Thanks for the feedback so far! I didn't quite understand the lead arm pulling concept/wording. From the comment on the shoulder and elbow I'm thinking of the feeling where you "supinate" your arm with the shoulder and humerus instead of the forearm? I'm thinking if that's the case and you are still in radial, the club flies out or gets "pulled"?
I did play around with the left arm feels thought but, haven't really been able to nail down a useful feel yet.
For a while I was getting really pulled into the ideas of the wipe thinking that was my issue but I believe that was misguided as shown in the video and diagrams. The diagram here shows the difference between my "handsy" exaggerated feel and my pivot driven feel I've been working towards.
Of note it seems like I'm doing some sort of held off turn and then a really late stall in my lead wrist? My club is just so behind my chest at impact and I believe I must be using this wrist extension to save it?
At this point I figure it's a combination of lacking ulnar which would make the supination into a pull pattern? I think what I learned at some point instead of that was this wrist motion. It's also worth noting my club is generally pretty shut at the top.
My current idea is to focus on supported supination drills with a focus on ulnar allowing for supination. Maybe even before that I need to work on low to high with preset ulnar with a focus on letting my trail hand get above my lead. During that time I figure I will build more trust in low point in the world where my handle goes up as ulnar sends the club down.
Would love to here your thoughts on my diagnosis and prescription. Also if you any additional pieces of information would make diagnosing easier!
Cheers,
Joey
Edit: I started to think that my handsy feel is actually closer than my body turn feel. Played around with delaying my release in that feel instead of releasing earlier with my body turn feel. Just added that video but I'm noticing my left arm supination, internal vs external elbow, and elbow bend are all over the place.