Archive for the 'Swing Vision' Category
Woody Austin Iron Swing Analysis
0 Comments Published July 8th, 2008 in Swing Tips, Swing Vision, Woody Austin, swing analysis.
Woody Austin is one of those players I like because of his personality, not his swing. He cracks me up with some of the things he has achieved.
Let’s look at his swing. His setup looks pretty good.

Takeaway looks good too. Woody doesn’t transfer much weight to the right but that’s okay. (I don’t either because I end up swaying)

At top of Woody’s swing, Woody looks very good. Pay attention to his lower body action.

At half-way down, take a look at how well Woody has transferred his weight to the left. This reminds me of Ben Hogan.

At impact, notice how far his hips have transferred and how straight his left arm and the club is.

After impact, Woody is still in really great shape.
Woody Austin might not win a lot of tournaments but heck, he’s always on the leaderboard.
His swing might be one of the best hidden swings on the PGA Tour.
Here’s Woody Austin’s swing in slow motion:
Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode
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Fred Funk Driver Swing Analysis
0 Comments Published July 8th, 2008 in Fred Funk, Swing Tips, Swing Vision, swing analysis.
For many years, Fred Funk has always been one of the straightest drivers on the PGA Tour and his swing has never changed. (probably because of that)
Let’s look at what makes his swing “tick”.
At setup, Fred looks pretty good. Notice that his sets with his ball outside the ball. Kinda unusual but some pros do this to hit inside-out.

At takeaway, Fred is doing pretty good, maybe slightly inside the plane. (Plane is a little off here because the camera angle is slightly closed)

At half-way, Fred looks pretty good.

At top of Fred’s swing, his in perfect plane except that his clubface is really shut. This isn’t great for hooking the ball but let’s find out how he manages to hit the ball straight with this backswing.

At half-way down, Fred is lookin’ good.

At impact, notice how much his hips have turned (maybe 45 degrees) and his shoulders.
Fred must really drive his hips in order to hit the ball straight but he hits straight alrighty.

After impact, Fred is in good shpae.
Fred’s swing requires a lot of hand-eye coordination and lots of lower body movement to hit it well. Fred might need a hip surgery when he gets older due to the fact he must really drive his hips.
Don’t swing like Fred if you want to play golf for a long time but Fred is still one of the straightest drivers on the tour.
Here’s Fred Funk’s funky swing in action:
Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode
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Rod Pampling Driver Swing Vision Swing Analysis
0 Comments Published July 7th, 2008 in Rod Pampling, Swing Tips, Swing Vision, swing analysis.
Let’s look at Rod Pampling’s driver swing here. He has a swing that “over-rotates” during the backswing and the follow-through.
At address, Rod is a little bit too much over the ball but sitting very tall.

At takeaway, Rod’s club is nicely on-plane except notice that even his clubface is on-plane. (Normally, you want the clubface edge pointing up at the sky at this point)

At half-way point, Rod is in perfectly on-plane, nice….

Again, at the top, Rod is doing really well.

At half-way down, Rod is doing great again, pretty much on-plane.

At impact, notice how much Rod’s hips and shoulders have turned. This is because he “over-rotates” his body on the backswing. It’s not an easy swing to repeat.

After impact, Rod is slightly inside the plane, meaning he used his wrists a little to square the club.
Again, this is probably due to his over-rotations.

At finish, Rod looks pretty good.
Rod Pampling could really benefit from swinging with less rotation. Then again, if he has been swinging like this for last 20 years, I wouldn’t change it, just go working on my putting more.
Here’s Rod Pampling’s swing in action:
Click Here to View in Full Screen Mode
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