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You may need to work on leading with your elbow rather than leading with your shoulder.bcsst26 wrote:If you standstill and reach back, transfer your weight, then pivot I can't see how you get the disc to the right pec without your shoulders opening up first.
Yep, you're literally building your throw from that point backwards. You'll always return to that position no matter what you do before that point.bcsst26 wrote:So if I use a reach back with no step the disc should come back to the right pec with the elbow away from the body correct?
Your hips will be in the same position at that point no matter if you use a reach back or not. Think of your starting position in the "right pec" drill as a snapshot of what's going on at that time. If you're doing something that doesn't lead you through that snapshot you aren't doing it right.Is this the point that the hips should pivot or should they already be pivoting to get the disc to this point.
Correct, but they aren't moving all that quick...yet. I believe this is a crutial point in the "elbow chop" part of the equation. You need the elbow chop to get to this point.And if the hips are pivoting to get the disc to this point that would me that the shoulders are moving
Why not? You should be in the same position as you started with on the "right pec" drill at that instant in time, but you'll be moving into that position rather than starting there. If you can't get into that position with your runup then you need to rework how you get to that point.and when the disc does get to the right pec my shoulder is no longer pointing at the target
black udder wrote:To understand the power base, stand with your arms loose at your sides. Pivot your hips back, as in a reach back, then power them open and give a little shoulder rotation. You should feel your arm just whip out. If you do not feel that and feel the power of your base, then you're not doing something right. This is a rotation, not a push from your hips. I see lots of folks push from their back leg and spin on their pivot foot. The goal here is to close the hips, then open them. There is no inherent forward motion in that action.
Now, once you feel that arm whip, you want to figure out at which point will it be of maximum effect.
You start at the bottom, your legs bent a little to use your muscles, pivot the hips closed, then power them open. Before you reach your full rotation (and the end of your hip flexibility) you want to begin to rotate your shoulders. This is the uncorking of your power. Your arm will be around your chest area at this time. The timing part comes in coordinating your arm speed and shoulder rotation so that when you pull through at maximum speed, you end up with your arm extending as your chest faces the target.
black udder wrote:LOL
Yeah, it's tough. See if thinking about this in a non-golf manner works.
Imagine a towel and you hold it vertically and then twist it up. Then begin to uncoil it from the bottom. This is the core of what you're working towards.
To understand the power base, stand with your arms loose at your sides. Pivot your hips back, as in a reach back, then power them open and give a little shoulder rotation. You should feel your arm just whip out. If you do not feel that and feel the power of your base, then you're not doing something right. This is a rotation, not a push from your hips. I see lots of folks push from their back leg and spin on their pivot foot. The goal here is to close the hips, then open them. There is no inherent forward motion in that action.
Now, once you feel that arm whip, you want to figure out at which point will it be of maximum effect.
You start at the bottom, your legs bent a little to use your muscles, pivot the hips closed, then power them open. Before you reach your full rotation (and the end of your hip flexibility) you want to begin to rotate your shoulders. This is the uncorking of your power. Your arm will be around your chest area at this time. The timing part comes in coordinating your arm speed and shoulder rotation so that when you pull through at maximum speed, you end up with your arm extending as your chest faces the target.
When that happens, your shoulder rotation will keep your elbow bent a little and the ejection of the disc will allow you to follow through properly and get your palm down for maximum rotation without injury.
Your pull should really start as the disc is around your chest area - right pec is fine. The timing comes in figuring out for you, where your shoulder will be in relation to this pull effort. For some it might be at the target, for others, it might be past the target because they have good arm speed.
Ideally, you want to keep the disc as close to your forearm as you can up until it's ejected from your grasp. Thus, an optimal pull for me would have the disc almost past my chest before my shoulder rotates past the target. If I rotate my shoulders further, then I get a late rip. If I don't rotate my shoulders, then I don't get the power and typically overextend my elbow a little.
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