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JHern wrote:I'm glad to hear people are still getting something from this thread. I think most of the lessons earlier in this thread can work quickly to get somebody over the 300' barrier with today's technology discs, and many casual players will be happy with that progress (for a little while, anyways). Getting over 400' requires channeling even more strength and energy into your throw while being even more fluid in your motions, which isn't easy and is where athletic coordination comes in very handy. A lot of us aren't used to producing the needed backhand hip turn driven by the legs, it is still uncoordinated in many ways even for somebody who can throw 350' without trouble. If I ever figure out an easy exercise to accomplish that, then I'll surely post it here at DGR.
myroomisajunkyard wrote:...I've been throwing 375 max and i've been trying to figure why the pro's gets up to 500.. then your PERFECT visual got me thinking, heck i'll try it the next morning.. I'm driving 450-475 with this new move... my course has a basket at 425 so about 20-50 ft past it.. So, i wanted to say thank you, your advice was what i needed!
myroomisajunkyard wrote:...question for jhern, i have this feeling i'm still half hitting the disc at 475, is that possible? because i still havent had the disc "RIP" out of my hand.. theres still a point where i open my hand to let it go and it's still going that far?...
JR wrote:...you might not be able to hold on to the disc for it to pivot long enough....Blake estimated the difference from 4 o'clock to 5 o'clock to be but it is a good jump in D...
gripandripit wrote:i have been having problems with my drives I can throw my buzzz the same distance as all of my drivers about 300 in my case. why is that, and what can i do to get my drives to fly farther?
niq wrote:JHern wrote:I'm glad to hear people are still getting something from this thread. I think most of the lessons earlier in this thread can work quickly to get somebody over the 300' barrier with today's technology discs, and many casual players will be happy with that progress (for a little while, anyways). Getting over 400' requires channeling even more strength and energy into your throw while being even more fluid in your motions, which isn't easy and is where athletic coordination comes in very handy. A lot of us aren't used to producing the needed backhand hip turn driven by the legs, it is still uncoordinated in many ways even for somebody who can throw 350' without trouble. If I ever figure out an easy exercise to accomplish that, then I'll surely post it here at DGR.
I really noticed this (hip turn driven by the legs) when i was practicing right pec and reachback yesterday. When i moved to the 1-step i could really see that i'm going to have to put in a lot of work here. Are there any benchmarks with a putter/midrange for a 1 step (half hitting & full hitting and whether they're with a reach back or from the right pec) to help get an idea of where i should be with these?
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