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O’MEARA’S EXAMPLE - AND WAGGLE . . .
The basis of my education as a coach really couldn’t have been
any better: for six years I worked as a trainee with the best in the
business - David Leadbetter. During my time at his base in Orlando,
I was lucky enough to work with some of golf’s greatest-ever players,
including the 1998 Open and Masters champion, Mark O’Meara. For me,
the way O’Meara waggles the clubhead is the model that every golfer
should aim to copy.
During the hours I spent on the range at his home club in Isleworth,
O’Meara showed me that by waggling the club in this deliberate manner
you very quickly get a sense of the delivery position you are looking
for in the swing itself - i.e. toe-up and slightly behind the hands,
the right hand fully hinged back on itself, wrists ‘loaded’. (If you
look at Hogan, his waggle was virtually identical, designed to give
him a sense of that critical delivery position.) Because there is no
body motion involved here, the appearance from the set-up is that the
left hand and forearm move out and away from the body just a fraction.
Of course, in the swing itself, this wrist and forearm action combines
with the rotary body motion that swings the hands, arms and the club
naturally inside the ball-to-target line. Theres an old saying, ‘as
ye waggle, so ye shall swing’. Rehearsing this move is the key to priming
your hands and arms to work this way in the swing, nurturing the wrist
action that maximises
your speed into the ball.
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