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The slide is a common lower handicap problem. It helps create axis tilt. It helps move the low point forward. It helps shift the path to the right. But it does these in a way that creates inconsistency and compliments a flip or steep arm pattern.
it may seem counter-intuitive, but with a slide, the heel generally turns inward (eversion) too much. You'll want to train it to stay neutral or even (invert) during the transition. Combining this feel with an anti-slide visual can be a really powerful training station.
Tags: Poor Contact, Follow Through, Release, Drill, Intermediate
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This drill is lead foot supination to fix the slide.
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So I've had a number of recent questions about sliding.
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So here's one other approach that I use which is going more at the foot and how it relates
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to the slide pattern.
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So the slide pattern is when your balance of lateral movement versus rotational movement
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is off and it's more towards this lateral movement.
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So you're overdoing the Jackson-Five movement or you're overdoing the lateral movement.
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As a rough guide, I'll use the center of the ankle or the most extreme the outside
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of the ankle compared to the center of the hip joint.
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So if you remember from finding your hips, your hip joint is roughly kind of fingers
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width in right around here.
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So if you were to bend right around there where you feel that bend, that's actually the
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hip joint.
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If this joint gets past the ankle, then what would happen is if I kept pushing through
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this leg, it would continue to push me forward.
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You can see as I get there I'm starting to lose my balance.
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So if I slide past the foot, then I'll stop my lower body.
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I'll usually bend the knee to kind of create a new fixed point further ahead that I can
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resist against.
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And then I'll have nothing left with my body and I'll just flip the arms.
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So as a little guide, yes at the top of the swing my hip is way back here so I have to bump
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it a little bit or slide it a little bit to get it more in line.
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But then the second half of the down swing is going to be primarily vertical and rotational.
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So I want to make sure that this hip isn't going out past the ankle.
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Well one of the ways that I can improve that is by getting this initial bump to happen
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more by supinating the foot or basically rolling the foot out that way.
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That gets the pressure into the the cuboid or the lateral aspect of the mid foot here.
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So it's going to roll out like that.
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Now if I do that from the top of the swing, that's going to bring my knee out over the toe,
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but without bringing the hip with it quite as much.
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So if I did the opposite, if I were to pronate, then the knee stays in and if I bump,
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it's very easy for me to get my hip too far past the ankle.
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So remember, if you're one of these golfers who stay back on this side, then you need to feel
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more of this excessive movement or you need to feel a lot more of the Jackson 5.
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But for the subset of golfers who get too much of this lateral movement, especially when
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the knee stays in like this, we're going to focus on the foot.
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The foot is going to have a big impact on moving the knee in this initial transition move.
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So now we're going to experiment going through this.
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So all I'm going to do is I'm going to do a few movements where I'm basically trying
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to roll to the outside of the foot while keeping that knee bent.
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And now I'm going to add just a little bit of pressure shift so that I'm not just totally
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over here, I'm actually shifting a little bit as I'm doing it.
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So that kind of gets the foot moving in the right direction.
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Now we're going to make that movement from 9 to 3, 10 to 2, and up towards full swing.
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So monitor yourself either with a mirror, with video, to make sure that the knee is staying
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a little bit ahead of the hip and the hip is not going past the foot.
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So I've got a little just kind of spatial barrier here.
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So if I do this 9 to 3 and I get up to the top and in slow motion I was to supinate that
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foot, I get that knee to hit this pool noodle before it then starts the street.
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So we're going to bring it back, supinate the foot, and then straighten.
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And you'll see I'm still finishing more up against this lead side.
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I'm over the ankle.
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I just don't want to be past the ankle.
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So this is to help clean up golfers who get too far past the ankle and it usually causes
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either a stall flip or too much of a hangback on the way through.
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So we'll do that again.
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We'll go up to a 9 to 3.
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Kind of like that.
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So that one I did in more of a blended movement feeling like the foot rolled to the outside
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as the initial trigger.
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Now we'll do 10 to 2.
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And we'll see as I make a little bigger backswing I might have to feel that this movement
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happens a little bit longer or more aggressively in order to get back to that same position
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because in making that longer backswing I might have my knee coming in a little bit more
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as the hip rotates.
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So 10 to 2.
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We're going to go up.
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First movement before I really start rotating is shifting the foot onto the outside.
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And lastly, full swing.
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Now in the full swing version it's going to feel probably a little bit more exaggerated
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and what I often have to do with students who slide is you have to exaggerate the knee
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staying bent as the foot starts this downswing and then once you get to delivery position
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and you kind of trigger the release the knee straightens the knee straightens the help trigger
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the release not to trigger transition.
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So full swing now will feel the knee is going to get out towards that pool noodle while
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the hip stays a little bit back compared to the ankle.
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Little thin there.
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Let's do one more little wrap through series.
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So 9 to 3.
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And bring it up.
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Pretty good one there.
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Exaggerate.
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So 10 to 2.
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That one was pretty good.
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I could feel that kind of rocking motion or leading with the lead knee.
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I remember a number of golfers like Davis love talking about the lead knee starting
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the downswing.
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It's a good thought for golfers who tend to stay more on the inside of the foot just
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for fun.
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I'll demonstrate one of those.
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So if I was to pronate if I was to have the knee come in this way you'll see the
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I actually shifted too far forward that way and I had much of a more of a throw feel
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less of this continued rotation through the ball.
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So now we'll do a 10 to 2 with a better foot action just so you can compare.
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And on that you'll see that there's much more of a continued rotation through the ball.
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And now let's do one more full swing.
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Tie that movement into a little bit full or back swing.
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So that was pretty good there.
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If you've tried a bunch of drills working on the hip and it's still not solved the slide,
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take a look at the foot.
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That might be the cause of your excessive lateral movement.