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Arm shallowing can give us a margin of error as well as make it harder to hook the ball. It also compliments more body rotation, which is really helpful for creating speed without losing accuracy. Some golfers are more prone to using a steep arm pattern than others. But if you're working on shallowing out the arms, you should check each of them in order to identify which arm is sabotaging your efforts the most. The shoulders work as a pair and complement each other's movements, so training them to shallow the club together makes the most sense.
Tags: Standing Up, Chicken Wing, Driver, Transition, Concept, Intermediate
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This video is connecting lead arm to Trail arm shallowing. So
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I had a member question come in about arm sowing
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specifically external rotation of the trail arm that
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they've been working on it for years and haven't
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made much progress that the arm
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is always behind kind of more in this position. And so
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no matter what they try whether it's getting a little bit more
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face rotation or really getting that elbow in front. It just
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doesn't seem to go there. So I asked them
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to send in a video and I showed him
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how the lead arm was.
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equally, if not more so
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causing that steep arm pattern so
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As one of the arguments for understanding how the shoulders work together with a
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rotational pattern. The shoulders will end up working kind of
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like the pelvis. So if you try to go into external rotation
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of the trail arm or the trail shoulder
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that will typically be accompanied with more
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of a retraction and depression of
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that shoulder blade to complement that the
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lead shoulder will help out if it goes into
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a little bit more protraction or
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kind of goes around your body like this and if your lead
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shoulder goes into internal rotation so oftentimes I'll
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describe as if we were holding on
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to a steering wheel kind of like this and going like that.
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If you try to externally rotate both of them it puts
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a lot of tension into your back and it can stall some of the ribcage
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rotation in your upper thoracic spine.
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So what often happens is if the lead arm
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starts pulling into external rotation
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or pulling down like this that shoulder
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drops down that trail arm comes up and you
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get more of this steep over the top pattern from the
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downline camera angle. So you'll get more of this even
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if you think you're trying to go this way, you'll see
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that if this is pulling down I
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have to really work somewhere in this wrist position
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in order to keep it from steepening. So that's
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why I have kind of an equal number of drills related
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to shallowing from the trail arm or shallowing from
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the lead arm from the lead arm. It's more of this lead shoulder
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rotation component, which you can identify by
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where the elbow is pointing.
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So if you go up to the top of the swing and you
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get into this downswing checkpoint, you pretty
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much want your lead arm pointing out
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away as that trail arm is more in
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front of your hip or in front of your body. If the lead
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arm is pointing more down than you would just have to
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excessively get the shallowing happening more at the forearm. And
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I'd find I found that some people
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can do that and it works really well, but other people's other golfers really
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struggle with it and that can be one of their big shallow barriers.
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One of the other advantages is as
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this lead arm shallows like this
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and raises up it tends to encourage and
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create a little bit of tension. So it encourages the body
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rotation on the way through when this arm
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tends to pull it'll actually encourage a little bit more of a stall
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pattern so
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you'll see if I get if I
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Steepen that lead arm you'll see even if I try to
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shallow that trail arm because of
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this arm getting into more of that steep position. It still has
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a tendency to want to pull on the way through where if I do
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the same thing with my trail arm, but I
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tend to lift or rotate this
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and give it more of a shallow position. You'll see
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that I have much cleaner impact. I have more of a less
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of a stall and more of an ability to rotate
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my body through so if you're really struggling with
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trying to take out some steepening moves and you've
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tried a lot with the trail arm don't neglect the lead arm those two
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work in pairs. You got to work on shallowing the lead
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arm just as much as shallowing the trail.