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GOLF
TEACHING PRO®
The Modern Swing
PART 1: Tiger’s Modern Swing Setup
By John Andrisani
USGTF Level III Member, Vero Beach, Florida
I consider myself a
golf historian, though admittedly my interest leans mostly toward
the realm of golf instruction. In fact, in my library I’ve got over
one hundred how-to books, my at home office walls are covered with
swing sequence photographs of golf greats, and my desk drawers
contain golf videotapes and electronic media of all types, plus
binders containing instruction articles cut out of major golf
magazines. On top of that, I’ve attended approximately 25 golf
schools around the world, and when not attending a golf tournament,
constantly watch golf on television. I live golf instruction!
In searching all
these years for the answers to the perfect swing, I’ve tested out
all kinds of swing methods, including the most popular and the most
obscure, and observed closely the swings of top tour pros from past
and present eras.
In tracking the
actions of Tour professionals, the players I pay the closest
attention to simply because they have proven themselves to be the
best golf club swingers and golf scorers in the world, I’ve noticed
that over the last ten years gradual changes have been occurring in
the techniques of more and more top players. These changes have all
been quite subtle in nature and, again, so gradual that the leading
golf magazines have not reported on them. Furthermore, until the
2007 PGA championship, no one player had employed all of the
elements of what was being built before your eyes without you
knowing it: The Modern Golf Swing.
In all fairness, the
chief reason this modern golf creation was virtually impossible to
see was because players were modernizing their setup, backswing, and
downswing piecemeal, and by feel or instinct alone. Moreover, one
player would change only one address key, another player only one
backswing key, another one downswing key, and so on. Therefore,
these changes went unnoticeable. No one golfer had it all together,
a handle on the complete Modern Swing package, but that was all to
change.
My trained eye and my
constant tracking of what goes on in the world of golf instruction
is what allowed me to discover the one player who was smart enough
to figure out the entire puzzle and piece each piece together into
one super-efficient package. Furthermore, this player operated
according to a plan, making conscious decisions to risk everything
he had accomplished to try and bring his technique to the highest
possible level. This shows the genius and the courage of that one
player. Who is this one player who has assembled the Modern Swing
that will now be our model for the future and allow him to play golf
even better than before and likely overtake Jack Nicklaus’s major
championship record of 18 major championships? Why, of course, it’s
Tiger Woods, the world’s greatest golfer, who just so happens to be
the most determined golfer, who just so happens to be the golfer who
most thinks outside the box when meditating on golf technique.
What’s even more
ironic is Tiger Woods is setting the trend, but he’s such a
phenomenon and gone through so many teachers and methods that the
press and golf swing aficionados have failed to notice the changes
Tiger has made to his setup and swing. That’s why you have not heard
any golf commentator mention Tiger’s accomplishment or, up until
now, ever read about Tiger discovering and employing The
Modern Swing.
I spoke about this at
length in one of my books, Tiger’s New Swing. However, since its
publication in 2005, Tiger has modernized his swing. And as one golf
insider told me, Tiger did the work himself (mostly after failing to
win the first three major championships of 2007), and that makes
sense, considering he knows more about golf technique than anyone in
the world.
THE MODERN SWING SETUP
* Teach Your Students to
Follow These Instructions
When setting up to
drive, position the ball an inch behind your left heel, tee the ball
lower than normal, so that the leading edge of the driver’s face is
even or just a tad below the top of the ball. Just recently, Tiger
changed the position of the ball, moving it back slightly. Tiger
also started teeing the ball lower to discourage an exaggerated
upswing hit and, instead, encourage what renowned teacher Jim McLean
calls a more streamlined “flat spot” in the hitting area, and as a
result, a more level strike. By level strike, I mean that the club
moves low along the target line through impact and stays on the ball
for a split second longer. The result:
more solid, clubface-to-ball contact, less backspin imparted on the
ball, and a lower, more piercing ball flight.
I’ve also noticed
that rather than set his hands a couple of inches behind the ball, a
la Ben Hogan, in order to promote a low and long takeaway, Tiger
sets them slightly ahead. This new “modernized” position promotes a
more upright swing plane, very different than the flat swing Tiger
learned under Butch Harmon. So, I suppose Tiger now believes what
his idol Jack Nicklaus always believed, and what we should all
accept as fact:
“An upright plane
gives the golfer his best chance of swinging the club along the
target line at impact.”
Two other setup
changes to Tiger’s swing that are both tied to one another involve
the left hip and the distribution of weight. Whereas Tiger used to
set slightly more weight on his right foot and tilt his left hip up,
to promote an upswing hit, he now sets up with his weight evenly
balanced and his hips dead level.
These modernized
changes of Tiger, plus setting his head more in line with the ball
than well behind it, point to the modern-day golfer looking for
added distance via a lower flying tee shot that will roll out
farther upon landing, rather than a tee ball hit with plenty of
carry.
Last, but certainly
not least, Tiger’s grip is neutral to strong, instead of on the weak
side, and his stance square rather than open, proving that he is
trying to gram a straight ball or slight draw into his shotmaking
repertoire rather than his old bread-and-butter high flying fade
that, unfortunately, sometimes turned into a slice. Sometimes, too,
when fearing hitting a shot right of target, Tiger would try to flip
the club back to square at impact, end up closing the clubface, and
hitting a duck-hook.
Have your students
work on the aforementioned address keys until they become second
nature. At that
point, they will be ready to learn and groove Tiger’s backswing and
downswing keys.
Continue to Part II of Article >
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