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One of the reasons that hockey players end up being successful golfers, is that they know how to push the ground away from them to create movement. Use a medicine ball or furniture mover to do an open chain type of lower body movement where the trail leg pushes on an angle of away from the target and behind you (about 30-45 degrees). Then, while keeping the foot on the ground, if you feel the same push, then you will create rotation without early extending (standing up).
Tags: Transition, Drill, Intermediate
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This is the trail leg push drill to help understand how the trail leg or the right leg
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for right handers pushes through the ground to help with the lateral hip bump during
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transition. So if you remember from the concept video during transition we are going to shift
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our weight from close to the right foot into the left foot. The main thing is by impact we want
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to make sure that we've got most of our weight into the left leg. So pushing through that right
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leg can help create both speed and this proper what we call axis tilt. So one of the hard
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things about the golf swing is because we are planted to the ground we don't get a lot of
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movement through the feet or I should say a lot of amateurs don't get a lot of movement through
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the feet. So sometimes it's easier to feel what the legs should do when they get disconnected
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from the ground. So I've got a couple objects here that we're going to use to help
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feel what the leg does. But essentially if I'm going to do it towards you, when I push through this leg
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this foot if it was not connected to the ground is going to rotate slightly outwards and back
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behind me like so. That's part of the reason why skaters or hockey players end up being pretty
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good golfers is because they're used to doing this movement in order to propel themselves.
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So you can take either a frisbee or one of these furniture movers that you can get a home depot
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or if you want the fancy version of the valve slides and you can place it under your foot
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and you can practice sliding it back away and sort of out to the side back about 30 degrees
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and letting that foot rotate out. So it'll be kind of like this. Okay so I've got my golf bag there
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to stop it just in case it goes too far but it would be if I angled like so it would be
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a push like that. Now if you don't have or if you want to get a little bit more resistance
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you can use a medicine ball because it'll take a little bit more force for me to slide this out of
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the way. If you're going to use the medicine ball I'm going to put my leg kind of on the inside
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edge just like so and then I'm going to push away just like so. Now that looks very goofy as far
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as it would relate to the golf swing going like so but if I do that same movement and my foot
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doesn't move it will actually propel my hip into a rotation this way. So in my sense it will push
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the lateral movement will push my hip to the side and the opening up of the foot will help push
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my hips this way. So this is a great drill for you if you're struggling with getting enough of the
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lateral movement of the lower body in transition. This drill will help you kind of find
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to and what the trail leg is doing during that movement.