include("728x15adlinks.txt") ?>
include("336x280adlinks.txt") ?>
One final thought on this matter of weight and balance and subsequent righthandedness or lefthandedness. If a person is terribly righthanded or terribly lefthanded, he is lopsided, one-handed, not ambidextrous and not ready and in position. He is not ready for the simple reason that he is not balanced for action, and he cannot balance himself for action because he does not have the necessary footwork to do so.
Do not walk up to a golf ball and plant both feet solidly on the ground with weight evenly divided, because you will be really locking up and thereby destroying all chance of an easy, natural swing.
All good golfers change their weight from their left foot to the right foot with a distinctive one-two move, also called a zig-zag movement. The first move of this one-two action is so common that it has a name. This is the forward press, which I have described in Chapter One.
From this forward bend of the right knee and the forward press of the hands, there is an easy natural opportunity, a natural impetus to make move 2, which is to reverse the knee positions, and through this reversing of the knees, transfer or shift the weight to the right foot. (All during Steps 1 and 2, the clubhead remains on the ground and so do the heels of both feet.)
This Step 2 is actually the key move to good golf, because it opens up the way and makes it possible to raise the club to the top of the swing in an easy natural way. continue the second part of the golf shot...
include("home-menu.txt") ?>