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Whoosh Progression Discussion

Identifying whether you need to work on your face control or your path as the primary focus can be helpful in speeding up the process. The whoosh progression drill can be useful for helping this decision. Since you aren't worrying about the club face, the only thing that matters is the path of the club. However, if you re-grip the club in a normal way and the club face doesn't match up, then in general, you have a club face control issue more than a path issue. What it really says is that "if you have a good path, then your brain doesn't know how to organize the club face for that path." See what I mean here in this discussion video.

Playlists: Pivot Drills

Tags: Not Enough Distance, Mental Game, Concept, Advanced, Intermediate

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In this video, we're going to take a look at the Wush Progressions.

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And we're going to watch a couple of students troubleshoot what it's like to use the

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Wush Progressions to figure out what a good path looks like.

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And then struggle with how do I organize the club face to a good path?

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Because if you're struggling with either the outside in or overly inside out, there's

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a good chance that you're faced the path of relationship is off during transition or down

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near the bottom during the release.

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And what you'll see with this Wush Progression is it can be a great diagnostic to see if

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it's really a face problem or a path problem.

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Let's take a look at a couple of golfers going through the Wush Progressions to see how the

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Wush drill can also be a little bit of a path to face diagnostic.

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So here we have a golfer on the left going through the Wush Progressions.

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And basically what you'll see is first, he's just trying to get the club to Wush from

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impact as I demonstrate in the drill.

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And you'll see that there's a fairly fluid amount of lead arm rotation and trail arm extension.

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For all intent purposes, this looks like a very good path and release associated with that

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path.

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Now over here on the left, he's going to take the club back to delivery position and then

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try to go through that same pattern.

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And what you'll see is there's a very good amount of body turn.

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There's a almost excessive amount of shaft lean.

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There's a very good amount of shaft lean.

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And then you'll see a similar looking fluid release in terms of trail arm extension and

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lead arm rotation.

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Okay, so we'll move that one over onto the left and on the right we'll now have him

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trying to do the exact same thing but with a club.

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So he gripped it in his normal way and he's just walking through this Wush Progression,

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trying to get the club to Wush.

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And what you'll find is that when the club would have made contact with the golf ball,

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it would be pointing roughly 30 degrees out to the right.

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This is a very common pattern among amateur golfers, which is basically if they had a

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very good path, which the Wush drill almost requires you to have a good path in order

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to get it to Wush.

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If he had a good path, he does not know how to organize the face for that path.

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And so what you would see is when he goes back to trying to hit a real golf ball, you'll

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see that he would dump the angles and kind of use the early release and the casting movement

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in order to get that club face more close.

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So this is a clear example of where face control and face education have to be a big

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part of how this person is going to reprogram their path.

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So now let's take a look at another golfer going through the same progression.

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And you'll see another example of where face and path and balancing the two is a big part

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of the solution for fixing most amateur swing issues.

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So here he is doing the Wush progression and you'll see again even almost excessive

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shaft lean in order to get the Wush after the golf ball, but a very fluid amount of lead

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arm rotation and trail arm extension.

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So now if we take him up to the top of the swing, you'll see him making good looking

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transition, building up that speed and then in order to get that Wush, you can see again

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a very fluid amount of trail arm extension and lead arm rotation.

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And you'll see that while his trail arm is extending, it doesn't reach, you know, the body

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has used a very good path in order to delay that extension of the arms.

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So again good looking release.

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Now let's see what happens when he switches the club right side up.

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So over on the right, now he has the club head and just for comparison sake, I'll take

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the just the shaft and put it to roughly where the golf ball would have been.

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So somewhere just passed there or just before there.

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So now with a club face, whether it's the weight of the club or the orientation of the

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face, you can see that there are already some changes going on in order to get that club

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face pointed in a similar direction of the target.

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So unlike the first golfer, the first golfer actually did roughly the same thing when

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he turned the club upside down, but as a result, the club was pointed well open.

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The second golfer, if we take him back up to the top of the swing, if you look at the

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trail arm, if you look at kind of the amount of angle of the shaft, you can see that

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the second golfer has released the club much sooner and he has created a little bit more

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space with that trail arm working kind of out in a way.

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He's done so in order to get the face pointed at the target.

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So while he still has a little bit more shaft lane than he normally does, this is falling

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into his usual pattern of using that trail arm early.

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And then as he comes through the ball, it no longer has that kind of fluid look of trail

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arm extension.

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It now has a little bit more of the shoulder internal rotation and kind of forearm rotation

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to take the club through the ball.

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But those two movements do not build a very consistent and repeatable arc with, which

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is what he's demonstrating here in that wish progression.

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So the wish drill can be a great diagnostic to see if you have more of a path problem or

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more of a face problem or basically if we give you a good path, then what happens with

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the face.

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Very often, golfers who have face issues will feel a benefit and experiencing what a good

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path is like from either doing something like the wish drill or using a trainer such

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as the orange whip or momentous.

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Any of those heavy or long clubs, almost guaranteed that you will have a good path.

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And then if your brain can figure out how to make a good face relationship to that path,

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you can overall succeed or succeed in changing your face and path pattern.

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So if you're an early extender or a caster or an early release type player, figuring

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out whether it's more of a face or a path problem can help you figure out the fastest way

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for you to improve it.

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