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Tyler Ferrell is the only person in the world named to Golf Digest's list of Best Young Teachers in America AND its list of Best Golf Fitness Professionals in America. Meet your new instructor.

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Amplified Center Of Mass

To build the training club, take a golf ball and securely attach it to the golf club in line with the balance point of the club, and in line with the club face. This will make the golf club feel slightly heavier, but still allow it to swing like a normal club. A couple great drills for hitting with this training club are zorro loops and the single arm releases. 

DO NOT SWING HARD OR HIT FULL SHOTS WITH THIS CLUB.

Tags: Member Question, Drill, Intermediate

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You notice on this site that I don't have a ton of training aids, I'm not really a big fan of most training aids,

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but there are some that I like and some that I build myself that I kind of show you how to do.

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So this is one that Johnston Clare created, that's very smart, it's just taking a golf ball and taping it about where the center of mass of the club would be.

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So if I just kind of balanced it there, it's basically if I took the club and I balanced it like this,

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and I found where that balance point was, and then I took a golf ball and I just taped it right there.

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That's pretty much what we're doing, so it should be inline with the club,

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taped at a bout where the balance point is.

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So what that does is that, as I hold it, it just feels like a heavy club,

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but it swings somewhat naturally.

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So what I can do is I can kind of feel the different relationships,

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so I can feel what happens if I rotate.

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So if I'm working on the motorcycle, I can get used to that feeling of the club in a little bit more closed position,

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and you can actually make contacts swinging with it,

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but it feels a little weird and depending on how securely you did the tape, the ball, the center of mass may move.

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But the one that I really like it for is feeling that arm shallowing or that water bottle transition feeling,

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because it'll exaggerate the feeling of it dropping, and as it, because it's exaggerating that feeling of it dropping,

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it'll encourage me to then feel like I'm going to get on top of it.

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So I can practice that good arm shallowing movement,

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and but before I reach parallel or a shaft parallel, so before I get really into the release,

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I'm making sure that I'm starting that club working out away from me,

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or basically instead of feeling it dropping this way, feeling like I'm starting to go here.

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So basically this is a great way to exaggerate that feeling of the Zoro loops,

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so I'll feel the drop a little bit more, so I can start applying that kind of tumble force,

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or some of the supination of the release a little bit earlier.

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So the three drills that I really like this exaggerated center mass for would be Zoro loops are kind of feeling,

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when feeling going from arm shallowing to arm steepening, or kind of somewhere in this phase right around here.

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I really like exaggerating and kind of feeling the weight of the club there,

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and I really like this for the single arm releases, because what you'll tend to feel is if you scoop it with this,

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as opposed to kind of hitting that good release, the weight of the club,

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you'll really feel it come in or go out, so you'll feel whether this arm is kind of pulling the mass

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towards me or allowing it to go out and using my body to kind of pull the mass in towards me.

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So if I'm doing it too much with my arm or if I'm doing it with my body, this little exaggerated weight tends to help me feel that.

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With the weight arm, it is very hard, this thing gets really heavy trying to disconnect here,

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so feeling me just swing the center of mass is a lot easier with this kind of heavy weighted club,

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as opposed to when I do it with the standard club.

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So the three times I like this are for training each arm during the release,

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or feeling that timing of going from the zoraloups,

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going from the shallow move to the bracing move, or the steepening moves during the release.

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If you're struggling with kind of getting a feel for those, make one of these clubs, take a golf ball, just tap it,

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where the center of mass would be for that particular golf club.

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Obviously, I'd recommend taking a specific old club so that you can always keep it in your,

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you know, whether you've got a little practice spot in your garage,

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or you can keep this in your bag as a training club.

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It's a great way to exaggerate some of the feels during some of these key drills.

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