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This week’s Impact Show explains what “lag” is in the golf swing, and how you can develop more of it to help you hit the golf ball farther.

Me and My Golf is the No. 1 subscribed golf YouTube channel in the world. Piers and Andy provide a variety of video content for avid golf fans that reaches more than 180 countries. Essentially, Me and My Golf's social channels feature core instructional training tips and drills, as well as entertainment focused golf challenges, course Vlogs and trick shots. Piers has spent more than 15 years helping golfers, delivering 35,000+ lessons. After years of learning from the best coaches around the world, he has developed a simple approach to help golfers improve. His greatest skill is understanding the needs of his students, which allows him to deliver “their best lesson." Andy has spent the last 11 years coaching golf and has a passion for helping people improve. His dedication to improving his knowledge has taken him around the world, and he has learned his craft from some of the best coaches and players. Andy’s promise is to share his experiences to deliver first-class instruction

3 Comments

3 Comments

  1. Bob Jones

    Dec 20, 2017 at 3:23 pm

    A simple way to maintain lag is for the sole of the clubhead and the tip of the handle to always move in the same direction in the forward swing. The sole always moves leftward in the forward swing, but if lag is being lost, the tip has pivoted to the right. This effect is especially apparent when the club flips in the impact area. At 1:10 in the video you can clearly see the tip backing up.

    Pierce says, “this is the hardest one to change,” and he’s right. Lag gets lost when the golfer hits with his/her right hand because of how powerful it feels to do that, and, well, because it just makes sense to, so we keep doing it even after we understand it’s the wrong thing to do.

  2. ghn

    Dec 20, 2017 at 1:43 pm

    I do not believe that the ‘angle gets narrower’ right from the top as you say. You are being fooled by parallax because the camera is not perpendicular to the plane of the swing but is facing the player. A few minutes in front of a mirror with a club in hand will demonstrate this.

    Many think that Sergio Garcia has some great amount of lag increase on his downswing because of this effect when in fact he merely has a flat downswing plane which makes the fabled ‘angle’ seem more acute.

    • Andrew Cooper

      Dec 21, 2017 at 11:55 am

      Spot on, see also Ben Hogan…the lag in the photos is an optical illusion. But it is the basis for so much of this create lag/hold the lag obsession.

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