How To Fix Your Choppy Golf Swing
We would all like to have a fluid, beautiful swing like Adam
Scott, power off the tee like Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods,
and the ability to repeat that swing round after round, day
after day.
But what is holding back most amateurs from
that silky smooth and powerful swing?
Most likely, it’s your hamstrings and your low back.
We are going to explore the connection between your hammies,
your low back and that less than PGA pro, Golf Magazine type
golf swing.
Let’s start with your hamstrings. Most of us think we know
where our hamstrings are located and what they do, but do we
really? We’re always hearing about baseball players, football
players and basketball players coming down with hamstring
injuries. It’s a common problem in a lot of sports, including
golf.
What are they and what do they do?
The hamstrings are a group of muscles located on the back
part of your upper leg. The hamstring group consists of three
individual muscles: the semimembrinosus, semitendinosus, and
the biceps femoris. To make it easier on my typing and to your
eyes we’ll just keep it simple and call them your hamstrings.
The function of the hamstrings in your body is pretty
complex.
I’ll try to simplify it for you. First off, your hamstrings
bend your knee. Also, your hamstrings help stabilize your hip
area. So when you are performing almost any activity the
hamstrings are essentially helping to hold your hips in place.
They are great stabilizers. So the next time you are on the
dance floor trying to do your best impression of Fred Astaire
or John Travolta, think about how hard those hammies are
working!
In addition to bending the knee and stabilizing the hips,
your hamstrings help with your rotation of your leg internally
and externally. Let’s try something. Right now, stand up and
turn your foot inward (pigeon toed) and then rotate your foot
out (duck toed). These two foot/leg movements use the
hamstrings to make the inward and outward movements happen.
This is certainly not a complete list, but it should give you
insight to how involved the hamstrings are when it comes to the
human body.
What about my aching low back!
I think we all know where the low back is located,
especially if you are a golfer. If you experience low back
issues like half of the golfers in the world, you intimately
know where the low back is and how it affects your daily
life.
The low back is essentially a group of small muscles. All
these little muscles together comprise the lower back region of
the body. The lower back muscles have a lot of functions. To
start off, the lower back muscles help stabilize your spine at
all times, especially during movement. In addition, the lower
back muscles are used extensively to rotate the torso and to
bend your hips forward/backward. Keep in mind that the lower
back muscles of your body are probably active and functioning
99% of the time. They are worked a ton! Every day. When’s the
last time you pulled weeds in the backyard for hours? How did
your low back and hammies feel the next day?
Alright now, what about that choppy swing my golf buddies
give me a hard time about?
Now, onto the golf swing. The golf swing is essentially a
total body movement that requires the body to move through
multiple planes of motion. The body has to stabilize your
moving body, accelerate aggressively on the downswing, rotate
quickly, and decelerate in a very short order during the golf
swing. This causes enormous stress on the body and results in
fatigue all over. For some of us that fatigue sets in on the
range, and for others it’s after a weekend of 72 holes and a
few hands of poker with the guys. For the PGA Tour pros,
hopefully it’s after walking up the 18th on Sunday in front of
TV cameras and thousands of spectators.
The connection is that hamstrings and the low back are
working extremely hard during the golf swing, and quite often
either one or the other (low back or hamstrings or even both)
gets “tight.” The tightness we talk about is something most all
of you have felt at one time or another. And I think it would
be safe to say that in addition to feeling these muscles
getting tight you know what effect it has on your game.
So, knowing that these two body parts are connected to the
swing, now what?
Here’s why the Golf Channel is not going to be calling you
anytime soon to exclaim about your beautiful swing….until you
fix a few things.
Both the low back and hamstrings become “tight” from
swinging a club. When you are actively using both of these
muscle groups in the golf swing, these muscles get “tired”.
What do I mean when I say “tired?” Exactly that! They get
tired, meaning the muscles get fatigued. They have no more gas
left in the tank. And when muscles get fatigued they don’t
function properly or efficiently, and they shorten and become
restricted. This is essentially the body’s way of telling you
that your muscles are tired and they need a rest. It is also a
“defense mechanism” of sorts by the body to prevent injury. If
you continue to “work” muscles that are tired they will
eventually become injured. So when you are performing the golf
swing for an extended amount of time, say, for instance, 18
holes or a long practice session, your low back and hamstrings
are going to get tired. If they get tired enough, they will
become “tight.” And that is the point where these muscles start
to affect your swing. Your swing looks stiff and choppy.
So it’s the fatigue that really makes my swing look
stiff?
The golf swing requires your body to move through a pretty
complex range of motion. This range of motion is essentially
the back swing to the follow through. This large range of
motion allows the golfer to swing the club on the correct path,
create club head speed, and swing the club with the correct
timing. Ultimately, it provides the golfer with the correct
golf swing. In order for all these movements to occur in the
right sequence, all the muscles of the body must be “loose” and
have their normal ranges of motion available to them. It’s like
someone taking most of your clubs away before a match. No
putter. No driver (probably a benefit for most golfers). No
wedges. You are probably not going to score as well without all
your critical clubs available to you.
Without your hammies and your low back working with a full
tank of gas, you’ve got your stiff and choppy golf swing. This
results in reduced club head speed and less likelihood of
swinging the club on the correct swing plane or with the
correct timing. Amazing when you think how these two muscles
groups that are associated to the golf swing can hinder your
performance if they are “tight.”
So that’s why I haven’t gotten much better after all those
lessons!
We all need a coach or a trainer. Phil Mickelson certainly
has a swing coach, a short game coach, and I help him with his
physical training.
What I’m saying is that without training your body to match
your swing, your improvement in your swing will be limited by
the strength, flexibility and endurance of your hamstrings and
low back area.
I would suggest the implementation of a golf-specific
training program that assists in getting the body ready to
swing a golf club. This type of program focuses on developing
the proper ranges of motion in these muscle groups for the golf
swing. This type of program assists in developing the needed
strength, endurance, and power required of the golf swing. In
addition, a program like this can assist in the prevention of
injuries to the lower back and other parts of the body. Finding
a quality, golf-specific, PGA Tour-proven program can be
difficult.
That’s where we come in. Our programs have helped golfers
from amateurs to a Masters Champion. They are available to you
at www.bioforcegolf.com. Programs at our site are geared
towards developing your body around the golf swing. They
essentially are swing tools working on the piece of machinery
that swings that 450 cc driver you just bought! The programs
are “tour proven” and work for both the professional and the
amateur. They do not take long to perform (15 minutes a day).
And I think it is safe to say anyone serious about their golf
game will spend fifteen minutes a day with a program that could
lower their handicap by 30%. Don’t you think? Thirty
percent!
Check it out and I am sure you will agree.
Sean Cochran is one of the most recognized golf fitness
instructors in the world today. He travels the PGA Tour
regularly with 2004 Masters Champion Phil Mickelson. He has
made many of his golf tips, golf instruction and golf swing
improvement techniques available to amateur golfers on the
website http://www.bioforcegolf.com Check out his
manual and DVD, Your Body & Your Swing, (http://www.bioforcegolf.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=93)
on BioForceGolf.com. To contact Sean, you can email him at
support@bioforcegolf.com.
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