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Post by meunier33 on Nov 2, 2021 14:31:53 GMT -5
I am saying that I should have full control over if my swing is good and not the computer. If I want to swing with no backswing, I want to be able to do it and still get a perfect. The same with no downswing. Most of the shots I take have either no downswing or no backswing. I would call my swing a snap swing where I touch the stick as little as possible but with the most force possible. I usually get perfect swings only by accident. Does anyone else play this way? I have made 3 out of 4 cuts on beer league this season playing this way, but I would do much better if there was no tempo.
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Post by owenayy on Nov 2, 2021 16:22:16 GMT -5
...but I would do much better if there was no tempo. Who wouldn't?
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Post by twofor22 on Nov 2, 2021 16:30:58 GMT -5
No because it doesn't work. You'd probably get far better results if you kept control of the stick through the whole swing rather than flicking it around. It's not the computer messing it up, it's just a poor technique.
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Post by jeffh on Dec 7, 2021 7:15:21 GMT -5
No shortcuts....go to the range and hit 100 balls. Ur tempo will be better immediately
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INCharlie68
Weekend Golfer
Posts: 103
TGCT Name: Charlie Clore
Tour: Challenge Circuit
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Post by INCharlie68 on Jan 4, 2022 14:06:04 GMT -5
No because it doesn't work. You'd probably get far better results if you kept control of the stick through the whole swing rather than flicking it around. It's not the computer messing it up, it's just a poor technique. IMO this is spot on. My timing and tempo issues come from trying to kill the ball. When I'm able to control the "whole" swing properly, my tempo slows down and timing becomes way more consistent. It's a much smoother feeling than "flicking" or trying to ram the stick forward. I have not found swinging harder to result in more distance.
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Post by sandgroper on Jan 13, 2022 5:02:31 GMT -5
Try this thenโฆ
no backswing, no follow through, no tempo problems ๐
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