks about 22 different axes of rotation
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but this one is
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just talking about it's not including the verticals or the APs but the two
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while there are many kind
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of pathologic axes there's really only two movement axes or two traditional
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axes and those are the
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the right oblique and the left oblique. So the right oblique goes from the
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right side here to the
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lower left and the left oblique goes from the upper left to the bottom right.
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We'll we'll see
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why they're called that here in a second. But those are the main sources of
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movement. So basically
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if I have just kind of a book that sacrum is kind of sitting like this in
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between the two
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filia. It moves either on this axis here this would be the from my point of
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view this would be the
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right oblique axis and then this would be the left oblique axis. So basically
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the upper side
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will be the name of the axis but they go diagonally from one side to the other.
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There's two main axes of rotation and what that does is it creates when you're
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walking it creates
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this rotation side bend rotation side bend that kind of helps create this
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movement. I've got an
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animation we'll look at here in a second but this is actually let me use this
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one. Okay so this is
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looking at the sacrum but now we're looking at a side view. So you're basically
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looking at this
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part of the sacrum. So through the pelvis into the sacrum there and you'll see
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that there's
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this kind of L shape or almost ear shaped joint. So the joint is kind of in
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this L shape like this
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and the the movement kind of follows the rails. In atomically they call this
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the lesser arm and
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then this the greater arm and the greater arm is more horizontal but it's
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longer the lesser arm is
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more vertical but it's shorter and then the middle in between those is called
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the isthmus.
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So you'll see that actually where is this? Here we go. Okay so here's that look
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of the
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joint or the you've got the lesser arm and the greater arm. Here's a little top
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ography map showing
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that it's it's kind of convexed. So they basically sit in each other like half
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of a tennis ball
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inside of another one. So then they kind of have this like sliding rotating
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movement but they stay
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on this rail. When it gets out of the rail you're going to have a lot of pain.
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That's why it's
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one of the common sources because there you saw how big those muscles are.
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While there's a lot
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of force closure or form closure it is possible to get those either from trauma
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or overuse or
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imbalance. You can get it where that is no longer sitting in flush and now it's
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kind of sitting crooked
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like that and you're going to get some extra friction and somewhere in pain
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patterns.
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So here's just kind of like a this is the ilius side of looking at that L and
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basically
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you could imagine if those two were going to follow down the rail there would
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be some rotation to it.
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And so when you see this you can see that basically as this curves this points
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more down but it's
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rotating roughly around kind of the middle of the bone and so the that joint is
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following almost
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like a C shape type movement like that. And then when it goes more vertical
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this one now goes up
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it goes more like that. So that's the classic movement it's on a slight angle
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kind of going
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like this but also kind of teeter tottering like that. So here's the animation
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that I was
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talking about. If we look at it from behind and I'll play this a couple times
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if you look at it from
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behind you can see that the sacrum is kind of rotating like this and then the
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ilius is rotating
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like that. So what's happening the sacrum goes like this and the ilium rotates
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behind it and on the
383
00:25:17.760 --> 00:25:23.570
other side the the ilium is rotating around so they're kind of going like this.
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Now if you watch
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that again the reason I talked about those ilio lumbar ligaments is if you
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watch the lower these
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last two vertebrae because they're tied by these ligaments they follow the
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movement of the the ilia
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or the pelvis while the sacrum is going in the opposite direction. That's one
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of the reasons why
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this area takes such a beating especially if it's out of alignment because you
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00:25:51.110 --> 00:25:52.480
have some natural
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00:25:52.480 --> 00:25:57.420
shearing due to the movement of the ligaments there. So if you also have like
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00:25:57.420 --> 00:25:58.640
translations like
395
00:25:58.640 --> 00:26:03.890
it's not sitting level it's kind of sitting more like this then you're really
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00:26:03.890 --> 00:26:06.080
asking for for problems.
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00:26:08.240 --> 00:26:12.360
So here they kind of separate it so you can see the movements independently it
398
00:26:12.360 --> 00:26:12.880
's kind of a cool
399
00:26:12.880 --> 00:26:19.060
look. Although they stopped L4 L5 from moving in this particular model but you
400
00:26:19.060 --> 00:26:20.880
can see at least
401
00:26:20.880 --> 00:26:26.480
so as it moves that way the ilia gets pulled back because the movement of the
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00:26:26.480 --> 00:26:27.600
sacrum and the
403
00:26:27.600 --> 00:26:34.880
lumbar vertebra rotate with the ilia. So if the pelvic floor is out of order if
404
00:26:36.560 --> 00:26:42.000
you've got digestive issues that can pull the pelvis out of order urologically
405
00:26:42.000 --> 00:26:43.360
issues like
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00:26:43.360 --> 00:26:50.970
everything down in this area is tightly connected. So whether it's digestion or
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00:26:50.970 --> 00:26:52.400
kidneys or bladder
408
00:26:52.400 --> 00:26:58.730
or sex organs like all of that stuff can create dysfunction and that
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00:26:58.730 --> 00:27:00.640
dysfunction creates an
410
00:27:00.640 --> 00:27:06.430
imbalance in the pelvis and then they don't want to move their pelvis correctly
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00:27:06.430 --> 00:27:08.160
. So this is where
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00:27:08.160 --> 00:27:14.320
some of the kind of advanced testing and discussing at least in the gym can
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00:27:14.320 --> 00:27:17.280
help identify how much of
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00:27:17.280 --> 00:27:22.600
these patterns are going to really be able to change. But what will usually
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00:27:22.600 --> 00:27:24.320
happen is we mentioned
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00:27:24.320 --> 00:27:30.050
that there's this form and force closer. Typically golfers will stand or put
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00:27:30.050 --> 00:27:31.600
more pressure into the
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00:27:31.600 --> 00:27:36.350
unstable side. So if you're naturally unstable on one side let's say my right
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00:27:36.350 --> 00:27:37.520
side is a little bit
420
00:27:37.520 --> 00:27:42.700
wonky I will stand and put more pressure into that right side. So if I have a
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00:27:42.700 --> 00:27:43.840
golfer who has a
422
00:27:43.840 --> 00:27:47.810
really hard time getting into their left side they might struggle with fat thin
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00:27:47.810 --> 00:27:48.400
contact with
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00:27:48.400 --> 00:27:54.210
their wedges creating too much axis tilt or they might just struggle with thin
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00:27:54.210 --> 00:27:55.280
contact and hooking
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00:27:55.280 --> 00:27:59.630
the ball because they can't quite get into that left side. Looking at the SI
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00:27:59.630 --> 00:28:00.800
joint looking at the
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00:28:00.800 --> 00:28:05.740
core function looking at trying to get the pelvis balanced maybe one of the big
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reasons why.
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Okay so as I said didn't have any questions come in this month but or at least
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not from the
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00:28:17.600 --> 00:28:23.680
the coaches. So I prepared a couple more kind of case studies and little things
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00:28:23.680 --> 00:28:24.480
that you can do
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00:28:24.480 --> 00:28:30.080
experimenting with your students. And right now I'm running a program of kind
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00:28:30.080 --> 00:28:30.720
of getting ready
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00:28:30.720 --> 00:28:38.880
for tournaments. So we were talking about aiming the shotgun. Now basically
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00:28:38.880 --> 00:28:40.320
what I mean by that is
438
00:28:40.320 --> 00:28:46.300
if you've got you know this is a scott faucet phrase of that we're shooting a
439
00:28:46.300 --> 00:28:47.440
shotgun not a
440
00:28:47.440 --> 00:28:51.240
rifle you basically want to take your your average shot and play for that not
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00:28:51.240 --> 00:28:52.400
necessarily play for
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00:28:52.400 --> 00:28:58.890
your best shot. So one game that I have students do is we'll we'll hit 10 or 20
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00:28:58.890 --> 00:29:00.080
shots at the same
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00:29:00.080 --> 00:29:04.950
target and just track where they finish offline. Usually I teach them on the
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00:29:04.950 --> 00:29:05.920
range to use like
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00:29:05.920 --> 00:29:10.880
aim point like finger system so and they'll just write it down so it might be
447
00:29:10.880 --> 00:29:11.920
you know this ball
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00:29:11.920 --> 00:29:16.640
was one finger right three fingers left two fingers left and at the end of 20
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00:29:16.640 --> 00:29:17.200
you get kind
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00:29:17.200 --> 00:29:24.320
of an average distribution. Now I had a this was I was just showing them about
451
00:29:24.320 --> 00:29:26.400
okay the about the
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00:29:26.400 --> 00:29:36.070
scatter plot. So this was me I hit 27 irons for just before class April so a
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00:29:36.070 --> 00:29:37.760
little bit ago.
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00:29:37.760 --> 00:29:43.600
Now wait this was March that's like the data I was looking at or printed off
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00:29:43.600 --> 00:29:44.480
the or took a picture
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00:29:44.480 --> 00:29:49.820
for you guys. But basically this is a normal distribution where the shots of
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00:29:49.820 --> 00:29:50.880
the right typically
458
00:29:50.880 --> 00:29:53.940
come up a little short because the club faces a little open the shots to the
459
00:29:53.940 --> 00:29:54.880
left typically go a
460
00:29:54.880 --> 00:30:00.120
little long so you get this pattern here. Now this is five yard increments and
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00:30:00.120 --> 00:30:01.600
then these are 15.
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00:30:01.600 --> 00:30:07.860
So you'll see with mine about 50 percent of the shots are within five yards to
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00:30:07.860 --> 00:30:09.040
the right five
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00:30:09.040 --> 00:30:15.970
yards to the left with a little bias to the left. So I for me it might be risky
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00:30:15.970 --> 00:30:16.880
if I'm aiming
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00:30:16.880 --> 00:30:22.370
my seven iron at a place where I don't have two fingers to the left of where I
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00:30:22.370 --> 00:30:23.120
'm aiming
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00:30:23.120 --> 00:30:28.190
or one finger to the right. That's kind of how I would use this this approach.
469
00:30:28.190 --> 00:30:30.160
But anyway so that's
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00:30:30.160 --> 00:30:34.510
fun for helping golfers figure out where they need to aim. Now my normal pads
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somewhere around
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three or four degrees in out with a club face that's about half that so every
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00:30:38.970 --> 00:30:40.080
one of these has a nice
474
00:30:40.080 --> 00:30:44.750
little draw these shots over here just the push where it doesn't draw but none
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00:30:44.750 --> 00:30:45.280
of them
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00:30:45.280 --> 00:30:50.150
and kind of faded and then this would be more the overdraws or the face gets a
477
00:30:50.150 --> 00:30:51.280
little bit too closed.
478
00:30:52.080 --> 00:31:00.000
Now I said that I had a student who wanted to do this but missed the class so
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00:31:00.000 --> 00:31:00.800
for the makeup he
480
00:31:00.800 --> 00:31:08.720
came in and we did it on track man. Now I've talked about this in in a few
481
00:31:08.720 --> 00:31:09.360
videos and I've
482
00:31:09.360 --> 00:31:12.560
talked about it kind of theoretically but this was really cool to see because
483
00:31:12.560 --> 00:31:14.000
this was a practical
484
00:31:14.000 --> 00:31:18.720
application of it. This golfer he's got a little bit of a scoop a little bit of
485
00:31:18.720 --> 00:31:20.160
a flip he's got a
486
00:31:20.160 --> 00:31:27.280
really straight path so for 10 swings his average path was 0.5. Now because
487
00:31:27.280 --> 00:31:30.560
this the club face or
488
00:31:30.560 --> 00:31:35.430
sorry because the path was very straight you'll see uh actually I'll switch
489
00:31:35.430 --> 00:31:36.800
over here. So because
490
00:31:36.800 --> 00:31:41.700
the club face was very straight you will see that he has very few shots that
491
00:31:41.700 --> 00:31:43.360
finish within five
492
00:31:43.360 --> 00:31:50.310
yards of his target most of them are either 10 to 15 left or 10 to 15 right. So
493
00:31:50.310 --> 00:31:50.720
this is the
494
00:31:50.720 --> 00:31:55.590
danger of when your path gets too straight you end up having a hard time um
495
00:31:55.590 --> 00:31:56.800
aiming your shotgun
496
00:31:56.800 --> 00:32:01.070
because you have equally big misses to the right and the left so you should
497
00:32:01.070 --> 00:32:02.240
just anticipate that
498
00:32:02.240 --> 00:32:07.840
the majority of the time the ball's not going to go where you aim and that can
499
00:32:07.840 --> 00:32:09.280
be challenging for
500
00:32:09.280 --> 00:32:15.920
a lot of golfers to think their way through. So that was with us uh 9 iron when
501
00:32:15.920 --> 00:32:17.200
we did this in class
502
00:32:17.200 --> 00:32:25.200
we did uh because the course here is a little shorter we did um 125 150 and 100
503
00:32:25.200 --> 00:32:26.640
so I had him do
504
00:32:26.640 --> 00:32:33.180
9 iron which was kind of his 125 club and then 7 iron is 150 club had pretty
505
00:32:33.180 --> 00:32:34.080
much the same
506
00:32:34.080 --> 00:32:39.220
distribution and had it even straighter path his problem. Now he says hey I'm a
507
00:32:39.220 --> 00:32:40.160
pretty good wedge
508
00:32:40.160 --> 00:32:45.020
player you can see there's a lot more here in the middle for his wedge and his
509
00:32:45.020 --> 00:32:46.000
club path was 4
510
00:32:46.000 --> 00:32:50.410
degrees into out. He also said I have a totally different pattern but I'm a
511
00:32:50.410 --> 00:32:52.080
more consistent driver
512
00:32:52.080 --> 00:32:57.600
and yes you will see that he has more he did have a few hot pulls uh kind of
513
00:32:57.600 --> 00:32:58.400
early on
514
00:32:58.400 --> 00:33:05.390
but more of his shots are within kind of that middle zone and he had a 10
515
00:33:05.390 --> 00:33:06.880
degree outside in
516
00:33:06.880 --> 00:33:10.310
swing direction or a 5 degree outside end path because he hits way down on the
517
00:33:10.310 --> 00:33:10.720
driver.
518
00:33:10.720 --> 00:33:18.960
So this is you know it's one example but I have found that golfers who get too
519
00:33:18.960 --> 00:33:19.680
straight
520
00:33:19.680 --> 00:33:24.880
will tend to have this um no man's land zone at the actual target and they
521
00:33:24.880 --> 00:33:26.080
either have a
522
00:33:26.080 --> 00:33:31.080
predominant miss or their misses will tend to kind of create this void right
523
00:33:31.080 --> 00:33:31.440
where they
524
00:33:31.440 --> 00:33:35.160
would aim and they have to prepare for it's hard to hit it close to the target
525
00:33:35.160 --> 00:33:36.080
unless they get
526
00:33:36.080 --> 00:33:41.650
really lucky. So if you're helping your golfers kind of get you understand
527
00:33:41.650 --> 00:33:43.200
where they should aim
528
00:33:43.200 --> 00:33:46.960
this is a a good way to approach that topic.
529
00:33:52.000 --> 00:33:58.800
Okay so now I've got um a couple case studies from the week and then we'll look
530
00:33:58.800 --> 00:33:59.680
at a couple
531
00:33:59.680 --> 00:34:05.120
swings that were submitted and we'll talk about shanking the wall. All right so
532
00:34:05.120 --> 00:34:07.360
here's a student
533
00:34:07.360 --> 00:34:14.720
he actually had a big breakthrough this week following this lesson he broke 80
534
00:34:14.720 --> 00:34:15.040
for the first
535
00:34:15.040 --> 00:34:22.080
time he did it back to back 79. You'll see that on the way down he's got a lot
536
00:34:22.080 --> 00:34:23.280
of early extension
537
00:34:23.280 --> 00:34:28.700
everything is finishing very vertical. So we've done stuff working on the
538
00:34:28.700 --> 00:34:29.680
release we've done
539
00:34:29.680 --> 00:34:35.180
stuff working on transition. This time we went after more side bend so one of
540
00:34:35.180 --> 00:34:37.040
the big causes of
541
00:34:37.040 --> 00:34:40.940
early extension or contributors to early extension is lack of side bend to the
542
00:34:40.940 --> 00:34:41.280
spine.
543
00:34:42.000 --> 00:34:48.160
And so if I go back to where he was this is what I showed him
544
00:34:48.160 --> 00:34:56.970
so there's this little trigger as he goes through boom so you'll see that there
545
00:34:56.970 --> 00:34:57.760
's very little
546
00:34:57.760 --> 00:35:03.000
side bend to the right with his spine he's got it more up in his shoulders and
547
00:35:03.000 --> 00:35:03.440
neck
548
00:35:03.440 --> 00:35:11.040
and the pelvis is pretty level. So that's usually going to create the look of
549
00:35:11.040 --> 00:35:11.600
the
550
00:35:11.600 --> 00:35:16.480
early extension. So then we talked about side bending from the spine he did it
551
00:35:16.480 --> 00:35:16.880
a little bit
552
00:35:16.880 --> 00:35:23.460
too much from the upper body and he hasn't figured out okay if that if the body
553
00:35:23.460 --> 00:35:23.840
's there
554
00:35:23.840 --> 00:35:27.600
what do my arms have to do differently. So we just ran the same arm program he
555
00:35:27.600 --> 00:35:28.080
was used to
556
00:35:28.080 --> 00:35:34.960
with the stand up and as a result you'll see this is a fun first rep
557
00:35:37.680 --> 00:35:42.870
where it bottoms out there and then actually swings up and over the golf ball.
558
00:35:42.870 --> 00:35:43.840
But the good
559
00:35:43.840 --> 00:35:47.510
news is this is a golfer who normally hits lots of pop-ups so he was kind of
560
00:35:47.510 --> 00:35:48.400
encouraged to
561
00:35:48.400 --> 00:35:55.260
to be so shallow he missed. So after working through a little bit more of the
562
00:35:55.260 --> 00:35:56.080
side bend move
563
00:35:56.080 --> 00:36:00.480
we worked a little bit on making sure the club wasn't so far from the inside
564
00:36:00.480 --> 00:36:01.360
when he had the side
565
00:36:01.360 --> 00:36:08.240
bend so changing the arm path just a little bit and changing the amount of body
566
00:36:08.240 --> 00:36:09.600
rotation so while
567
00:36:09.600 --> 00:36:14.990
he has some good side bend there he's really closed compared to the golf ball.
568
00:36:14.990 --> 00:36:17.120
So again this
569
00:36:17.120 --> 00:36:25.770
was still going up but you can see he was very encouraged and like I said after
570
00:36:25.770 --> 00:36:26.640
we worked through
571
00:36:26.640 --> 00:36:31.500
that lesson we went out on grass so we could see where the club was bottoming
572
00:36:31.500 --> 00:36:32.160
out but he was
573
00:36:32.160 --> 00:36:37.160
much able he was able to retain that spine angle a whole lot longer and when we
574
00:36:37.160 --> 00:36:38.080
cleaned up the
575
00:36:38.080 --> 00:36:43.360
sequence and the timing he had one of his best rounds ever for some break in 80
576
00:36:43.360 --> 00:36:45.520
. They don't all
577
00:36:45.520 --> 00:36:52.570
go that way but okay so here's a new student he's a member of the site so he
578
00:36:52.570 --> 00:36:54.480
had already worked a
579
00:36:54.480 --> 00:37:01.680
little bit on some shawling and some anti-flip stuff but I'm not too worried
580
00:37:01.680 --> 00:37:02.320
about what we
581
00:37:02.320 --> 00:37:07.190
the face on means a whitewash because we're really focusing on it down the line
582
00:37:07.190 --> 00:37:08.640
and we'll
583
00:37:08.640 --> 00:37:13.950
see there's a couple things as far as the body standing up and the arms getting
584
00:37:13.950 --> 00:37:15.680
fully extended at
585
00:37:15.680 --> 00:37:22.080
impact that tend to cause the impact to go way out to the right and cause his
586
00:37:22.080 --> 00:37:23.520
most troublesome
587
00:37:23.520 --> 00:37:35.200
ness of the pull up. So then we did a free setting side bend move and then tried
588
00:37:35.200 --> 00:37:36.560
to rotate through
589
00:37:36.560 --> 00:37:41.420
and you'll see how just by doing that side bend and then delaying the timing of
590
00:37:41.420 --> 00:37:42.000
the rotation
591
00:37:42.000 --> 00:37:47.280
he was able to get into a much better looking follow through position. So I'm
592
00:37:47.280 --> 00:37:48.240
pausing here I just
593
00:37:48.240 --> 00:37:53.360
wanted these two case studies I was using I wanted you'll see how it relates to
594
00:37:53.360 --> 00:37:54.480
the shank video that
595
00:37:54.480 --> 00:37:58.880
we're going to look at later but I wanted you to see how side bend or axis tilt
596
00:37:58.880 --> 00:38:01.040
more side bend
597
00:38:01.040 --> 00:38:06.670
than axis tilt can help influence early extension it also has a big influence
598
00:38:06.670 --> 00:38:07.680
on the ability to
599
00:38:07.680 --> 00:38:16.920
keep that trail arm bent longer. Now he wasn't able to coordinate ground
600
00:38:16.920 --> 00:38:17.840
contact and figured out how
601
00:38:17.840 --> 00:38:22.710
to work his the release stuff into it yet but overall the pivot definitely
602
00:38:22.710 --> 00:38:23.440
improved.
603
00:38:23.440 --> 00:38:35.620
So then the work the timing of the release we got the feel of that side bend
604
00:38:35.620 --> 00:38:36.400
and then just did
605
00:38:36.400 --> 00:38:41.360
the push ball drill to feel the arms kind of extend later and later
606
00:38:41.360 --> 00:38:50.740
and then this was kind of the combo of putting it together so a little bit of
607
00:38:50.740 --> 00:38:52.320
side bend and then
608
00:38:52.320 --> 00:38:58.450
feeling the push ball on the way through. So while we ended in kind of more of
609
00:38:58.450 --> 00:39:00.480
a step release drill
610
00:39:00.480 --> 00:39:04.040
it was way better than any of the release drills he was doing beforehand and
611
00:39:04.040 --> 00:39:04.720
that was because we
612
00:39:04.720 --> 00:39:10.000
used the side bend and basically staying in the posture to help coordinate the
613
00:39:10.000 --> 00:39:10.800
arm timing you
614
00:39:10.800 --> 00:39:13.400
had already been practicing or the arm movements you had already been
615
00:39:13.400 --> 00:39:14.000
practicing.
616
00:39:14.000 --> 00:39:24.330
Okay so hopefully that gets your brain thinking about loss of posture and early
617
00:39:24.330 --> 00:39:24.720
extension.
618
00:39:24.720 --> 00:39:32.160
Here was a swing submitted from one of our coaches and he was talking about his
619
00:39:32.160 --> 00:39:32.560
student
620
00:39:32.560 --> 00:39:38.090
struggling with early extension and shanking the ball. So I'm going to walk you
621
00:39:38.090 --> 00:39:38.800
through some of my
622
00:39:38.800 --> 00:39:49.200
favorite stuff and we'll look at this here on the actual analyzer. So usually
623
00:39:49.200 --> 00:39:51.040
there's not a ton
624
00:39:51.040 --> 00:39:57.050
with the face on view as far as how it relates to shanking the ball. This was a
625
00:39:57.050 --> 00:39:59.120
little better
626
00:39:59.120 --> 00:40:04.240
because it was high speed. This was him doing a K vest. All right let me pull
627
00:40:04.240 --> 00:40:05.520
up the analyzer.
628
00:40:05.520 --> 00:40:12.960
Okay hold on.
629
00:40:12.960 --> 00:40:25.520
Okay so hopefully you can let's pull up those two down the line.
630
00:40:29.440 --> 00:40:35.760
Okay so
631
00:40:35.760 --> 00:40:46.480
so we can see the early extension and even though this was a decent strike we
632
00:40:46.480 --> 00:40:49.200
'll talk about why
633
00:40:49.200 --> 00:40:54.000
he would have trouble shanking the wall and what's apparent in that movement.
634
00:40:55.040 --> 00:41:01.680
So here's working on staying down in his posture with his early extension.
635
00:41:01.680 --> 00:41:06.880
So he does a better job of staying down and you can see this wasn't a shank but
636
00:41:06.880 --> 00:41:07.520
man is that
637
00:41:07.520 --> 00:41:12.390
flirting with shanking. You can see the hosel is right out by the golf ball he
638
00:41:12.390 --> 00:41:13.200
hit that just a few
639
00:41:13.200 --> 00:41:20.080
millimeters away from the heel there. Okay so one of the things that I'll do
640
00:41:21.440 --> 00:41:25.480
basically this falls in my mind this falls into the category of low point
641
00:41:25.480 --> 00:41:26.000
control.
642
00:41:26.000 --> 00:41:29.600
This golfer is unaware of where the club is bottoming out.
643
00:41:29.600 --> 00:41:34.790
So what I'm going to do we're going to look at it a couple different ways. I'm
644
00:41:34.790 --> 00:41:35.200
going to draw
645
00:41:35.200 --> 00:41:40.070
some reference lines. When I'm talking to the students I'm going to talk to
646
00:41:40.070 --> 00:41:42.240
them about well
647
00:41:42.240 --> 00:41:45.840
there's two ways to shank it either the club face is coming in wildly open or
648
00:41:46.560 --> 00:41:52.300
the hosel is like the club is too far away from you. It's moving that way. It's
649
00:41:52.300 --> 00:41:53.440
not fat, thin,
650
00:41:53.440 --> 00:42:02.160
it's moving too far away from you. So then what I'll do is I'll take it up and
651
00:42:02.160 --> 00:42:04.240
I put that one line
652
00:42:07.040 --> 00:42:16.800
it's running a tiny bit slow there we go. Okay so the camera moves it's not
653
00:42:16.800 --> 00:42:18.560
quite on a tripod
654
00:42:18.560 --> 00:42:22.800
this one might be a little bit better. Yeah so this looks like it's on a tripod
655
00:42:22.800 --> 00:42:23.840
so now
656
00:42:23.840 --> 00:42:34.800
nothing's moving but as a result of his swing pattern his hands get much closer
657
00:42:34.800 --> 00:42:36.320
to the golf ball
658
00:42:36.320 --> 00:42:40.960
then where they were at start that means that in order to not hit the hosel he
659
00:42:40.960 --> 00:42:41.440
would have to
660
00:42:41.440 --> 00:42:47.330
raise them higher to pick up that slack. When he starts staying down in his
661
00:42:47.330 --> 00:42:48.640
posture the hands
662
00:42:48.640 --> 00:42:55.010
move out in the club head follow suit in order to not hit it fat he's gonna sh
663
00:42:55.010 --> 00:42:56.320
ank the ball. So
664
00:42:56.320 --> 00:43:03.050
now there's a couple main questions I would have the student think through. One
665
00:43:03.050 --> 00:43:04.400
would be is your
666
00:43:04.400 --> 00:43:07.600
upper body moving closer to the golf ball. Nope his is actually moving further
667
00:43:07.600 --> 00:43:07.920
away.
668
00:43:07.920 --> 00:43:15.700
Is the pelvis moving in closer to the golf ball? Yes his is moving a bit closer
669
00:43:15.700 --> 00:43:16.640
to the golf ball so
670
00:43:16.640 --> 00:43:20.300
weight distribution might be one way to control this but then I would talk
671
00:43:20.300 --> 00:43:21.120
about well what are
672
00:43:21.120 --> 00:43:25.150
some of the other factors and I would talk about the shoulder movement either
673
00:43:25.150 --> 00:43:26.720
moving the hands out
674
00:43:26.720 --> 00:43:33.790
or the in his case left arm straightening too much too soon. So what I would
675
00:43:33.790 --> 00:43:35.520
normally do is I would
676
00:43:35.520 --> 00:43:41.930
then work on trying to get more aware of where the ground contact was. So that
677
00:43:41.930 --> 00:43:43.760
would look.
678
00:43:52.160 --> 00:43:57.710
I'll pull them up here in a second. I don't think I, maybe I put them in the
679
00:43:57.710 --> 00:43:58.800
analyzer.
680
00:43:58.800 --> 00:44:06.320
Okay I will pull them up here in a second but there's two different,
681
00:44:06.320 --> 00:44:11.680
we'll go back to the analyzers. There's two different things that I would do.
682
00:44:15.520 --> 00:44:23.760
I would, I've got the yoga block here. First I'd just help him be aware of the
683
00:44:23.760 --> 00:44:24.560
space so I would
684
00:44:24.560 --> 00:44:29.560
probably put either the shank gate or because he's on a mat. I would put a yoga
685
00:44:29.560 --> 00:44:31.520
block right here
686
00:44:31.520 --> 00:44:40.390
and then if he was to do that same swing you could see coming into the golf
687
00:44:40.390 --> 00:44:41.680
ball it would be very
688
00:44:41.680 --> 00:44:46.990
close and might catch the yoga block when he actually shanks it. Like in this
689
00:44:46.990 --> 00:44:48.400
one over here
690
00:44:48.400 --> 00:44:54.800
it would actually probably hit it. The other thing I might do I have a pull
691
00:44:54.800 --> 00:44:55.520
noodle on the
692
00:44:55.520 --> 00:45:00.530
end of a stick and I would put the, I would stand in front of him holding the
693
00:45:00.530 --> 00:45:02.080
stick this way and
694
00:45:02.080 --> 00:45:05.540
basically not letting his hands get closer to the golf ball and just asking him
695
00:45:05.540 --> 00:45:06.320
well how was he
696
00:45:06.320 --> 00:45:11.190
controlling it. The whole goal is to figure out how to control the weight of
697
00:45:11.190 --> 00:45:11.920
the club or
698
00:45:11.920 --> 00:45:19.440
in his case where his hands are and I would start with 3D space but the goal is
699
00:45:19.440 --> 00:45:20.080
to get it down to
700
00:45:20.080 --> 00:45:25.870
ground contact. So then I take my, my face spray and I would put two lines on
701
00:45:25.870 --> 00:45:26.960
the ground. I call
702
00:45:26.960 --> 00:45:31.360
it a bowling alley and I say I, I want you to hit gutter balls on the inside
703
00:45:31.360 --> 00:45:33.520
lane. So basically
704
00:45:33.520 --> 00:45:38.650
he would set up to a golf ball in the middle of that bowling alley and I'd say
705
00:45:38.650 --> 00:45:39.600
and I'd challenge
706
00:45:39.600 --> 00:45:44.950
him to make ground contact and make the divots over on this side not on that
707
00:45:44.950 --> 00:45:47.600
side because basically
708
00:45:47.600 --> 00:45:53.790
when he's coming through he would, when he shanks it he would be making ground
709
00:45:53.790 --> 00:45:54.560
contact
710
00:45:54.560 --> 00:46:03.530
too far away. So that, that's a couple go-tos. I'll pull them into the power
711
00:46:03.530 --> 00:46:05.040
point when I upload it
712
00:46:05.040 --> 00:46:12.400
but I've pictures of those two drills that I use very, very often. So I've
713
00:46:12.400 --> 00:46:14.160
actually got
714
00:46:15.680 --> 00:46:23.520
here's one example with our new overhead camera looking at how this shank thing
715
00:46:23.520 --> 00:46:26.080
works. So if I
716
00:46:26.080 --> 00:46:32.590
go up to the top I think I frame by frame it towards the end. Okay so you can
717
00:46:32.590 --> 00:46:33.920
see over here
718
00:46:33.920 --> 00:46:43.360
on the right this is really, I know not everyone has a great studio like this
719
00:46:44.160 --> 00:46:49.760
but it's really helpful for showing a student why that's going to shank and why
720
00:46:49.760 --> 00:46:50.240
they're hitting
721
00:46:50.240 --> 00:46:55.280
it on the heel. They can start to see that oh because of where the clubhead is
722
00:46:55.280 --> 00:46:56.240
it's going to make
723
00:46:56.240 --> 00:47:06.020
contact on this inside part of the club right there. So that helps clarify all
724
00:47:06.020 --> 00:47:06.720
right if I put
725
00:47:06.720 --> 00:47:18.730
these sticks on the ground you'll see that he's going to make contact with the
726
00:47:18.730 --> 00:47:20.000
outside stick.
727
00:47:20.000 --> 00:47:22.960
Looks like it's crashing a little bit.
728
00:47:22.960 --> 00:47:34.880
All right so anyway let's jump, might have to close this and reopen it let me
729
00:47:34.880 --> 00:47:35.840
go to the powerpoint
730
00:47:35.840 --> 00:47:54.560
again. Okay so back to the second example so is or sorry that's the end of that
731
00:47:54.560 --> 00:47:55.440
shank example
732
00:47:56.400 --> 00:48:05.840
and here's where I put them. Okay so again looking from this top down view
733
00:48:05.840 --> 00:48:16.720
if I zoom it in or speed it up just a little bit you'll see it's a great view
734
00:48:16.720 --> 00:48:17.520
of what's
735
00:48:17.520 --> 00:48:23.110
happening for most golfers when they shank. Now that I have kind of this
736
00:48:23.110 --> 00:48:25.760
overhead camera I'd say
737
00:48:27.280 --> 00:48:35.340
the vast majority of the time the shank is caused more from the whole path of
738
00:48:35.340 --> 00:48:37.440
the club and the
739
00:48:37.440 --> 00:48:47.370
hosel I'm not sure why it's not playing. Let's see if the second one plays
740
00:48:47.370 --> 00:48:48.640
maybe it's just a bad file.
741
00:48:48.640 --> 00:48:59.850
But I would say here we go so it's that same file that was playing so I guess
742
00:48:59.850 --> 00:49:00.240
the other
743
00:49:00.240 --> 00:49:06.980
file is just not working but this is what when I show a shanker from overhead I
744
00:49:06.980 --> 00:49:10.080
'd say nine times
745
00:49:10.080 --> 00:49:14.940
out of ten it's more this model here where it's the club is just swinging too
746
00:49:14.940 --> 00:49:16.400
far out away from them
747
00:49:16.400 --> 00:49:23.510
their hands have gotten further away and it's going to hit the heel and so oft
748
00:49:23.510 --> 00:49:24.880
entimes that's what I was
749
00:49:24.880 --> 00:49:32.240
going to show. So let me bring this back to
750
00:49:32.240 --> 00:49:46.480
so I'll frequently use a video to show you remember what we saw with with Ed
751
00:49:46.480 --> 00:49:47.120
student who
752
00:49:47.840 --> 00:49:54.080
shanks the ball a little bit. Well now if I put a line just outside his hands
753
00:49:54.080 --> 00:49:55.520
you'll see
754
00:49:55.520 --> 00:50:04.320
as he comes down to the golf ball compared to where that was.
755
00:50:12.880 --> 00:50:18.160
Usually because it's going to be a little bit bowed I'd say about a finger's
756
00:50:18.160 --> 00:50:19.200
width is pretty
757
00:50:19.200 --> 00:50:25.220
normal but if you remember or if you skip back the other gentleman who was
758
00:50:25.220 --> 00:50:26.880
complaining of shanking
759
00:50:26.880 --> 00:50:32.160
the wall his hand was probably out there so it would have to go up it's really
760
00:50:32.160 --> 00:50:34.000
reinforcing his
761
00:50:34.880 --> 00:50:43.230
early extension pattern it would have to go up in order to like if the hands
762
00:50:43.230 --> 00:50:44.080
are that close you're
763
00:50:44.080 --> 00:50:49.940
going to shank it unless you stood up so he's feeding the the pattern. I'm
764
00:50:49.940 --> 00:50:51.680
going to go back to the
765
00:50:52.480 --> 00:51:05.340
PowerPoint. Okay so then the second question was more on this student and we
766
00:51:05.340 --> 00:51:07.520
can see okay he sent
767
00:51:07.520 --> 00:51:14.560
in no real description just some graphs and some swings so first I'll let you
768
00:51:14.560 --> 00:51:14.880
kind of
769
00:51:15.680 --> 00:51:23.270
look at the the graphs here is obviously the kinematic sequence red is the pel
770
00:51:23.270 --> 00:51:24.640
vis green is the trunk
771
00:51:24.640 --> 00:51:30.800
blue is the left arm brown is the club you can see some stuff in there maybe
772
00:51:30.800 --> 00:51:33.040
and then this is looking
773
00:51:33.040 --> 00:51:40.240
at the pelvis bends it looks like so red is rotation green is bend and then
774
00:51:40.240 --> 00:51:41.840
blue is side bend
775
00:51:43.200 --> 00:51:48.640
either calibration thing or not a lot of side bend there at impact this is
776
00:51:48.640 --> 00:51:49.840
again looking at just the
777
00:51:49.840 --> 00:52:01.220
pelvis bend these are looking at the upper body rotation and then this is
778
00:52:01.220 --> 00:52:04.480
looking at the x-factor
779
00:52:07.600 --> 00:52:13.120
so now we've got a couple of his swing
780
00:52:13.120 --> 00:52:24.320
so I'll just let it play through
781
00:52:33.200 --> 00:52:37.920
well actually now that we know we saw the graphs that's where we needed this
782
00:52:37.920 --> 00:52:39.760
now we'll head over to the analyzer
783
00:52:39.760 --> 00:52:50.400
all right so where's
784
00:52:57.760 --> 00:53:03.600
okay
785
00:53:03.600 --> 00:53:16.060
so we go up to the top of the swing it's almost like these uh these swings were
786
00:53:16.060 --> 00:53:16.800
planted for me
787
00:53:16.800 --> 00:53:24.240
based on today's topics so as we go up to the top of the swing we can see a
788
00:53:24.240 --> 00:53:25.360
little bit of straightening
789
00:53:25.360 --> 00:53:34.080
of that right leg and we can see right up in through there you'll see like a
790
00:53:34.080 --> 00:53:35.920
little excessive hinge
791
00:53:35.920 --> 00:53:45.440
this part of his lower back so those are two indications that he's not really
792
00:53:45.440 --> 00:53:46.560
using the deep
793
00:53:46.560 --> 00:53:54.800
core through there he's using more superficial back like the lat and the quad
794
00:53:54.800 --> 00:53:56.960
in order to transfer
795
00:53:56.960 --> 00:54:05.440
that force so then as he comes through here you can to me it looks like again
796
00:54:05.440 --> 00:54:06.400
he's not really
797
00:54:06.400 --> 00:54:12.320
connected there in the core there's a lot of good pieces and um if we look from
798
00:54:12.320 --> 00:54:14.640
this view he's
799
00:54:14.640 --> 00:54:20.230
he's getting some good shaft rotation down through there um but because the
800
00:54:20.230 --> 00:54:22.000
core isn't totally
801
00:54:22.000 --> 00:54:28.930
involved he's going to have a little bit more of that lead arm shrug um instead
802
00:54:28.930 --> 00:54:30.080
of the ribcage
803
00:54:30.080 --> 00:54:36.830
pulling around it's the shoulder pulling away from the ground uh and as a
804
00:54:36.830 --> 00:54:39.680
result of that shoulder
805
00:54:39.680 --> 00:54:45.410
shrugging he is a little bit more um internal rotation on this side so i think
806
00:54:45.410 --> 00:54:47.360
that the root of
807
00:54:47.360 --> 00:54:53.680
his issues is trying to get some of the deep core involved so trying to get um
808
00:54:53.680 --> 00:54:56.000
a little bit more
809
00:54:56.000 --> 00:55:01.460
ab and ribcage rotation on the way through uh you might be able to kind of
810
00:55:01.460 --> 00:55:03.040
force it by working on
811
00:55:03.040 --> 00:55:10.230
that trail arm going into internal rotation or by working on some of the
812
00:55:10.230 --> 00:55:11.280
connection not quite
813
00:55:11.280 --> 00:55:15.520
having as much shrug feeling a little bit more of the arms getting pulled out
814
00:55:15.520 --> 00:55:17.760
um but if we go back to
815
00:55:17.760 --> 00:55:22.880
his kinematic sequence
816
00:55:25.920 --> 00:55:34.240
and his uh pelvis graph um you can see that there's some little uh kind of
817
00:55:34.240 --> 00:55:38.790
i don't want to say dysfunctions but there's some little indications that the
818
00:55:38.790 --> 00:55:40.480
pelvis is out of order
819
00:55:40.480 --> 00:55:46.440
but not uh nothing grand it shows up a lot more in the video and it shows up
820
00:55:46.440 --> 00:55:49.200
more um when he's trying
821
00:55:49.200 --> 00:55:59.090
to swing full like he would with a driver compared to with the iron he's
822
00:55:59.090 --> 00:56:00.000
probably
823
00:56:00.000 --> 00:56:10.350
you'll see not quite as exaggerated that um lower body hinge and then on the
824
00:56:10.350 --> 00:56:12.000
way through
825
00:56:14.480 --> 00:56:19.760
a little bit better ribcage rotation and a little less of the lead shoulder
826
00:56:19.760 --> 00:56:20.480
shrug so
827
00:56:20.480 --> 00:56:26.680
the fact that it shows up a bit more with the driver helps me identify that it
828
00:56:26.680 --> 00:56:27.680
's probably more
829
00:56:27.680 --> 00:56:33.550
related to um power production and possibly positive you know increasing the
830
00:56:33.550 --> 00:56:34.800
angle of attack
831
00:56:34.800 --> 00:56:42.180
um but that's uh the number one thing that kind of jumps out for me is more uh
832
00:56:42.180 --> 00:56:42.800
that deep core
833
00:56:42.800 --> 00:56:47.680
function so i'd probably you know look at his breathing look at his tva um but
834
00:56:47.680 --> 00:56:48.240
that might be
835
00:56:48.240 --> 00:56:52.130
stuff to be easier to do in the gym otherwise if i was if i was confident he
836
00:56:52.130 --> 00:56:53.280
was strong enough to
837
00:56:53.280 --> 00:56:58.560
do it in the gym then i would probably go after um trail arm and uh lead
838
00:56:58.560 --> 00:57:00.320
shoulder connection
1
00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:03.780
As far as the the topics, we're going to cover the motorcycle movement, which I
2
00:00:03.780 --> 00:00:07.610
always demonstrate, kind of like this, so many people start thinking it's just
3
00:00:07.610 --> 00:00:12.540
the lead wrist, but I'm going to show you in today's webinar that it's more
4
00:00:12.540 --> 00:00:17.000
than just the lead wrist, what's happening at the club, and then we'll go over
5
00:00:17.000 --> 00:00:21.910
the the basic anatomy of the SI joint, so we're we're kind of working into the
6
00:00:21.910 --> 00:00:22.320
spine.
7
00:00:23.440 --> 00:00:27.650
From the pelvis, and that's a real key area for golf, at least for
8
00:00:27.650 --> 00:00:31.680
understanding kind of pain patterns and loading patterns and things like that.
9
00:00:31.680 --> 00:00:39.460
Okay, so when it comes to the motorcycle movement, one of the biggest keys is
10
00:00:39.460 --> 00:00:41.920
getting gradual face closing.
11
00:00:42.480 --> 00:00:47.600
So you've probably seen, I've done a bunch of things where I talk about the ax
12
00:00:47.600 --> 00:00:52.810
ial velocity graph. The axial velocity graph is what I'm going to use to refer
13
00:00:52.810 --> 00:00:54.560
to the motorcycle movement.
14
00:00:54.560 --> 00:00:57.840
And let's pull me up.
15
00:00:57.840 --> 00:01:03.450
Okay, so the axial velocity graph is looking at the speed that the club is
16
00:01:03.450 --> 00:01:07.600
rotating. So when it's positive, it's closing, and when it's negative, it's
17
00:01:07.600 --> 00:01:08.160
opening.
18
00:01:08.880 --> 00:01:13.200
And so what you can see with this golfer is as the golfer
19
00:01:13.200 --> 00:01:18.270
in the backswing, the club is opening slightly and then it gets to the top of
20
00:01:18.270 --> 00:01:22.320
the swing and it goes negative or goes positive. It starts closing
21
00:01:22.320 --> 00:01:26.480
early in the downswing and it's kind of got a real gradual slope to it.
22
00:01:26.480 --> 00:01:31.790
This is a pattern that I like to see or that I commonly see with really
23
00:01:31.790 --> 00:01:35.760
consistent golfers, really consistent ball strikers.
24
00:01:36.720 --> 00:01:43.190
Now, what you'll, the things that let me bring this up, the things that have
25
00:01:43.190 --> 00:01:48.240
the biggest influence are going to be the leader is flexion and the trail worst
26
00:01:48.240 --> 00:01:49.360
extension, but
27
00:01:49.360 --> 00:01:55.090
it took me a little while to kind of understand this, but what you'll actually
28
00:01:55.090 --> 00:01:59.760
see is if I bend forward, I'm not changing anything with my hands. If I bend
29
00:01:59.760 --> 00:02:01.120
forward, I can rotate it.
30
00:02:01.600 --> 00:02:08.200
Or if I pull my arms down, I can rotate it. So just from kind of changing the
31
00:02:08.200 --> 00:02:13.650
arc of the, or the angle of the shoulders or the angle of the chest, I can
32
00:02:13.650 --> 00:02:15.360
influence that graph.
33
00:02:15.360 --> 00:02:21.660
So it's not just lead wrist and trail wrist movement. It's also what's
34
00:02:21.660 --> 00:02:25.120
happening at the shoulders or what I have up here at the thorax.
35
00:02:26.400 --> 00:02:36.190
Now, it's a, I'm going to say it's a tricky one to see. What I did here was I,
36
00:02:36.190 --> 00:02:40.160
I'm playing the animation so you can kind of see it along. Unfortunately, on
37
00:02:40.160 --> 00:02:44.000
this first one, I opened the raw file instead of the smooth file.
38
00:02:44.000 --> 00:02:48.860
So it's not going to be at the same timing as the golf swing. You can see he
39
00:02:48.860 --> 00:02:50.160
already changed direction down there.
40
00:02:50.160 --> 00:02:55.380
Good. So if we flip back and forth, I just want you to watch the angle of the
41
00:02:55.380 --> 00:02:56.240
club right there.
42
00:02:57.120 --> 00:03:01.990
I want you to watch the angle of the club head and you'll see that as it's
43
00:03:01.990 --> 00:03:08.240
going down there, it's starting to rotate and point more towards the ground.
44
00:03:08.240 --> 00:03:14.140
Now, here's a golfer. This is a tour golfer. He's a very good ball striker, but
45
00:03:14.140 --> 00:03:19.880
he's a little streaky, especially off the tee, so with the longer clubs, and he
46
00:03:19.880 --> 00:03:23.200
has more of kind of that arm pull pattern.
47
00:03:24.080 --> 00:03:28.580
So you'll see the lead wrist is going to go into extension, but the trail wrist
48
00:03:28.580 --> 00:03:33.290
is also going into extension. So the trail wrist technically is closing it. The
49
00:03:33.290 --> 00:03:35.040
lead wrist is technically opening it.
50
00:03:35.040 --> 00:03:42.010
And then what you'll see is he has a fair amount of thorax lift. So even though
51
00:03:42.010 --> 00:03:47.810
he's kind of basically he'll have a look of more of a stand up and that stand
52
00:03:47.810 --> 00:03:51.040
up helps open it with that lead wrist pull down.
53
00:03:52.240 --> 00:03:56.800
So if we take a look at this golfer.
54
00:03:56.800 --> 00:04:07.130
So you'll see the club face as he does that, I'll go kind of a little bit
55
00:04:07.130 --> 00:04:15.360
slower frame my frame. You'll see that the club is slowly starting to point
56
00:04:15.360 --> 00:04:17.600
more up compared to the axis.
57
00:04:18.160 --> 00:04:25.630
Now, I'll talk about this. Actually, you know, it'll come up again when we look
58
00:04:25.630 --> 00:04:30.000
at shanking later in the video. That's going to be one of the big takeaways is
59
00:04:30.000 --> 00:04:33.450
I'm going to go through kind of my checklist and recipes when I'm looking at sh
60
00:04:33.450 --> 00:04:34.000
anking. But
61
00:04:36.240 --> 00:04:42.310
I bring this back up. So what some people feel is they feel more the shaft so
62
00:04:42.310 --> 00:04:46.760
that what they feel what they're holding. They don't actually feel the weight
63
00:04:46.760 --> 00:04:49.120
of the club, which is off of the shaft.
64
00:04:49.120 --> 00:04:53.990
And so when you pull down, like if I wanted to swing this thing as fast as
65
00:04:53.990 --> 00:04:58.840
possible and feel like I had control of it, I'd probably want the club head,
66
00:04:58.840 --> 00:05:02.560
the weight going right through the center of the shaft like this.
67
00:05:03.040 --> 00:05:07.530
If it was more like that, it kind of feels unstable. It doesn't feel like it
68
00:05:07.530 --> 00:05:11.870
can swing it quite as fast because it feels like when I apply force, there's
69
00:05:11.870 --> 00:05:14.480
this little reverberation I've got to handle.
70
00:05:14.480 --> 00:05:20.000
So the challenge for a lot of golfers is when you do more of this motorcycle,
71
00:05:20.000 --> 00:05:25.390
it gets the weight of the club no longer in the axis of the thing that I'm
72
00:05:25.390 --> 00:05:29.950
holding, it kind of gets it now more like a hockey stick, less like a baseball
73
00:05:29.950 --> 00:05:30.320
bat.
74
00:05:30.800 --> 00:05:37.310
It's a lot of golfers who are sensing a feeling of power, especially pulling
75
00:05:37.310 --> 00:05:44.330
with the arms and the shoulders tend to do more to get the club in line with
76
00:05:44.330 --> 00:05:45.600
the hosel.
77
00:05:45.600 --> 00:05:50.080
So we'll see that when we look at the shanking later.
78
00:05:50.080 --> 00:05:55.730
Okay, now we're going to look at a couple amateurs and this first one, I
79
00:05:55.730 --> 00:06:00.560
believe, yes, so this first one is one of the ones that really kind of
80
00:06:00.800 --> 00:06:04.000
got me thinking about the motorcycle movement a little bit differently.
81
00:06:04.000 --> 00:06:09.460
So this was a collegiate player, pretty good, could get a little streaky with
82
00:06:09.460 --> 00:06:11.440
the driver, but a pretty good ball striker.
83
00:06:11.440 --> 00:06:18.460
And you'll see that lead wrist, he got a little off with his arc width, so that
84
00:06:18.460 --> 00:06:20.560
's where he could get a little bit inconsistent, but
85
00:06:20.560 --> 00:06:28.350
the lead wrist is going into extension there during the early part of the down
86
00:06:28.350 --> 00:06:29.040
swing.
87
00:06:30.320 --> 00:06:35.560
So even though the trail wrist is going into extension, the lead wrist is going
88
00:06:35.560 --> 00:06:36.640
into extension as well.
89
00:06:36.640 --> 00:06:44.050
Now he, as compared to that tour pro, we saw who was opening it, the wrist aren
90
00:06:44.050 --> 00:06:45.440
't that different.
91
00:06:45.440 --> 00:06:50.380
So if I scroll back, you'll see lead wrist going into extension, trail wrist
92
00:06:50.380 --> 00:06:51.440
going into extension.
93
00:06:51.440 --> 00:06:56.240
A little bit of shallowing on both sides, but
94
00:06:57.680 --> 00:07:02.960
primarily the extension is the big piece. You'll see similar looking wrist
95
00:07:02.960 --> 00:07:05.680
grafts and very different axial velocity graphs.
96
00:07:05.680 --> 00:07:09.480
It's because of the difference of what's happening at the shoulders and what's
97
00:07:09.480 --> 00:07:11.680
happening at the body.
98
00:07:11.680 --> 00:07:17.520
This golfer has more of a kind of flexion upper body
99
00:07:17.520 --> 00:07:24.320
lunge or dive type pattern. So he gets up to the top of the swing and his upper
100
00:07:24.320 --> 00:07:25.680
body really goes down
101
00:07:26.240 --> 00:07:28.480
and that will tend to
102
00:07:28.480 --> 00:07:35.840
help close the face. So even though he shallows it a good bit, you can see this
103
00:07:35.840 --> 00:07:37.520
model is lowering
104
00:07:37.520 --> 00:07:42.480
two and a half inches and he's really going into flexion early with his trunk.
105
00:07:42.480 --> 00:07:49.840
So it's that movement of the upper body kind of covering the ball that helps
106
00:07:49.840 --> 00:07:50.480
close the face.
107
00:07:51.200 --> 00:07:58.980
So one of the ways that many amateur golfers close the face is not so much with
108
00:07:58.980 --> 00:08:00.240
the independent wrist movement.
109
00:08:00.240 --> 00:08:07.280
They do it more with a dropping down or lowering of their body.
110
00:08:07.280 --> 00:08:15.200
And the ones you don't, the ones who really stand up tend to open the face up
111
00:08:15.200 --> 00:08:16.720
even more and then
112
00:08:17.280 --> 00:08:21.010
kind of look more like this pattern. So the club gets really open and then has
113
00:08:21.010 --> 00:08:22.400
to slam shut fast
114
00:08:22.400 --> 00:08:29.200
late. So this golfer is extending the wrist but he's also flexing the trail
115
00:08:29.200 --> 00:08:32.080
wrist. So it's possible
116
00:08:32.080 --> 00:08:38.480
that I haven't seen that combination produce a more of a gradual curve. Oops,
117
00:08:38.480 --> 00:08:39.040
you can't see the
118
00:08:39.040 --> 00:08:44.880
mouse. I haven't seen that combination create more of a gradual curve. So
119
00:08:44.880 --> 00:08:49.360
typically if both wrists are
120
00:08:49.360 --> 00:08:52.800
rotating open the face doesn't matter what you do with the body, the face is
121
00:08:52.800 --> 00:08:55.440
going to open. And so
122
00:08:55.440 --> 00:09:04.800
now we'll watch that one. So this is kind of more of a classic get really steep
123
00:09:04.800 --> 00:09:04.800
.
124
00:09:07.600 --> 00:09:12.860
And actually I take that back, I forgot why I put this one in. He's actually
125
00:09:12.860 --> 00:09:13.440
flexing the
126
00:09:13.440 --> 00:09:18.310
leader is so he's doing a little bit of closing of the face with that leader is
127
00:09:18.310 --> 00:09:18.880
but the trail
128
00:09:18.880 --> 00:09:24.730
wrist was opening the face. We could find out down the road that perhaps this
129
00:09:24.730 --> 00:09:25.760
has to do with grip
130
00:09:25.760 --> 00:09:29.470
pressure and which hand is actually moving the club and which hand is just
131
00:09:29.470 --> 00:09:30.640
moving in response to
132
00:09:30.640 --> 00:09:35.600
the other moving. But you can see that his lead wrist does flex which should
133
00:09:35.600 --> 00:09:37.760
close the face but
134
00:09:37.760 --> 00:09:43.920
you'll see that he goes into more of a stand up move so he doesn't have a
135
00:09:43.920 --> 00:09:45.280
really big flexion move
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and that right shoulder or the right hand goes into more of a flexion move as
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well which opens
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the face. So well I think you can get a good sense by looking at video. I did
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want you to see on
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this with this graph, there's a little bit more interpretation than just
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looking at the movement
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of the wrist to see what's happening at the club. But if you start trying to
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look in transition at
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the orientation of the club compared to the shaft, you might get a little bit
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better at being able
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to read this. The key takeaway here is to look at the movement of the club not
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just the movement
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of the wrist. There are more things that influence the motorcycle than just the
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lead wrist flexion.
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That's definitely one of the big common ones but this last golfer showed a
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little bit going this
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way but still getting kind of steep and opening it more like this. So the
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influence of the shoulders,
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the influence of the posture, basically anything that rotates the club down
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that way is going to
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help close it, anything that can see me doing any that. So again the wrist will
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have the biggest
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influence but the body position, the shoulders, everything that rotates the
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club down that way
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can help close it and everything that would rotate it more this way can help
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open it. And what I see
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on 3D is that the more consistent golfers tend to have more of a gradual
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closing where
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the less consistent golfers tend to go really open and then slam it shut away.
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Okay so now on to the SI joint. So the SI joint is
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and yeah it looks like I'm having some issues with the the live stream so I'm
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recording this and
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we'll get it up on the site and you'll still be able to watch it and if you
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have any questions
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submit them and hopefully I can figure out what the heck went wrong this
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morning before the
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the next one in a few weeks. Okay so the SI joint is where the spine meets the
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the legs
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through the pelvis. So here we have the pelvis you can see it on the skeleton.
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This is the sacrum
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here and then these are the two ilium or the um you know basically what you
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feel as your pelvis.
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Now the the legs standing on the ground all that force wants to push the iliums
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up. Oops you can't see
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me. Okay so you've got the two ilium on the side and then these are the legs.
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The legs want to
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push the ilium up but the spine and everything up above it wants to fall down.
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So these these two
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want to kind of move past each other but there's a really intricate complex
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joint that manages how
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those forces work. The two like what keeps the pressure what keeps the the
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joint functioning is
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what's referred to as form and force closure. So essentially I've got the yoga
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block we'll
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use later. So form closure is basically the geometric structure so you can see
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here that this is
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basically sitting on there so as this pushes up and this pushes down that
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creates a tight
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junction. The next would be force closure so now there's nothing underneath
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holding it but I'm
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applying some pressure this way that is keeping this from falling. In the
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actual
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SI joint there's a little bit of both. There's some there's a little bit of an
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angle.
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The sacrum is shaped like this and the ilium are as well so this is kind of if
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it it's like a wedge
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kind of falling down. So over on the far right where you see SI stability you
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've got that
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that angle and then there's tons of ligaments and some muscles that are
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applying the tension
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which is creating the force closure. So essentially you've got form closure
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from the shape of the
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joint. We'll look at that a little bit in more detail because these are it's a
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it's a complicated
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joint. It's very tricky but and it's a common source of back pain and it's a
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common source of
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abdominal dysfunction. So if you have a hard time transferring energy from your
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legs using your
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glutes using your abs there's a chance that this is out of order. And then
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force closure is the
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compression caused from both the body weight and the ligaments and the big
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muscles in that area.
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We'll look at that a little bit more as well. All right so I'll actually move
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that down a little bit.
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So we're going to look at the movement here. I reordered it. All right so we'll
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look at that
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here in a second. Okay so if I jump back up this is kind of a rough kind of
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schematic of the body
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weight of the pelvis is going down and pushing through this joint and the the
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force coming up from
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the ground is going up and these arrows are kind of all meeting and creating
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this harmony where the
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forces from above and the forces from below are balanced in this really elegant
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structure.
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Kind of here's another image of it. So looking at it more from face-on
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because the interesting thing is it's actually shaped like this where the pel
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vis, the pubic
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synthesis is way in front of the sacrum so you've got forces being managed in
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this kind of complicated
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3D structure. And there's a lot of muscles at play. I'm going to keep
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referencing various
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muscles. I recommend just kind of pulling out an anatomy book and studying it a
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little bit
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because what you'll see is there's a lot of little small important movements
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going on.
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In fact if you want to look at what the spine is doing rotation-wise, getting
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an idea as far as
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what the sacrum is doing is a good place to look. Now one of the hard things is
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some of these
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movements are really small so therefore it's impossible to get their
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measurements on a 3D system.
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You get more of a global movement, not these little small micro movements.
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So we've got all these muscles influencing how the SI joint is functioning and
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how the hip skin
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function but we also have a ton of ligaments. So this is what the pelvis looks
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like if you strip
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away the skin roughly. There's some really big important ligaments. We're going
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to talk primarily
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about these ones up here called the ileolumbar ligaments. There are two of them
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, they go from
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L4 and L5 to the ilea or the pelvis. So it looks, here's that ileolumbar lig
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ament up here and we'll
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you'll see some when I get to the animation of being able to show you how this
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movement looks.
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You'll see why that's such a common source of pain. Now these ligaments, if you
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've ever
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had an ankle sprain you know how painful that can be. Well these ligaments in
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your back can
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basically get mild sprains or severe sprains and that's one of the main causes
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of back pain.
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And so having exercises like the aldoa or therapies where they can pump these
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ligaments
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is really helpful for golfers experiencing lower back pain. If you can reach
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down and kind of touch
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it right on the point of where your pelvis or your lower back is, the PSIS, it
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's a good chance
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that pain is originating from the SI joint being a little out of sorts. Because
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in addition to
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all those muscles and ligaments you can see that there's a large number of
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these yellow things
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or nerves. So there's some really important ligaments. If they get tight they
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can pinch
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on the nerves and then the brain sends a signal of pain. So here's the ileolumb
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ar ligaments
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from in front. That's the main one we're going to talk about today. And then
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from the back you
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can see it over here. Now one of the or two of the common muscles that are also
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influenced in
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this lower back pain especially like sciatica are the piriformis and the obtur
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ator internus muscle.
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If these two get really tight you can see that there's a really big nerve
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adjacent to them and
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that can get impinged and create a whole lot of pain. So that's one of the more
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common
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muscles I teach people how to stretch when we're doing when anyone has a pelvic
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issue.
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Piriformis obturator internus. There are some big muscles that help with the
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force closure.
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Glute maximus, the hamstring and the glute medius. We'll talk about it when we
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look at
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gait here in a few slides. But basically in order to move you need to create a
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fixed point.
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So you're either going to have a fixed point at the spine and then the leg can
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move or you're
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going to have a fixed point at the leg and then the spine moves. We'll see how
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these muscles
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kind of help coordinate that depending on if they are the fixed point or the
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open side.
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Alright so here I'll actually jump this one up. So I said it was a complicated
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joint. We'll see
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about when we look at the structure but essentially there are different axes
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that that bone can move
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on. The givoie who I study from he talks about 22 different axes of rotation
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but this one is
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just talking about it's not including the verticals or the APs but the two
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while there are many kind
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of pathologic axes there's really only two movement axes or two traditional
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axes and those are the
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the right oblique and the left oblique. So the right oblique goes from the
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right side here to the
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lower left and the left oblique goes from the upper left to the bottom right.
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We'll we'll see
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why they're called that here in a second. But those are the main sources of
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movement. So basically
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if I have just kind of a book that sacrum is kind of sitting like this in
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between the two
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filia. It moves either on this axis here this would be the from my point of
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view this would be the
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right oblique axis and then this would be the left oblique axis. So basically
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the upper side
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will be the name of the axis but they go diagonally from one side to the other.
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There's two main axes of rotation and what that does is it creates when you're
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walking it creates
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this rotation side bend rotation side bend that kind of helps create this
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movement. I've got an
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animation we'll look at here in a second but this is actually let me use this
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one. Okay so this is
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looking at the sacrum but now we're looking at a side view. So you're basically
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looking at this
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part of the sacrum. So through the pelvis into the sacrum there and you'll see
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that there's
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this kind of L shape or almost ear shaped joint. So the joint is kind of in
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this L shape like this
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and the the movement kind of follows the rails. In atomically they call this
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the lesser arm and
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then this the greater arm and the greater arm is more horizontal but it's
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longer the lesser arm is
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more vertical but it's shorter and then the middle in between those is called
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the isthmus.
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So you'll see that actually where is this? Here we go. Okay so here's that look
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of the
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joint or the you've got the lesser arm and the greater arm. Here's a little top
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ography map showing
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that it's it's kind of convexed. So they basically sit in each other like half
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of a tennis ball
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inside of another one. So then they kind of have this like sliding rotating
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movement but they stay
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on this rail. When it gets out of the rail you're going to have a lot of pain.
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That's why it's
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one of the common sources because there you saw how big those muscles are.
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While there's a lot
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of force closure or form closure it is possible to get those either from trauma
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or overuse or
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imbalance. You can get it where that is no longer sitting in flush and now it's
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kind of sitting crooked
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like that and you're going to get some extra friction and somewhere in pain
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patterns.
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So here's just kind of like a this is the ilius side of looking at that L and
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basically
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you could imagine if those two were going to follow down the rail there would
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be some rotation to it.
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And so when you see this you can see that basically as this curves this points
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more down but it's
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rotating roughly around kind of the middle of the bone and so the that joint is
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following almost
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like a C shape type movement like that. And then when it goes more vertical
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this one now goes up
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it goes more like that. So that's the classic movement it's on a slight angle
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kind of going
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like this but also kind of teeter tottering like that. So here's the animation
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that I was
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talking about. If we look at it from behind and I'll play this a couple times
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if you look at it from
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behind you can see that the sacrum is kind of rotating like this and then the
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ilius is rotating
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like that. So what's happening the sacrum goes like this and the ilium rotates
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behind it and on the
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other side the the ilium is rotating around so they're kind of going like this.
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Now if you watch
385
00:25:25.120 --> 00:25:30.060
that again the reason I talked about those ilio lumbar ligaments is if you
386
00:25:30.060 --> 00:25:31.520
watch the lower these
387
00:25:31.520 --> 00:25:35.490
last two vertebrae because they're tied by these ligaments they follow the
388
00:25:35.490 --> 00:25:38.240
movement of the the ilia
389
00:25:38.240 --> 00:25:44.920
or the pelvis while the sacrum is going in the opposite direction. That's one
390
00:25:44.920 --> 00:25:46.080
of the reasons why
391
00:25:46.080 --> 00:25:51.110
this area takes such a beating especially if it's out of alignment because you
392
00:25:51.110 --> 00:25:52.480
have some natural
393
00:25:52.480 --> 00:25:57.420
shearing due to the movement of the ligaments there. So if you also have like
394
00:25:57.420 --> 00:25:58.640
translations like
395
00:25:58.640 --> 00:26:03.890
it's not sitting level it's kind of sitting more like this then you're really
396
00:26:03.890 --> 00:26:06.080
asking for for problems.
397
00:26:08.240 --> 00:26:12.360
So here they kind of separate it so you can see the movements independently it
398
00:26:12.360 --> 00:26:12.880
's kind of a cool
399
00:26:12.880 --> 00:26:19.060
look. Although they stopped L4 L5 from moving in this particular model but you
400
00:26:19.060 --> 00:26:20.880
can see at least
401
00:26:20.880 --> 00:26:26.480
so as it moves that way the ilia gets pulled back because the movement of the
402
00:26:26.480 --> 00:26:27.600
sacrum and the
403
00:26:27.600 --> 00:26:34.880
lumbar vertebra rotate with the ilia. So if the pelvic floor is out of order if
404
00:26:36.560 --> 00:26:42.000
you've got digestive issues that can pull the pelvis out of order urologically
405
00:26:42.000 --> 00:26:43.360
issues like
406
00:26:43.360 --> 00:26:50.970
everything down in this area is tightly connected. So whether it's digestion or
407
00:26:50.970 --> 00:26:52.400
kidneys or bladder
408
00:26:52.400 --> 00:26:58.730
or sex organs like all of that stuff can create dysfunction and that
409
00:26:58.730 --> 00:27:00.640
dysfunction creates an
410
00:27:00.640 --> 00:27:06.430
imbalance in the pelvis and then they don't want to move their pelvis correctly
411
00:27:06.430 --> 00:27:08.160
. So this is where
412
00:27:08.160 --> 00:27:14.320
some of the kind of advanced testing and discussing at least in the gym can
413
00:27:14.320 --> 00:27:17.280
help identify how much of
414
00:27:17.280 --> 00:27:22.600
these patterns are going to really be able to change. But what will usually
415
00:27:22.600 --> 00:27:24.320
happen is we mentioned
416
00:27:24.320 --> 00:27:30.050
that there's this form and force closer. Typically golfers will stand or put
417
00:27:30.050 --> 00:27:31.600
more pressure into the
418
00:27:31.600 --> 00:27:36.350
unstable side. So if you're naturally unstable on one side let's say my right
419
00:27:36.350 --> 00:27:37.520
side is a little bit
420
00:27:37.520 --> 00:27:42.700
wonky I will stand and put more pressure into that right side. So if I have a
421
00:27:42.700 --> 00:27:43.840
golfer who has a
422
00:27:43.840 --> 00:27:47.810
really hard time getting into their left side they might struggle with fat thin
423
00:27:47.810 --> 00:27:48.400
contact with
424
00:27:48.400 --> 00:27:54.210
their wedges creating too much axis tilt or they might just struggle with thin
425
00:27:54.210 --> 00:27:55.280
contact and hooking
426
00:27:55.280 --> 00:27:59.630
the ball because they can't quite get into that left side. Looking at the SI
427
00:27:59.630 --> 00:28:00.800
joint looking at the
428
00:28:00.800 --> 00:28:05.740
core function looking at trying to get the pelvis balanced maybe one of the big
429
00:28:05.740 --> 00:28:06.560
reasons why.
430
00:28:06.560 --> 00:28:16.690
Okay so as I said didn't have any questions come in this month but or at least
431
00:28:16.690 --> 00:28:17.600
not from the
432
00:28:17.600 --> 00:28:23.680
the coaches. So I prepared a couple more kind of case studies and little things
433
00:28:23.680 --> 00:28:24.480
that you can do
434
00:28:24.480 --> 00:28:30.080
experimenting with your students. And right now I'm running a program of kind
435
00:28:30.080 --> 00:28:30.720
of getting ready
436
00:28:30.720 --> 00:28:38.880
for tournaments. So we were talking about aiming the shotgun. Now basically
437
00:28:38.880 --> 00:28:40.320
what I mean by that is
438
00:28:40.320 --> 00:28:46.300
if you've got you know this is a scott faucet phrase of that we're shooting a
439
00:28:46.300 --> 00:28:47.440
shotgun not a
440
00:28:47.440 --> 00:28:51.240
rifle you basically want to take your your average shot and play for that not
441
00:28:51.240 --> 00:28:52.400
necessarily play for
442
00:28:52.400 --> 00:28:58.890
your best shot. So one game that I have students do is we'll we'll hit 10 or 20
443
00:28:58.890 --> 00:29:00.080
shots at the same
444
00:29:00.080 --> 00:29:04.950
target and just track where they finish offline. Usually I teach them on the
445
00:29:04.950 --> 00:29:05.920
range to use like
446
00:29:05.920 --> 00:29:10.880
aim point like finger system so and they'll just write it down so it might be
447
00:29:10.880 --> 00:29:11.920
you know this ball
448
00:29:11.920 --> 00:29:16.640
was one finger right three fingers left two fingers left and at the end of 20
449
00:29:16.640 --> 00:29:17.200
you get kind
450
00:29:17.200 --> 00:29:24.320
of an average distribution. Now I had a this was I was just showing them about
451
00:29:24.320 --> 00:29:26.400
okay the about the
452
00:29:26.400 --> 00:29:36.070
scatter plot. So this was me I hit 27 irons for just before class April so a
453
00:29:36.070 --> 00:29:37.760
little bit ago.
454
00:29:37.760 --> 00:29:43.600
Now wait this was March that's like the data I was looking at or printed off
455
00:29:43.600 --> 00:29:44.480
the or took a picture
456
00:29:44.480 --> 00:29:49.820
for you guys. But basically this is a normal distribution where the shots of
457
00:29:49.820 --> 00:29:50.880
the right typically
458
00:29:50.880 --> 00:29:53.940
come up a little short because the club faces a little open the shots to the
459
00:29:53.940 --> 00:29:54.880
left typically go a
460
00:29:54.880 --> 00:30:00.120
little long so you get this pattern here. Now this is five yard increments and
461
00:30:00.120 --> 00:30:01.600
then these are 15.
462
00:30:01.600 --> 00:30:07.860
So you'll see with mine about 50 percent of the shots are within five yards to
463
00:30:07.860 --> 00:30:09.040
the right five
464
00:30:09.040 --> 00:30:15.970
yards to the left with a little bias to the left. So I for me it might be risky
465
00:30:15.970 --> 00:30:16.880
if I'm aiming
466
00:30:16.880 --> 00:30:22.370
my seven iron at a place where I don't have two fingers to the left of where I
467
00:30:22.370 --> 00:30:23.120
'm aiming
468
00:30:23.120 --> 00:30:28.190
or one finger to the right. That's kind of how I would use this this approach.
469
00:30:28.190 --> 00:30:30.160
But anyway so that's
470
00:30:30.160 --> 00:30:34.510
fun for helping golfers figure out where they need to aim. Now my normal pads
471
00:30:34.510 --> 00:30:35.600
somewhere around
472
00:30:35.600 --> 00:30:38.970
three or four degrees in out with a club face that's about half that so every
473
00:30:38.970 --> 00:30:40.080
one of these has a nice
474
00:30:40.080 --> 00:30:44.750
little draw these shots over here just the push where it doesn't draw but none
475
00:30:44.750 --> 00:30:45.280
of them
476
00:30:45.280 --> 00:30:50.150
and kind of faded and then this would be more the overdraws or the face gets a
477
00:30:50.150 --> 00:30:51.280
little bit too closed.
478
00:30:52.080 --> 00:31:00.000
Now I said that I had a student who wanted to do this but missed the class so
479
00:31:00.000 --> 00:31:00.800
for the makeup he
480
00:31:00.800 --> 00:31:08.720
came in and we did it on track man. Now I've talked about this in in a few
481
00:31:08.720 --> 00:31:09.360
videos and I've
482
00:31:09.360 --> 00:31:12.560
talked about it kind of theoretically but this was really cool to see because
483
00:31:12.560 --> 00:31:14.000
this was a practical
484
00:31:14.000 --> 00:31:18.720
application of it. This golfer he's got a little bit of a scoop a little bit of
485
00:31:18.720 --> 00:31:20.160
a flip he's got a
486
00:31:20.160 --> 00:31:27.280
really straight path so for 10 swings his average path was 0.5. Now because
487
00:31:27.280 --> 00:31:30.560
this the club face or
488
00:31:30.560 --> 00:31:35.430
sorry because the path was very straight you'll see uh actually I'll switch
489
00:31:35.430 --> 00:31:36.800
over here. So because
490
00:31:36.800 --> 00:31:41.700
the club face was very straight you will see that he has very few shots that
491
00:31:41.700 --> 00:31:43.360
finish within five
492
00:31:43.360 --> 00:31:50.310
yards of his target most of them are either 10 to 15 left or 10 to 15 right. So
493
00:31:50.310 --> 00:31:50.720
this is the
494
00:31:50.720 --> 00:31:55.590
danger of when your path gets too straight you end up having a hard time um
495
00:31:55.590 --> 00:31:56.800
aiming your shotgun
496
00:31:56.800 --> 00:32:01.070
because you have equally big misses to the right and the left so you should
497
00:32:01.070 --> 00:32:02.240
just anticipate that
498
00:32:02.240 --> 00:32:07.840
the majority of the time the ball's not going to go where you aim and that can
499
00:32:07.840 --> 00:32:09.280
be challenging for
500
00:32:09.280 --> 00:32:15.920
a lot of golfers to think their way through. So that was with us uh 9 iron when
501
00:32:15.920 --> 00:32:17.200
we did this in class
502
00:32:17.200 --> 00:32:25.200
we did uh because the course here is a little shorter we did um 125 150 and 100
503
00:32:25.200 --> 00:32:26.640
so I had him do
504
00:32:26.640 --> 00:32:33.180
9 iron which was kind of his 125 club and then 7 iron is 150 club had pretty
505
00:32:33.180 --> 00:32:34.080
much the same
506
00:32:34.080 --> 00:32:39.220
distribution and had it even straighter path his problem. Now he says hey I'm a
507
00:32:39.220 --> 00:32:40.160
pretty good wedge
508
00:32:40.160 --> 00:32:45.020
player you can see there's a lot more here in the middle for his wedge and his
509
00:32:45.020 --> 00:32:46.000
club path was 4
510
00:32:46.000 --> 00:32:50.410
degrees into out. He also said I have a totally different pattern but I'm a
511
00:32:50.410 --> 00:32:52.080
more consistent driver
512
00:32:52.080 --> 00:32:57.600
and yes you will see that he has more he did have a few hot pulls uh kind of
513
00:32:57.600 --> 00:32:58.400
early on
514
00:32:58.400 --> 00:33:05.390
but more of his shots are within kind of that middle zone and he had a 10
515
00:33:05.390 --> 00:33:06.880
degree outside in
516
00:33:06.880 --> 00:33:10.310
swing direction or a 5 degree outside end path because he hits way down on the
517
00:33:10.310 --> 00:33:10.720
driver.
518
00:33:10.720 --> 00:33:18.960
So this is you know it's one example but I have found that golfers who get too
519
00:33:18.960 --> 00:33:19.680
straight
520
00:33:19.680 --> 00:33:24.880
will tend to have this um no man's land zone at the actual target and they
521
00:33:24.880 --> 00:33:26.080
either have a
522
00:33:26.080 --> 00:33:31.080
predominant miss or their misses will tend to kind of create this void right
523
00:33:31.080 --> 00:33:31.440
where they
524
00:33:31.440 --> 00:33:35.160
would aim and they have to prepare for it's hard to hit it close to the target
525
00:33:35.160 --> 00:33:36.080
unless they get
526
00:33:36.080 --> 00:33:41.650
really lucky. So if you're helping your golfers kind of get you understand
527
00:33:41.650 --> 00:33:43.200
where they should aim
528
00:33:43.200 --> 00:33:46.960
this is a a good way to approach that topic.
529
00:33:52.000 --> 00:33:58.800
Okay so now I've got um a couple case studies from the week and then we'll look
530
00:33:58.800 --> 00:33:59.680
at a couple
531
00:33:59.680 --> 00:34:05.120
swings that were submitted and we'll talk about shanking the wall. All right so
532
00:34:05.120 --> 00:34:07.360
here's a student
533
00:34:07.360 --> 00:34:14.720
he actually had a big breakthrough this week following this lesson he broke 80
534
00:34:14.720 --> 00:34:15.040
for the first
535
00:34:15.040 --> 00:34:22.080
time he did it back to back 79. You'll see that on the way down he's got a lot
536
00:34:22.080 --> 00:34:23.280
of early extension
537
00:34:23.280 --> 00:34:28.700
everything is finishing very vertical. So we've done stuff working on the
538
00:34:28.700 --> 00:34:29.680
release we've done
539
00:34:29.680 --> 00:34:35.180
stuff working on transition. This time we went after more side bend so one of
540
00:34:35.180 --> 00:34:37.040
the big causes of
541
00:34:37.040 --> 00:34:40.940
early extension or contributors to early extension is lack of side bend to the
542
00:34:40.940 --> 00:34:41.280
spine.
543
00:34:42.000 --> 00:34:48.160
And so if I go back to where he was this is what I showed him
544
00:34:48.160 --> 00:34:56.970
so there's this little trigger as he goes through boom so you'll see that there
545
00:34:56.970 --> 00:34:57.760
's very little
546
00:34:57.760 --> 00:35:03.000
side bend to the right with his spine he's got it more up in his shoulders and
547
00:35:03.000 --> 00:35:03.440
neck
548
00:35:03.440 --> 00:35:11.040
and the pelvis is pretty level. So that's usually going to create the look of
549
00:35:11.040 --> 00:35:11.600
the
550
00:35:11.600 --> 00:35:16.480
early extension. So then we talked about side bending from the spine he did it
551
00:35:16.480 --> 00:35:16.880
a little bit
552
00:35:16.880 --> 00:35:23.460
too much from the upper body and he hasn't figured out okay if that if the body
553
00:35:23.460 --> 00:35:23.840
's there
554
00:35:23.840 --> 00:35:27.600
what do my arms have to do differently. So we just ran the same arm program he
555
00:35:27.600 --> 00:35:28.080
was used to
556
00:35:28.080 --> 00:35:34.960
with the stand up and as a result you'll see this is a fun first rep
557
00:35:37.680 --> 00:35:42.870
where it bottoms out there and then actually swings up and over the golf ball.
558
00:35:42.870 --> 00:35:43.840
But the good
559
00:35:43.840 --> 00:35:47.510
news is this is a golfer who normally hits lots of pop-ups so he was kind of
560
00:35:47.510 --> 00:35:48.400
encouraged to
561
00:35:48.400 --> 00:35:55.260
to be so shallow he missed. So after working through a little bit more of the
562
00:35:55.260 --> 00:35:56.080
side bend move
563
00:35:56.080 --> 00:36:00.480
we worked a little bit on making sure the club wasn't so far from the inside
564
00:36:00.480 --> 00:36:01.360
when he had the side
565
00:36:01.360 --> 00:36:08.240
bend so changing the arm path just a little bit and changing the amount of body
566
00:36:08.240 --> 00:36:09.600
rotation so while
567
00:36:09.600 --> 00:36:14.990
he has some good side bend there he's really closed compared to the golf ball.
568
00:36:14.990 --> 00:36:17.120
So again this
569
00:36:17.120 --> 00:36:25.770
was still going up but you can see he was very encouraged and like I said after
570
00:36:25.770 --> 00:36:26.640
we worked through
571
00:36:26.640 --> 00:36:31.500
that lesson we went out on grass so we could see where the club was bottoming
572
00:36:31.500 --> 00:36:32.160
out but he was
573
00:36:32.160 --> 00:36:37.160
much able he was able to retain that spine angle a whole lot longer and when we
574
00:36:37.160 --> 00:36:38.080
cleaned up the
575
00:36:38.080 --> 00:36:43.360
sequence and the timing he had one of his best rounds ever for some break in 80
576
00:36:43.360 --> 00:36:45.520
. They don't all
577
00:36:45.520 --> 00:36:52.570
go that way but okay so here's a new student he's a member of the site so he
578
00:36:52.570 --> 00:36:54.480
had already worked a
579
00:36:54.480 --> 00:37:01.680
little bit on some shawling and some anti-flip stuff but I'm not too worried
580
00:37:01.680 --> 00:37:02.320
about what we
581
00:37:02.320 --> 00:37:07.190
the face on means a whitewash because we're really focusing on it down the line
582
00:37:07.190 --> 00:37:08.640
and we'll
583
00:37:08.640 --> 00:37:13.950
see there's a couple things as far as the body standing up and the arms getting
584
00:37:13.950 --> 00:37:15.680
fully extended at
585
00:37:15.680 --> 00:37:22.080
impact that tend to cause the impact to go way out to the right and cause his
586
00:37:22.080 --> 00:37:23.520
most troublesome
587
00:37:23.520 --> 00:37:35.200
ness of the pull up. So then we did a free setting side bend move and then tried
588
00:37:35.200 --> 00:37:36.560
to rotate through
589
00:37:36.560 --> 00:37:41.420
and you'll see how just by doing that side bend and then delaying the timing of
590
00:37:41.420 --> 00:37:42.000
the rotation
591
00:37:42.000 --> 00:37:47.280
he was able to get into a much better looking follow through position. So I'm
592
00:37:47.280 --> 00:37:48.240
pausing here I just
593
00:37:48.240 --> 00:37:53.360
wanted these two case studies I was using I wanted you'll see how it relates to
594
00:37:53.360 --> 00:37:54.480
the shank video that
595
00:37:54.480 --> 00:37:58.880
we're going to look at later but I wanted you to see how side bend or axis tilt
596
00:37:58.880 --> 00:38:01.040
more side bend
597
00:38:01.040 --> 00:38:06.670
than axis tilt can help influence early extension it also has a big influence
598
00:38:06.670 --> 00:38:07.680
on the ability to
599
00:38:07.680 --> 00:38:16.920
keep that trail arm bent longer. Now he wasn't able to coordinate ground
600
00:38:16.920 --> 00:38:17.840
contact and figured out how
601
00:38:17.840 --> 00:38:22.710
to work his the release stuff into it yet but overall the pivot definitely
602
00:38:22.710 --> 00:38:23.440
improved.
603
00:38:23.440 --> 00:38:35.620
So then the work the timing of the release we got the feel of that side bend
604
00:38:35.620 --> 00:38:36.400
and then just did
605
00:38:36.400 --> 00:38:41.360
the push ball drill to feel the arms kind of extend later and later
606
00:38:41.360 --> 00:38:50.740
and then this was kind of the combo of putting it together so a little bit of
607
00:38:50.740 --> 00:38:52.320
side bend and then
608
00:38:52.320 --> 00:38:58.450
feeling the push ball on the way through. So while we ended in kind of more of
609
00:38:58.450 --> 00:39:00.480
a step release drill
610
00:39:00.480 --> 00:39:04.040
it was way better than any of the release drills he was doing beforehand and
611
00:39:04.040 --> 00:39:04.720
that was because we
612
00:39:04.720 --> 00:39:10.000
used the side bend and basically staying in the posture to help coordinate the
613
00:39:10.000 --> 00:39:10.800
arm timing you
614
00:39:10.800 --> 00:39:13.400
had already been practicing or the arm movements you had already been
615
00:39:13.400 --> 00:39:14.000
practicing.
616
00:39:14.000 --> 00:39:24.330
Okay so hopefully that gets your brain thinking about loss of posture and early
617
00:39:24.330 --> 00:39:24.720
extension.
618
00:39:24.720 --> 00:39:32.160
Here was a swing submitted from one of our coaches and he was talking about his
619
00:39:32.160 --> 00:39:32.560
student
620
00:39:32.560 --> 00:39:38.090
struggling with early extension and shanking the ball. So I'm going to walk you
621
00:39:38.090 --> 00:39:38.800
through some of my
622
00:39:38.800 --> 00:39:49.200
favorite stuff and we'll look at this here on the actual analyzer. So usually
623
00:39:49.200 --> 00:39:51.040
there's not a ton
624
00:39:51.040 --> 00:39:57.050
with the face on view as far as how it relates to shanking the ball. This was a
625
00:39:57.050 --> 00:39:59.120
little better
626
00:39:59.120 --> 00:40:04.240
because it was high speed. This was him doing a K vest. All right let me pull
627
00:40:04.240 --> 00:40:05.520
up the analyzer.
628
00:40:05.520 --> 00:40:12.960
Okay hold on.
629
00:40:12.960 --> 00:40:25.520
Okay so hopefully you can let's pull up those two down the line.
630
00:40:29.440 --> 00:40:35.760
Okay so
631
00:40:35.760 --> 00:40:46.480
so we can see the early extension and even though this was a decent strike we
632
00:40:46.480 --> 00:40:49.200
'll talk about why
633
00:40:49.200 --> 00:40:54.000
he would have trouble shanking the wall and what's apparent in that movement.
634
00:40:55.040 --> 00:41:01.680
So here's working on staying down in his posture with his early extension.
635
00:41:01.680 --> 00:41:06.880
So he does a better job of staying down and you can see this wasn't a shank but
636
00:41:06.880 --> 00:41:07.520
man is that
637
00:41:07.520 --> 00:41:12.390
flirting with shanking. You can see the hosel is right out by the golf ball he
638
00:41:12.390 --> 00:41:13.200
hit that just a few
639
00:41:13.200 --> 00:41:20.080
millimeters away from the heel there. Okay so one of the things that I'll do
640
00:41:21.440 --> 00:41:25.480
basically this falls in my mind this falls into the category of low point
641
00:41:25.480 --> 00:41:26.000
control.
642
00:41:26.000 --> 00:41:29.600
This golfer is unaware of where the club is bottoming out.
643
00:41:29.600 --> 00:41:34.790
So what I'm going to do we're going to look at it a couple different ways. I'm
644
00:41:34.790 --> 00:41:35.200
going to draw
645
00:41:35.200 --> 00:41:40.070
some reference lines. When I'm talking to the students I'm going to talk to
646
00:41:40.070 --> 00:41:42.240
them about well
647
00:41:42.240 --> 00:41:45.840
there's two ways to shank it either the club face is coming in wildly open or
648
00:41:46.560 --> 00:41:52.300
the hosel is like the club is too far away from you. It's moving that way. It's
649
00:41:52.300 --> 00:41:53.440
not fat, thin,
650
00:41:53.440 --> 00:42:02.160
it's moving too far away from you. So then what I'll do is I'll take it up and
651
00:42:02.160 --> 00:42:04.240
I put that one line
652
00:42:07.040 --> 00:42:16.800
it's running a tiny bit slow there we go. Okay so the camera moves it's not
653
00:42:16.800 --> 00:42:18.560
quite on a tripod
654
00:42:18.560 --> 00:42:22.800
this one might be a little bit better. Yeah so this looks like it's on a tripod
655
00:42:22.800 --> 00:42:23.840
so now
656
00:42:23.840 --> 00:42:34.800
nothing's moving but as a result of his swing pattern his hands get much closer
657
00:42:34.800 --> 00:42:36.320
to the golf ball
658
00:42:36.320 --> 00:42:40.960
then where they were at start that means that in order to not hit the hosel he
659
00:42:40.960 --> 00:42:41.440
would have to
660
00:42:41.440 --> 00:42:47.330
raise them higher to pick up that slack. When he starts staying down in his
661
00:42:47.330 --> 00:42:48.640
posture the hands
662
00:42:48.640 --> 00:42:55.010
move out in the club head follow suit in order to not hit it fat he's gonna sh
663
00:42:55.010 --> 00:42:56.320
ank the ball. So
664
00:42:56.320 --> 00:43:03.050
now there's a couple main questions I would have the student think through. One
665
00:43:03.050 --> 00:43:04.400
would be is your
666
00:43:04.400 --> 00:43:07.600
upper body moving closer to the golf ball. Nope his is actually moving further
667
00:43:07.600 --> 00:43:07.920
away.
668
00:43:07.920 --> 00:43:15.700
Is the pelvis moving in closer to the golf ball? Yes his is moving a bit closer
669
00:43:15.700 --> 00:43:16.640
to the golf ball so
670
00:43:16.640 --> 00:43:20.300
weight distribution might be one way to control this but then I would talk
671
00:43:20.300 --> 00:43:21.120
about well what are
672
00:43:21.120 --> 00:43:25.150
some of the other factors and I would talk about the shoulder movement either
673
00:43:25.150 --> 00:43:26.720
moving the hands out
674
00:43:26.720 --> 00:43:33.790
or the in his case left arm straightening too much too soon. So what I would
675
00:43:33.790 --> 00:43:35.520
normally do is I would
676
00:43:35.520 --> 00:43:41.930
then work on trying to get more aware of where the ground contact was. So that
677
00:43:41.930 --> 00:43:43.760
would look.
678
00:43:52.160 --> 00:43:57.710
I'll pull them up here in a second. I don't think I, maybe I put them in the
679
00:43:57.710 --> 00:43:58.800
analyzer.
680
00:43:58.800 --> 00:44:06.320
Okay I will pull them up here in a second but there's two different,
681
00:44:06.320 --> 00:44:11.680
we'll go back to the analyzers. There's two different things that I would do.
682
00:44:15.520 --> 00:44:23.760
I would, I've got the yoga block here. First I'd just help him be aware of the
683
00:44:23.760 --> 00:44:24.560
space so I would
684
00:44:24.560 --> 00:44:29.560
probably put either the shank gate or because he's on a mat. I would put a yoga
685
00:44:29.560 --> 00:44:31.520
block right here
686
00:44:31.520 --> 00:44:40.390
and then if he was to do that same swing you could see coming into the golf
687
00:44:40.390 --> 00:44:41.680
ball it would be very
688
00:44:41.680 --> 00:44:46.990
close and might catch the yoga block when he actually shanks it. Like in this
689
00:44:46.990 --> 00:44:48.400
one over here
690
00:44:48.400 --> 00:44:54.800
it would actually probably hit it. The other thing I might do I have a pull
691
00:44:54.800 --> 00:44:55.520
noodle on the
692
00:44:55.520 --> 00:45:00.530
end of a stick and I would put the, I would stand in front of him holding the
693
00:45:00.530 --> 00:45:02.080
stick this way and
694
00:45:02.080 --> 00:45:05.540
basically not letting his hands get closer to the golf ball and just asking him
695
00:45:05.540 --> 00:45:06.320
well how was he
696
00:45:06.320 --> 00:45:11.190
controlling it. The whole goal is to figure out how to control the weight of
697
00:45:11.190 --> 00:45:11.920
the club or
698
00:45:11.920 --> 00:45:19.440
in his case where his hands are and I would start with 3D space but the goal is
699
00:45:19.440 --> 00:45:20.080
to get it down to
700
00:45:20.080 --> 00:45:25.870
ground contact. So then I take my, my face spray and I would put two lines on
701
00:45:25.870 --> 00:45:26.960
the ground. I call
702
00:45:26.960 --> 00:45:31.360
it a bowling alley and I say I, I want you to hit gutter balls on the inside
703
00:45:31.360 --> 00:45:33.520
lane. So basically
704
00:45:33.520 --> 00:45:38.650
he would set up to a golf ball in the middle of that bowling alley and I'd say
705
00:45:38.650 --> 00:45:39.600
and I'd challenge
706
00:45:39.600 --> 00:45:44.950
him to make ground contact and make the divots over on this side not on that
707
00:45:44.950 --> 00:45:47.600
side because basically
708
00:45:47.600 --> 00:45:53.790
when he's coming through he would, when he shanks it he would be making ground
709
00:45:53.790 --> 00:45:54.560
contact
710
00:45:54.560 --> 00:46:03.530
too far away. So that, that's a couple go-tos. I'll pull them into the power
711
00:46:03.530 --> 00:46:05.040
point when I upload it
712
00:46:05.040 --> 00:46:12.400
but I've pictures of those two drills that I use very, very often. So I've
713
00:46:12.400 --> 00:46:14.160
actually got
714
00:46:15.680 --> 00:46:23.520
here's one example with our new overhead camera looking at how this shank thing
715
00:46:23.520 --> 00:46:26.080
works. So if I
716
00:46:26.080 --> 00:46:32.590
go up to the top I think I frame by frame it towards the end. Okay so you can
717
00:46:32.590 --> 00:46:33.920
see over here
718
00:46:33.920 --> 00:46:43.360
on the right this is really, I know not everyone has a great studio like this
719
00:46:44.160 --> 00:46:49.760
but it's really helpful for showing a student why that's going to shank and why
720
00:46:49.760 --> 00:46:50.240
they're hitting
721
00:46:50.240 --> 00:46:55.280
it on the heel. They can start to see that oh because of where the clubhead is
722
00:46:55.280 --> 00:46:56.240
it's going to make
723
00:46:56.240 --> 00:47:06.020
contact on this inside part of the club right there. So that helps clarify all
724
00:47:06.020 --> 00:47:06.720
right if I put
725
00:47:06.720 --> 00:47:18.730
these sticks on the ground you'll see that he's going to make contact with the
726
00:47:18.730 --> 00:47:20.000
outside stick.
727
00:47:20.000 --> 00:47:22.960
Looks like it's crashing a little bit.
728
00:47:22.960 --> 00:47:34.880
All right so anyway let's jump, might have to close this and reopen it let me
729
00:47:34.880 --> 00:47:35.840
go to the powerpoint
730
00:47:35.840 --> 00:47:54.560
again. Okay so back to the second example so is or sorry that's the end of that
731
00:47:54.560 --> 00:47:55.440
shank example
732
00:47:56.400 --> 00:48:05.840
and here's where I put them. Okay so again looking from this top down view
733
00:48:05.840 --> 00:48:16.720
if I zoom it in or speed it up just a little bit you'll see it's a great view
734
00:48:16.720 --> 00:48:17.520
of what's
735
00:48:17.520 --> 00:48:23.110
happening for most golfers when they shank. Now that I have kind of this
736
00:48:23.110 --> 00:48:25.760
overhead camera I'd say
737
00:48:27.280 --> 00:48:35.340
the vast majority of the time the shank is caused more from the whole path of
738
00:48:35.340 --> 00:48:37.440
the club and the
739
00:48:37.440 --> 00:48:47.370
hosel I'm not sure why it's not playing. Let's see if the second one plays
740
00:48:47.370 --> 00:48:48.640
maybe it's just a bad file.
741
00:48:48.640 --> 00:48:59.850
But I would say here we go so it's that same file that was playing so I guess
742
00:48:59.850 --> 00:49:00.240
the other
743
00:49:00.240 --> 00:49:06.980
file is just not working but this is what when I show a shanker from overhead I
744
00:49:06.980 --> 00:49:10.080
'd say nine times
745
00:49:10.080 --> 00:49:14.940
out of ten it's more this model here where it's the club is just swinging too
746
00:49:14.940 --> 00:49:16.400
far out away from them
747
00:49:16.400 --> 00:49:23.510
their hands have gotten further away and it's going to hit the heel and so oft
748
00:49:23.510 --> 00:49:24.880
entimes that's what I was
749
00:49:24.880 --> 00:49:32.240
going to show. So let me bring this back to
750
00:49:32.240 --> 00:49:46.480
so I'll frequently use a video to show you remember what we saw with with Ed
751
00:49:46.480 --> 00:49:47.120
student who
752
00:49:47.840 --> 00:49:54.080
shanks the ball a little bit. Well now if I put a line just outside his hands
753
00:49:54.080 --> 00:49:55.520
you'll see
754
00:49:55.520 --> 00:50:04.320
as he comes down to the golf ball compared to where that was.
755
00:50:12.880 --> 00:50:18.160
Usually because it's going to be a little bit bowed I'd say about a finger's
756
00:50:18.160 --> 00:50:19.200
width is pretty
757
00:50:19.200 --> 00:50:25.220
normal but if you remember or if you skip back the other gentleman who was
758
00:50:25.220 --> 00:50:26.880
complaining of shanking
759
00:50:26.880 --> 00:50:32.160
the wall his hand was probably out there so it would have to go up it's really
760
00:50:32.160 --> 00:50:34.000
reinforcing his
761
00:50:34.880 --> 00:50:43.230
early extension pattern it would have to go up in order to like if the hands
762
00:50:43.230 --> 00:50:44.080
are that close you're
763
00:50:44.080 --> 00:50:49.940
going to shank it unless you stood up so he's feeding the the pattern. I'm
764
00:50:49.940 --> 00:50:51.680
going to go back to the
765
00:50:52.480 --> 00:51:05.340
PowerPoint. Okay so then the second question was more on this student and we
766
00:51:05.340 --> 00:51:07.520
can see okay he sent
767
00:51:07.520 --> 00:51:14.560
in no real description just some graphs and some swings so first I'll let you
768
00:51:14.560 --> 00:51:14.880
kind of
769
00:51:15.680 --> 00:51:23.270
look at the the graphs here is obviously the kinematic sequence red is the pel
770
00:51:23.270 --> 00:51:24.640
vis green is the trunk
771
00:51:24.640 --> 00:51:30.800
blue is the left arm brown is the club you can see some stuff in there maybe
772
00:51:30.800 --> 00:51:33.040
and then this is looking
773
00:51:33.040 --> 00:51:40.240
at the pelvis bends it looks like so red is rotation green is bend and then
774
00:51:40.240 --> 00:51:41.840
blue is side bend
775
00:51:43.200 --> 00:51:48.640
either calibration thing or not a lot of side bend there at impact this is
776
00:51:48.640 --> 00:51:49.840
again looking at just the
777
00:51:49.840 --> 00:52:01.220
pelvis bend these are looking at the upper body rotation and then this is
778
00:52:01.220 --> 00:52:04.480
looking at the x-factor
779
00:52:07.600 --> 00:52:13.120
so now we've got a couple of his swing
780
00:52:13.120 --> 00:52:24.320
so I'll just let it play through
781
00:52:33.200 --> 00:52:37.920
well actually now that we know we saw the graphs that's where we needed this
782
00:52:37.920 --> 00:52:39.760
now we'll head over to the analyzer
783
00:52:39.760 --> 00:52:50.400
all right so where's
784
00:52:57.760 --> 00:53:03.600
okay
785
00:53:03.600 --> 00:53:16.060
so we go up to the top of the swing it's almost like these uh these swings were
786
00:53:16.060 --> 00:53:16.800
planted for me
787
00:53:16.800 --> 00:53:24.240
based on today's topics so as we go up to the top of the swing we can see a
788
00:53:24.240 --> 00:53:25.360
little bit of straightening
789
00:53:25.360 --> 00:53:34.080
of that right leg and we can see right up in through there you'll see like a
790
00:53:34.080 --> 00:53:35.920
little excessive hinge
791
00:53:35.920 --> 00:53:45.440
this part of his lower back so those are two indications that he's not really
792
00:53:45.440 --> 00:53:46.560
using the deep
793
00:53:46.560 --> 00:53:54.800
core through there he's using more superficial back like the lat and the quad
794
00:53:54.800 --> 00:53:56.960
in order to transfer
795
00:53:56.960 --> 00:54:05.440
that force so then as he comes through here you can to me it looks like again
796
00:54:05.440 --> 00:54:06.400
he's not really
797
00:54:06.400 --> 00:54:12.320
connected there in the core there's a lot of good pieces and um if we look from
798
00:54:12.320 --> 00:54:14.640
this view he's
799
00:54:14.640 --> 00:54:20.230
he's getting some good shaft rotation down through there um but because the
800
00:54:20.230 --> 00:54:22.000
core isn't totally
801
00:54:22.000 --> 00:54:28.930
involved he's going to have a little bit more of that lead arm shrug um instead
802
00:54:28.930 --> 00:54:30.080
of the ribcage
803
00:54:30.080 --> 00:54:36.830
pulling around it's the shoulder pulling away from the ground uh and as a
804
00:54:36.830 --> 00:54:39.680
result of that shoulder
805
00:54:39.680 --> 00:54:45.410
shrugging he is a little bit more um internal rotation on this side so i think
806
00:54:45.410 --> 00:54:47.360
that the root of
807
00:54:47.360 --> 00:54:53.680
his issues is trying to get some of the deep core involved so trying to get um
808
00:54:53.680 --> 00:54:56.000
a little bit more
809
00:54:56.000 --> 00:55:01.460
ab and ribcage rotation on the way through uh you might be able to kind of
810
00:55:01.460 --> 00:55:03.040
force it by working on
811
00:55:03.040 --> 00:55:10.230
that trail arm going into internal rotation or by working on some of the
812
00:55:10.230 --> 00:55:11.280
connection not quite
813
00:55:11.280 --> 00:55:15.520
having as much shrug feeling a little bit more of the arms getting pulled out
814
00:55:15.520 --> 00:55:17.760
um but if we go back to
815
00:55:17.760 --> 00:55:22.880
his kinematic sequence
816
00:55:25.920 --> 00:55:34.240
and his uh pelvis graph um you can see that there's some little uh kind of
817
00:55:34.240 --> 00:55:38.790
i don't want to say dysfunctions but there's some little indications that the
818
00:55:38.790 --> 00:55:40.480
pelvis is out of order
819
00:55:40.480 --> 00:55:46.440
but not uh nothing grand it shows up a lot more in the video and it shows up
820
00:55:46.440 --> 00:55:49.200
more um when he's trying
821
00:55:49.200 --> 00:55:59.090
to swing full like he would with a driver compared to with the iron he's
822
00:55:59.090 --> 00:56:00.000
probably
823
00:56:00.000 --> 00:56:10.350
you'll see not quite as exaggerated that um lower body hinge and then on the
824
00:56:10.350 --> 00:56:12.000
way through
825
00:56:14.480 --> 00:56:19.760
a little bit better ribcage rotation and a little less of the lead shoulder
826
00:56:19.760 --> 00:56:20.480
shrug so
827
00:56:20.480 --> 00:56:26.680
the fact that it shows up a bit more with the driver helps me identify that it
828
00:56:26.680 --> 00:56:27.680
's probably more
829
00:56:27.680 --> 00:56:33.550
related to um power production and possibly positive you know increasing the
830
00:56:33.550 --> 00:56:34.800
angle of attack
831
00:56:34.800 --> 00:56:42.180
um but that's uh the number one thing that kind of jumps out for me is more uh
832
00:56:42.180 --> 00:56:42.800
that deep core
833
00:56:42.800 --> 00:56:47.680
function so i'd probably you know look at his breathing look at his tva um but
834
00:56:47.680 --> 00:56:48.240
that might be
835
00:56:48.240 --> 00:56:52.130
stuff to be easier to do in the gym otherwise if i was if i was confident he
836
00:56:52.130 --> 00:56:53.280
was strong enough to
837
00:56:53.280 --> 00:56:58.560
do it in the gym then i would probably go after um trail arm and uh lead
838
00:56:58.560 --> 00:57:00.320
shoulder connection
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-
GSA Level 1 Certification Overview03:04
-
Integrating Speed Training1:26:09
-
Mastering the 'Wipe'1:45:45
-
Exploring Arc Width, Axial Velocity, and Training 'Feel'1:25:53
-
Lead Shoulder Dynamics, Foot Mechanics, and Transition Sequencing1:30:17
-
Dual External Rotation, Knee Anatomy, and Transition Case Studies1:21:37
-
Analyzing the Cast Pattern, Hip Anatomy, and Swing Mechanics1:15:51
-
The Motorcycle Move & SI Joint Mechanics57:00
-
Short Game 3D—Cast & Coast & Lumbar Spine Mechanics1:16:45
-
Integrating Core Concepts for a Cohesive Golf Swing1:15:36
-
Phases of the Swing - Impact1:31:25
-
Phases of the Swing – Backswing1:38:12
-
Phases of the Swing - Downswing1:26:31
-
Discussing the 3 Consistency Keys09:25
-
Analyzing Rate of Closure on Video09:23
-
Face To Path Explained with a Plane Board11:41
-
Wipe Analysis - Back Side Visual14:15
-
Seeing Face Rotation on 2D Video10:33
-
Bump Then Turn The Hips Discussion17:02
-
Net Force Discussion - Simplified Golf Physics07:20
-
2016 WGFS - Driver Vs Iron Presentation38:28
-
2018 WGFS - Arm Moves of Elite Golfers51:24
-
How To Apply Force In Transition - Quiver Pulls Explained04:38
-
Axial Velocity Explained with 3D07:34
-
Throwing A Club Discussion06:55
-
Axis Tilt Examples - A Key For Driving13:48
-
Exploring the Como Flat Spot13:48