GOLF TEACHING PRO®
What
Was So Special About
Sam
Snead's Setup and Swing?
By
John Andrisani
USGTF Contributing Writer, Tampa, FL
In this second article of a four-part series,
John Anselmo, Tiger’s former teacher, answers the above question,
as he told me when we collaborated on the book A-Game Golf.
In
the late 1940’s Anselmo turned professional and started playing
the circuit with such players as Sam Snead. Snead became Anselmo’s
idol and Anselmo still thinks Snead possessed the all-time model-swing.
Anselmo is so strong in his opinion that when teaching Tiger,
from the age of 10 until 18, he showed him photographs of Snead’s
swing and asked him to form mental images of Snead’s key movements
in his mind.
I now want to share with you what Anselmo told
me he liked so much about Snead’s technique, which now, because
of Snead’s passing, means so very much more.
I would encourage you to read or re-read Snead’s
classic book, How To Play Golf, look at the sequence of his wonderful
swing contained in it, and take the following valuable information
from master USGTF Teaching Professional, John Anselmo and apply
it to your students.
Grip
Anselmo admired Snead’s comfortable pressure-free
grip — the way he held the club as firmly as he would a little
bird or to squeeze a tube of toothpaste. Using a relatively light
grip pressure prevents tension in the hands, arms and wrists.
Holding the club in this fashion also helps promote good clubhead
feel and higher clubhead speed. According to Anselmo, Snead’s
good grip was one of the chief reasons he hit powerful drives
while looking so smooth swinging the club.
Stance
Anselmo liked the way Snead dropped his foot back
slightly farther from the target line, in a closed position, to
encourage a free and powerful turn of the right hip. Anselmo relates
increased hip turn to power. He does not believe in the X-Factor
theory of Jim McLean, who believes you should increase your shoulder
turn and decrease your hip turn. As far as stance width, Anselmo
agrees with McLean and Venturi, that Snead’s extra-wide driver
stance gave him a more solid foundation. Additionally, this type
of stance encouraged Snead to make a wider takeaway and begin
creating a wider, stronger swing arc.
Tee Height
Anselmo also liked the way Snead teed the ball
up high, so that three quarters of the ball was above the top
of the clubface. This tee-position will encourage your student
to make a slightly flatter swing, and sweep powerfully through
the ball. Incidentally, Anselmo laughs at those teachers who talk
about keeping the club in front of the body. Snead swung the club
on a flat plane, and look what it allowed him to accomplish. He
hit a controlled draw that helped him enter the winner’s circle
more than any other professional golfer.
Backswing Pivot
Anselmo also liked the way Snead straightened his
right knee on the backswing. Anselmo agrees with top teacher and
kineseology expert Mike Austin who believes it is unnatural to
try and keep the right knee flexed during the backswing. Anselmo
also believes that Snead’s straight right leg position gave him
a solid post to turn around. The more solid the post, the better
able he was to maintain good balance while turning. The better
his balance, the better his tempo and rhythm. And we all know
that no swing ever was as syrupy as Snead’s.
Downswing Trigger
Anselmo admired the way Snead reached the top of
the swing and triggered the downswing by uncoiling his right hip
first. This, Anselmo told me, allowed Snead to more naturally
push his weight back onto his left foot and leg, and caused his
knees to first square up to the target then rotate toward it.
“This is the way to swing,” said Anselmo.
Downswing Pivot
As Snead completed his weight shift action and
more weight shifted to his left side, he purposely let his left
knee flex back and straighten, since this helped him establish
a firm post to turn his left hip around. If you have a student
that is having trouble clearing their left hip and generating
ample power, encourage he or she to let the left leg straighten
early on in the downswing. This is what Anselmo taught Tiger to
do as a teenager, and you see what a power-hitter and world-beater
he has become.
The
Release
According to Anselmo, releasing his right side
toward the target further helped Snead clear his left hip more
easily around his solid left leg post. Furthermore, once that
clearing action started, Snead’s arms extended out at the ball.
“At this point, it was almost as if you could see and feel the
building pulse of power being transmitted through Snead’s arms
and hands, into the clubhead,” said Anselmo. “All that was left
to hear was the loud and solid swish sound of the club meeting
the back of the ball at impact – Boom!”
Snead hit the ball a country mile while looking
like he was out for a Sunday stroll in the park. So learn from
his tension-free action, and pass on Anselmo’s tips about his
swing-idol to your students.