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Face To Path Explained With A Plane Board

Understanding Face-to-path is a key skill for playing golf. It is responsible for the amount of curve or shaft lean in your swing. I use a plane board to help illustrate how the face-to-path relationship changes throughout the swing and how you can visualize it.

Show more

Understanding Face-to-path is a key skill for playing golf. It is responsible for the amount of curve or shaft lean in your swing. I use a plane board to help illustrate how the face-to-path relationship changes throughout the swing and how you can visualize it.

Hide
Video Transcript
WEBVTT

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This concept video is exploring the face-to-path relationship in the golf

2
00:00:03.960 --> 00:00:08.840
swing. So I've got a little target here that we use for wedge practice, but we

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00:00:08.840 --> 00:00:08.920
're

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gonna use it like a plane board. So you can see if I were to set my foreiron on

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the ground. It's not quite a flush to it, but it's going to give us a decent

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representation of a swing plane. Now what we're going to look at is the club

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face orientation compared to this plane at different points during the swing.

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There's a philosophy out there that you want to try to keep the club face

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square to this plane of movement as long as possible. And what I'm going to

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show

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you is that that's a challenging to do and b) I don't think it's the most

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athletic way or most natural way for the club to swing, and we'll look at a

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bunch of examples of tour pros to kind of see what they've figured out as far

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as

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the amount of rotation. So what we're going to do is let's pretend that instead

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of

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making a swing way up here where the club's following kind of a somewhat

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planar or circular path, we're going to shrink it down so that I'm standing

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right

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here in this H and the club is going to work around me as I make my

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swing. So in order for the club face to be square to the path, most people

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would

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define that as perpendicular. So the leading edge, perpendicular, kind of like

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that. Now what we'll see is let's say it's perpendicular when the shaft is

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vertical, if I lean the shaft forward I can still keep the leading edge

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perpendicular, but that would actually take a little bit of rotation in order

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to

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do so. So if I kept the face square to the path of the grip, it would be open

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and

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then if I rotated it, that makes it square. So down at the bottom when I'm

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making contact, we're going to have a little bit of shaft lean and then the

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club face will be rotated just a touch compared to the plane of the club in

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order to square the face. Now the theory of keeping the club face square to the

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path, you'll see, really doesn't show up when we look at it in the backswing,

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because there's a couple key points where it's easy to see the face-to-path

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relationship. One is when the shaft is parallel on either side of the ball and

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then two is looking at the top of the swing. So if we're looking at when the

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shaft is parallel, if it was to be square, that means that during the takeaway

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and

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during the downswing, you would want the face to be roughly at that angle there

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.

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Or if I had my six iron, that's roughly a 60 degree vertical swing plane with

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the

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six iron, that means that the club face would be square or perpendicular to

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that

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60 degree angle, it would look very much like that and most people would say

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that

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that's pretty closed. So if we fast forward to the downswing, that means that

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if

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we're saying this is pretty close to square or even vertical is square, I don't

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care too much, that means that I've still got to rotate it a good 40 degrees or

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so

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from here down to the bottom of the swing in order to get the club face pointed

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at the target or get it square to the path. So if I've got some rotation

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happening

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between here and contact, it doesn't make sense if you look at a lot of other

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sports that I would want to then change the path or change the movement of my

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arms right there in impact. It would make a lot more sense that I would want to

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gradually close it and continue it closing so that when it's in this

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follow-through position, square to the path would actually point close to like

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that. That would look like a very open club face by most standards. Square

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would

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be something like that but now you can see that that's more close than it was

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at

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the at impact. So I tend to look for more of a gradual rotation and gradual

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closing compared to the path. The place where it's the most apparent is if you

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look at the top of the swing. If I was to try to keep this square to the path

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at

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the top of the swing, you can see that that would look extremely closed by most

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standards. Most golfers are going to be closer to parallel to the plane, not

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perpendicular to it. So the club face has to rotate a good 70, 80, 90 degrees

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between the top of the swing and impact. So you could either, we'll do it there

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,

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so here's the top of the swing, there's impact. You could either wait, wait,

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wait,

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wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, and then try to snap it closed or you could

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gradually close it the whole time or you could close it early and then try to

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hold it on. I tend to prefer more of the gradual closing the entire downswing

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and

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even into the follow because I think it has the most fluidity and kind of, I

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like

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what it does to the path of the club in terms of helping to build the flat spot

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.

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Now you can see that from a practical standpoint, trying to create a swing

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where I keep that closed becomes really challenging as I start to get up

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towards the top of the swing. You can see that if I get my wrist in any sort of

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natural position, it's going to be closer to parallel to the plane instead of

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perpendicular to it. So if the downswing starts with it, not

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square to the plane, there's no way I could keep the club face square to the

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plane during the entire swing. So now the two major ways that the club face is

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going to rotate. One would be if I start to pull the grip back like this and

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kept the club face in the same orientation, you can see that it would

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be pointing way to the right. But because of how this arm tends to rotate when

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it straightens, what ends up happening is when I pull this in, that shoulder

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will

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tend to rotate this closed. So that many golfers who have a look of it open,

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open,

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open, open, and then snap and close do so by more bringing the grip back

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instead

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of twisting the face. The only way that I can keep the grip moving towards the

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target, or in the, it's moving a little bit up, but

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moving through there, the only way that I could then square it through that

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would

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be having pure shaft rotation. Maybe that will make a little bit more sense

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from the face on view. From the face on view, you'll frequently see the club

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face

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looking like this when it's wide open. Golfers who tend to have more of that

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earlier rotation will tend to have the club face looking more like this.

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If it's open through this phase here, then what will typically happen is the

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grip will end up moving backward like this and the club will rotate because of

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how the right arm works on it like that. As opposed to getting it closed a

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little bit earlier, and then I can continue the grip moving forward,

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which helps delay the low point and create some of that flat spot.

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I thought it would be helpful to take a quick look at a couple different

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examples in the video analyzer. So we've got a couple different golfers who

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are thought to have kind of quiet wrists, not a whole lot of club face rotation

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.

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So we got Dustin Johnson and Steve Stricker. Now it's a little tricky to see

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the club face

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because this camera angles a little bit low. But if we go just until he starts

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down,

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you can start to see the club face there is pointing pretty much that way.

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Now if it was perpendicular to the swing plane, which would be

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somewhere in that general category, we would expect to see it pointing

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kind of more parallel to that line or the club face would be along that line

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pointing out that way. So even Dustin with his close grip or strong grip,

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boogerist, doesn't get the club face square to the swing plane at the top of

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the swing. And then as he comes down, you can see at this point, the club face

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is

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pretty vertical. So if you were to, you know, imagine some type of swing plane,

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again, it's still got a good 20 30 degrees to rotate.

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The only swing plane that that would be square to would be one that was

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perpendicular or something

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about like that. Now you will see that he he gets it fairly closed here as

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as we're close to square to that path as anybody that I've seen.

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But you will see that on the way through through here, he gets it close to

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vertical,

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which again, that would be turned down compared to the swing plane.

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Now it's, I, we'll look at another view. We'll look at one of my swings from

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overhead.

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And just to show some of the challenges of being able to see the amount of

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rotation

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in through here, because the collision with the golf ball can definitely

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disrupt the way

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that the club face will look. But quickly, we can look at Steve Stricker

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over here on the right. You can see at the top, it's is club face would be

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considered

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square or even slightly open, maybe, but it's pretty close to parallel to the

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forearm.

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And we know if it was pretty, if it was in that same orientation down at the

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bottom,

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it would be pointing along the swing plane, not perpendicular to it.

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So the club face would actually be pointing basically out like that or probably

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60 degrees,

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70 degrees out to the right. But then as we get to those two checkpoints that

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are easy-ish

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to see the face to path relationship here, you can see again, the only swing

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plane that would

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be perpendicular to would be pretty horizontal. So it's still got a good 20, 30

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degrees to

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rotate there. And then you'll see at the point in the follow through when it's

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toe up,

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he's rotated it past perpendicular. So we know that it's rotating through that

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phase,

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and we know that it's rotating through that phase. To me, it wouldn't make a

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whole

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lot of sense to rotate it, hold on, and then rotate it again. It seems more

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repeatable or

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athletic to have slow, smooth, consistent rotation during the entire release

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pattern.

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I thought it'd be fun to look at two different perspectives of my own swing

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from a couple years

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ago. Here we've got camera, I've got down the line, and then here you can see

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that same alignment

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stick, but now we're looking from close to overhead. Now we're going to use

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those two references over

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here. You can see the club face close to vertical, and then on the way through

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close to vertical as

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well. So there's definitely, there's definitely some rotation through that

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phase, right, because

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the club face, if it stayed at the same orientation to the swing plane would be

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pointed out the right,

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so we know it's closing. And then to get back to, to get to vertical, it would

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have to close

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even past where it was at impact. Now from overhead, you'll see that I struck

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this ball a little bit

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on the toe. And so what you'll see is that slightly off center strike can

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disrupt some of the speed

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of how it looks like it's closing, which is part of the reason why I think it

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can be more helpful

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to look at the window, just prior to impact, and then a couple feet after where

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some of that noise

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has been somewhat zeroed out. But you can see that there's definitely some

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rotation of the club

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through this phase, even on a release that looks pretty close to square.

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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.

Face To Path Explained With A Plane Board

Understanding Face-to-path is a key skill for playing golf. It is responsible for the amount of curve or shaft lean in your swing. I use a plane board to help illustrate how the face-to-path relationship changes throughout the swing and how you can visualize it.

Show more

Understanding Face-to-path is a key skill for playing golf. It is responsible for the amount of curve or shaft lean in your swing. I use a plane board to help illustrate how the face-to-path relationship changes throughout the swing and how you can visualize it.

Hide
Video Transcript
WEBVTT

1
00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:03.960
This concept video is exploring the face-to-path relationship in the golf

2
00:00:03.960 --> 00:00:08.840
swing. So I've got a little target here that we use for wedge practice, but we

3
00:00:08.840 --> 00:00:08.920
're

4
00:00:08.920 --> 00:00:13.960
gonna use it like a plane board. So you can see if I were to set my foreiron on

5
00:00:13.960 --> 00:00:18.160
the ground. It's not quite a flush to it, but it's going to give us a decent

6
00:00:18.160 --> 00:00:23.280
representation of a swing plane. Now what we're going to look at is the club

7
00:00:23.280 --> 00:00:26.520
face orientation compared to this plane at different points during the swing.

8
00:00:26.520 --> 00:00:30.300
There's a philosophy out there that you want to try to keep the club face

9
00:00:30.300 --> 00:00:34.800
square to this plane of movement as long as possible. And what I'm going to

10
00:00:34.800 --> 00:00:35.040
show

11
00:00:35.040 --> 00:00:41.700
you is that that's a challenging to do and b) I don't think it's the most

12
00:00:41.700 --> 00:00:46.240
athletic way or most natural way for the club to swing, and we'll look at a

13
00:00:46.240 --> 00:00:50.040
bunch of examples of tour pros to kind of see what they've figured out as far

14
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as

15
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the amount of rotation. So what we're going to do is let's pretend that instead

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of

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making a swing way up here where the club's following kind of a somewhat

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planar or circular path, we're going to shrink it down so that I'm standing

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right

20
00:01:03.560 --> 00:01:09.640
here in this H and the club is going to work around me as I make my

21
00:01:09.640 --> 00:01:15.560
swing. So in order for the club face to be square to the path, most people

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00:01:15.560 --> 00:01:15.680
would

23
00:01:15.680 --> 00:01:20.840
define that as perpendicular. So the leading edge, perpendicular, kind of like

24
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that. Now what we'll see is let's say it's perpendicular when the shaft is

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vertical, if I lean the shaft forward I can still keep the leading edge

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perpendicular, but that would actually take a little bit of rotation in order

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to

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do so. So if I kept the face square to the path of the grip, it would be open

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and

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then if I rotated it, that makes it square. So down at the bottom when I'm

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00:01:46.960 --> 00:01:50.760
making contact, we're going to have a little bit of shaft lean and then the

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00:01:50.760 --> 00:01:55.280
club face will be rotated just a touch compared to the plane of the club in

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00:01:55.280 --> 00:02:02.080
order to square the face. Now the theory of keeping the club face square to the

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00:02:02.080 --> 00:02:07.280
path, you'll see, really doesn't show up when we look at it in the backswing,

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00:02:07.280 --> 00:02:10.400
because there's a couple key points where it's easy to see the face-to-path

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00:02:10.400 --> 00:02:15.320
relationship. One is when the shaft is parallel on either side of the ball and

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00:02:15.320 --> 00:02:19.440
then two is looking at the top of the swing. So if we're looking at when the

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shaft is parallel, if it was to be square, that means that during the takeaway

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00:02:24.480 --> 00:02:24.800
and

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00:02:24.800 --> 00:02:28.840
during the downswing, you would want the face to be roughly at that angle there

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00:02:28.840 --> 00:02:28.840
.

42
00:02:28.840 --> 00:02:36.370
Or if I had my six iron, that's roughly a 60 degree vertical swing plane with

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00:02:36.370 --> 00:02:36.440
the

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00:02:36.440 --> 00:02:40.520
six iron, that means that the club face would be square or perpendicular to

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00:02:40.520 --> 00:02:40.680
that

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00:02:40.680 --> 00:02:44.030
60 degree angle, it would look very much like that and most people would say

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00:02:44.030 --> 00:02:44.160
that

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00:02:44.160 --> 00:02:49.200
that's pretty closed. So if we fast forward to the downswing, that means that

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00:02:49.200 --> 00:02:49.840
if

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00:02:49.840 --> 00:02:54.240
we're saying this is pretty close to square or even vertical is square, I don't

51
00:02:54.240 --> 00:03:01.200
care too much, that means that I've still got to rotate it a good 40 degrees or

52
00:03:01.200 --> 00:03:01.400
so

53
00:03:01.400 --> 00:03:06.080
from here down to the bottom of the swing in order to get the club face pointed

54
00:03:06.080 --> 00:03:10.910
at the target or get it square to the path. So if I've got some rotation

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00:03:10.910 --> 00:03:11.680
happening

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00:03:11.680 --> 00:03:16.280
between here and contact, it doesn't make sense if you look at a lot of other

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00:03:16.280 --> 00:03:21.400
sports that I would want to then change the path or change the movement of my

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00:03:21.400 --> 00:03:25.280
arms right there in impact. It would make a lot more sense that I would want to

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gradually close it and continue it closing so that when it's in this

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00:03:30.580 --> 00:03:35.920
follow-through position, square to the path would actually point close to like

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00:03:35.920 --> 00:03:41.000
that. That would look like a very open club face by most standards. Square

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00:03:41.000 --> 00:03:41.280
would

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00:03:41.280 --> 00:03:45.510
be something like that but now you can see that that's more close than it was

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at

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00:03:45.800 --> 00:03:51.480
the at impact. So I tend to look for more of a gradual rotation and gradual

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00:03:51.480 --> 00:03:55.560
closing compared to the path. The place where it's the most apparent is if you

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00:03:55.560 --> 00:04:00.880
look at the top of the swing. If I was to try to keep this square to the path

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00:04:00.880 --> 00:04:01.120
at

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00:04:01.120 --> 00:04:05.160
the top of the swing, you can see that that would look extremely closed by most

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00:04:05.160 --> 00:04:10.720
standards. Most golfers are going to be closer to parallel to the plane, not

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00:04:10.720 --> 00:04:16.160
perpendicular to it. So the club face has to rotate a good 70, 80, 90 degrees

72
00:04:16.160 --> 00:04:21.200
between the top of the swing and impact. So you could either, we'll do it there

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00:04:21.200 --> 00:04:21.200
,

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00:04:21.200 --> 00:04:26.240
so here's the top of the swing, there's impact. You could either wait, wait,

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00:04:26.240 --> 00:04:26.480
wait,

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00:04:26.480 --> 00:04:30.720
wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, and then try to snap it closed or you could

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00:04:30.720 --> 00:04:35.200
gradually close it the whole time or you could close it early and then try to

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00:04:35.200 --> 00:04:40.800
hold it on. I tend to prefer more of the gradual closing the entire downswing

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00:04:40.800 --> 00:04:41.560
and

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00:04:41.560 --> 00:04:47.070
even into the follow because I think it has the most fluidity and kind of, I

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00:04:47.070 --> 00:04:47.320
like

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00:04:47.320 --> 00:04:50.640
what it does to the path of the club in terms of helping to build the flat spot

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00:04:50.640 --> 00:04:50.760
.

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00:04:50.760 --> 00:04:58.560
Now you can see that from a practical standpoint, trying to create a swing

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00:04:58.560 --> 00:05:03.440
where I keep that closed becomes really challenging as I start to get up

86
00:05:03.440 --> 00:05:07.440
towards the top of the swing. You can see that if I get my wrist in any sort of

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00:05:07.440 --> 00:05:12.800
natural position, it's going to be closer to parallel to the plane instead of

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00:05:12.800 --> 00:05:17.280
perpendicular to it. So if the downswing starts with it, not

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00:05:17.280 --> 00:05:20.000
square to the plane, there's no way I could keep the club face square to the

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00:05:20.000 --> 00:05:24.880
plane during the entire swing. So now the two major ways that the club face is

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going to rotate. One would be if I start to pull the grip back like this and

92
00:05:31.200 --> 00:05:35.760
kept the club face in the same orientation, you can see that it would

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00:05:35.760 --> 00:05:40.480
be pointing way to the right. But because of how this arm tends to rotate when

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00:05:40.480 --> 00:05:44.560
it straightens, what ends up happening is when I pull this in, that shoulder

95
00:05:44.560 --> 00:05:44.720
will

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00:05:44.720 --> 00:05:49.590
tend to rotate this closed. So that many golfers who have a look of it open,

97
00:05:49.590 --> 00:05:49.760
open,

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00:05:49.760 --> 00:05:55.360
open, open, and then snap and close do so by more bringing the grip back

99
00:05:55.360 --> 00:05:55.840
instead

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00:05:55.840 --> 00:06:01.440
of twisting the face. The only way that I can keep the grip moving towards the

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00:06:01.440 --> 00:06:06.480
target, or in the, it's moving a little bit up, but

102
00:06:06.480 --> 00:06:09.520
moving through there, the only way that I could then square it through that

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00:06:09.520 --> 00:06:09.680
would

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00:06:09.680 --> 00:06:13.760
be having pure shaft rotation. Maybe that will make a little bit more sense

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00:06:13.760 --> 00:06:17.840
from the face on view. From the face on view, you'll frequently see the club

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face

107
00:06:18.640 --> 00:06:23.040
looking like this when it's wide open. Golfers who tend to have more of that

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earlier rotation will tend to have the club face looking more like this.

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00:06:28.400 --> 00:06:33.040
If it's open through this phase here, then what will typically happen is the

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00:06:33.040 --> 00:06:38.160
grip will end up moving backward like this and the club will rotate because of

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00:06:38.160 --> 00:06:44.320
how the right arm works on it like that. As opposed to getting it closed a

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00:06:44.320 --> 00:06:49.280
little bit earlier, and then I can continue the grip moving forward,

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which helps delay the low point and create some of that flat spot.

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I thought it would be helpful to take a quick look at a couple different

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examples in the video analyzer. So we've got a couple different golfers who

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00:07:01.360 --> 00:07:08.080
are thought to have kind of quiet wrists, not a whole lot of club face rotation

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00:07:08.080 --> 00:07:08.080
.

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00:07:08.080 --> 00:07:12.640
So we got Dustin Johnson and Steve Stricker. Now it's a little tricky to see

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00:07:12.640 --> 00:07:13.520
the club face

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00:07:13.520 --> 00:07:20.080
because this camera angles a little bit low. But if we go just until he starts

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00:07:20.080 --> 00:07:20.400
down,

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00:07:20.400 --> 00:07:24.960
you can start to see the club face there is pointing pretty much that way.

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Now if it was perpendicular to the swing plane, which would be

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somewhere in that general category, we would expect to see it pointing

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kind of more parallel to that line or the club face would be along that line

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pointing out that way. So even Dustin with his close grip or strong grip,

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00:07:47.040 --> 00:07:51.840
boogerist, doesn't get the club face square to the swing plane at the top of

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the swing. And then as he comes down, you can see at this point, the club face

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00:07:57.040 --> 00:07:57.200
is

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00:07:57.200 --> 00:08:02.400
pretty vertical. So if you were to, you know, imagine some type of swing plane,

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00:08:02.400 --> 00:08:06.720
again, it's still got a good 20 30 degrees to rotate.

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00:08:06.720 --> 00:08:12.400
The only swing plane that that would be square to would be one that was

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00:08:12.400 --> 00:08:13.680
perpendicular or something

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00:08:13.680 --> 00:08:19.360
about like that. Now you will see that he he gets it fairly closed here as

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00:08:19.360 --> 00:08:23.680
as we're close to square to that path as anybody that I've seen.

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00:08:23.680 --> 00:08:29.280
But you will see that on the way through through here, he gets it close to

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vertical,

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which again, that would be turned down compared to the swing plane.

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00:08:35.920 --> 00:08:41.160
Now it's, I, we'll look at another view. We'll look at one of my swings from

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00:08:41.160 --> 00:08:42.000
overhead.

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00:08:42.000 --> 00:08:48.720
And just to show some of the challenges of being able to see the amount of

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00:08:48.720 --> 00:08:49.600
rotation

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00:08:49.600 --> 00:08:52.880
in through here, because the collision with the golf ball can definitely

144
00:08:52.880 --> 00:08:53.760
disrupt the way

145
00:08:53.760 --> 00:08:58.480
that the club face will look. But quickly, we can look at Steve Stricker

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00:08:58.480 --> 00:09:04.640
over here on the right. You can see at the top, it's is club face would be

147
00:09:04.640 --> 00:09:05.120
considered

148
00:09:05.120 --> 00:09:09.800
square or even slightly open, maybe, but it's pretty close to parallel to the

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00:09:09.800 --> 00:09:10.160
forearm.

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00:09:10.160 --> 00:09:13.600
And we know if it was pretty, if it was in that same orientation down at the

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00:09:13.600 --> 00:09:13.920
bottom,

152
00:09:13.920 --> 00:09:18.480
it would be pointing along the swing plane, not perpendicular to it.

153
00:09:18.480 --> 00:09:23.720
So the club face would actually be pointing basically out like that or probably

154
00:09:23.720 --> 00:09:24.480
60 degrees,

155
00:09:24.480 --> 00:09:28.800
70 degrees out to the right. But then as we get to those two checkpoints that

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00:09:28.800 --> 00:09:29.760
are easy-ish

157
00:09:29.760 --> 00:09:35.360
to see the face to path relationship here, you can see again, the only swing

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00:09:35.360 --> 00:09:35.840
plane that would

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00:09:35.840 --> 00:09:40.660
be perpendicular to would be pretty horizontal. So it's still got a good 20, 30

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00:09:40.660 --> 00:09:41.040
degrees to

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00:09:41.040 --> 00:09:45.100
rotate there. And then you'll see at the point in the follow through when it's

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00:09:45.100 --> 00:09:45.520
toe up,

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00:09:45.520 --> 00:09:52.560
he's rotated it past perpendicular. So we know that it's rotating through that

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00:09:52.560 --> 00:09:52.800
phase,

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00:09:52.800 --> 00:09:56.080
and we know that it's rotating through that phase. To me, it wouldn't make a

166
00:09:56.080 --> 00:09:56.240
whole

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00:09:56.240 --> 00:10:01.520
lot of sense to rotate it, hold on, and then rotate it again. It seems more

168
00:10:01.520 --> 00:10:04.320
repeatable or

169
00:10:04.320 --> 00:10:09.280
athletic to have slow, smooth, consistent rotation during the entire release

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00:10:09.280 --> 00:10:10.080
pattern.

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00:10:10.080 --> 00:10:14.900
I thought it'd be fun to look at two different perspectives of my own swing

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00:10:14.900 --> 00:10:16.080
from a couple years

173
00:10:16.080 --> 00:10:20.770
ago. Here we've got camera, I've got down the line, and then here you can see

174
00:10:20.770 --> 00:10:22.080
that same alignment

175
00:10:22.080 --> 00:10:26.900
stick, but now we're looking from close to overhead. Now we're going to use

176
00:10:26.900 --> 00:10:28.160
those two references over

177
00:10:28.160 --> 00:10:34.480
here. You can see the club face close to vertical, and then on the way through

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00:10:34.480 --> 00:10:35.520
close to vertical as

179
00:10:35.520 --> 00:10:40.800
well. So there's definitely, there's definitely some rotation through that

180
00:10:40.800 --> 00:10:42.000
phase, right, because

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00:10:42.000 --> 00:10:46.970
the club face, if it stayed at the same orientation to the swing plane would be

182
00:10:46.970 --> 00:10:48.080
pointed out the right,

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00:10:48.080 --> 00:10:52.760
so we know it's closing. And then to get back to, to get to vertical, it would

184
00:10:52.760 --> 00:10:53.280
have to close

185
00:10:53.280 --> 00:11:02.010
even past where it was at impact. Now from overhead, you'll see that I struck

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00:11:02.010 --> 00:11:03.200
this ball a little bit

187
00:11:03.200 --> 00:11:10.090
on the toe. And so what you'll see is that slightly off center strike can

188
00:11:10.090 --> 00:11:11.760
disrupt some of the speed

189
00:11:11.760 --> 00:11:15.830
of how it looks like it's closing, which is part of the reason why I think it

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00:11:15.830 --> 00:11:17.440
can be more helpful

191
00:11:17.440 --> 00:11:25.390
to look at the window, just prior to impact, and then a couple feet after where

192
00:11:25.390 --> 00:11:26.160
some of that noise

193
00:11:26.160 --> 00:11:32.490
has been somewhat zeroed out. But you can see that there's definitely some

194
00:11:32.490 --> 00:11:34.880
rotation of the club

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00:11:34.880 --> 00:11:41.600
through this phase, even on a release that looks pretty close to square.

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