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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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Hula Hoop Pivot Training

Using a hula hoop is a great way to train your pivot/body-mechanics at home or on the range. By anchoring it to your sternum while in golf posture, you will have a good visual representation of the ideal swing plane. This will allow you to pick-up on any inefficiencies in the backswing or downswing, such as a sway or flat/steep shoulder turn. 

Tags: Early Extension, Standing Up, Sway, Follow Through, Backswing, Drill, Beginner

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The drill is Hulu Hoop Pivot Training.

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So what we're going to do is we're going to use a Hulu Hoop to work on our body pivot.

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So I'm going to roughly hold the Hulu Hoop out in front of me on about the angle of

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the whatever club I'm training.

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So a little bit flatter for the woods, a little bit more upright for the irons.

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And I'm going to hold it so that it's basically up against the just above my belly button

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or below my sternum right about there.

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And now this gives me a rough representation of the swing plane.

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So you can see from down the line that if I made a backswing and basically kept this at

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about the same angle to the ground, that would basically be my shoulders and my hips tilting

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more down at the ground.

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If you tend to have more of a loss of posture or a flat shoulder plane, then if you keep this

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in front of you like this, then the Hulu Hoop would get more horizontal just like that.

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The two main issues that you'll see on the backswing, actually we'll do the backswing.

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First, the two main backswing ones, what either getting too flat, you can see because

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my shoulders are now parallel to the ground and this is now horizontal or having a

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sway in this getting or kind of almost a reverse tilt leaning towards the target this

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way.

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But if I have my shoulders working down and in kind of that shoulder plane or the wind

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mill drill and the pressure shifting in the my trail foot, this will start to follow and

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natural pivot.

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That's about as far as my body would go, then the rest of the swing would be more my arms.

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Now on the way through, the two common ones would be more of an early extension pattern

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so again getting it more horizontal from this down the line.

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You kind of like this or I would tend to get more of a slide, hang back buckle kind of

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like this and it would be tilted way out to the right.

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Also in transition, I want to get this if I'm just following my body, I want to get this

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to shallow just slightly because my body is tilting this way as opposed to if I spun

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my upper body on top of my lower body, you can start to see it going that way.

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So those are some details but when you start to put it in practice, all you do is you lock

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it up against your sternum and then you make some swings, basically checking it at the top

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of the backswing, it's still pointed down roughly at the club and then right here it's

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roughly at the club.

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So roughly at the club, roughly at the club.

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If I work on that and I can start adding a little bit of speed to it, this will help

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me with the overall orientation of my body and then if I find that I can do that when

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I'm holding a whole hoop but I have a problem when the balls in the ground are on in front

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of me.

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Then that usually means that I'm struggling with some of my arm motions, maybe I'm struggling

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with low point, maybe I'm struggling with club face but at least my brain knows what I'm

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supposed to be doing as far as the pivot and as far as the sequencing.

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