Swinging Into Golf
By Ernest Jones
2.5/5
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- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Half on creating an actual good swing was good, but the book got long with the stories.
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Swinging Into Golf - Ernest Jones
Ego
Part I
THE SWING TECHNIQUE
By ERNEST JONES
WHAT IT IS ALL ABOUT
FAULTY methods of doing a thing obviously add to the difficulties of satisfactory performance. And the difficulty that a great many thousands of people encounter in their efforts to learn to play a creditable and enjoyable game of golf stoutly implies serious faults in the methods they follow in trying to learn the game.
When one has gone along for some time doing a thing in an awkward, cumbersome manner, in order to learn the right way, it becomes necessary first to correct the existing faulty method. Therefore, before setting out to explain my own method of teaching, I want to point out wherein I feel most people make mistakes.
Briefly summed up, I think the fundamental difficulty lies in a negative instead of a positive approach; golfers start from a premise of trying to find out what is wrong when the shot does not come off satisfactorily, instead of getting back to the positive consideration of what it is that causes the shot to prove satisfactory. That this approach is a natural result of the system of teaching employed by their instructors is all the more unfortunate.
I know the old saying that To know what is wrong is one way of knowing what is right,
but I am afraid this is a long and circuitous route to follow in learning to play golf. There are too many wrong ways, when it comes to the matter of identifying these in detail, and the process of elimination in finding eventually what is right proves tedious and discouraging.
This consideration of details of wrong methods suggests the second fundamental difficulty in the approach to learning the game, namely, that of trying to take the stroke apart and identify it piece by piece through visual observation of what this or that good player appears to do as he plays a stroke. This means trying to learn the game solely through application of the sense of sight, whereas every good golfer in the world plays the game through the guidance of the sense of touch or feel.
I know any number of persons who can give you an excellent word picture of what actually takes place as a good player makes a stroke, but who are totally incapable of making a correct stroke themselves. They have watched others, read articles analyzing their actions, and studied pictures of them in various stages of the stroke, until they have an accurate and correct picture of what the action should be, but they are quite incapable of producing the action. Granted that they have chosen excellent models, the basic mistake they make is the failure to realize that, whereas they are watching an expert perform, they are missing entirely the methods employed by the expert in reaching the estate of expertness.
This is quite illogical, because the expert never became expert by following a procedure of this kind. The skillful performer in any line made his start by acquiring a sense of the fundamentals involved. Consciously or subconsciously he acquired mastery of these fundamentals in their proper application, and gradually molded them into his own particular style of performance. It is for this reason that I insist the simplest way to learn golf is to get back to acquiring first an understanding of what it is the good player does consistently that the poor one does only occasionally, if at all.
Briefly stated, every good golfer displays control, balance, and timing in wielding the club. Without these factors no one becomes a consistently good player Practically all discussions of the game from the instructive side abound in references to these three points, but usually, when one presses for explicit, detailed explanation of just what is meant by any one or all, the answers received are vague and indefinite.
One hears, for instance, that this or that expert player has fine control. But just what is control, how is it achieved, and what does it mean? In brief, what are we trying to achieve in swinging a golf club? Now, questions on fundamentals of any subject frequently sound simple—so simple, in fact, as to appear ridiculous. The above question may strike the reader as just that. We are trying to strike the ball with the club head, of course. That’s obvious, to be sure—so obvious that a great army of golfers, trying desperately to remember half a dozen things, or more, at the time of wielding the club, entirely forget the main purpose.
We are trying to strike the ball with the club head, so it should be plain that we must have control of the club head. Next, what are the dominant factors in the action of the club head in striking the ball? The answer to that is speed and accuracy. To get maximum distance from the effort, the club head must be traveling at the maximum speed at the instant of impact. So, also, the higher the speed, the finer the degree of accuracy in the well-made stroke, as I shall explain later on. We want maximum speed, and we want it at the right time and place—the instant of impact.
THE FIRST four pictures above, from left to right, show a simple routine for arriving at a position of balance and freedom. First, stand comfortably erect and extend the arms at full length, with the palms of the hands facing; next, bring the hands together, with the right immediately above and touching the left; then lower the hands into position on a vertical center line in front of the body; finally close the fingers as in holding the club. Easy body balance and balance between the two hands result. The fifth figure is introduced to show one position in which this balance has purposely been destroyed by a deliberate effort with the hips.
In approaching the factor of speed and how to attain it, let me first direct your attention to the action of a pendulum. On first consideration, the easy rhythmic movement of a pendulum, of an old-fashioned clock, let us say, back and forth, hardly suggests speed. But reflect a moment; if the arc through which the pendulum is swung is gradually increased, the pendulum must in time move through a complete circle. To move an object in a circular path, the power must be applied at the center. That is centrifugal application of power. It is one of two basic methods of applying power; the other is leverage. In wielding a golf club, one swings the club head with the hands around the center. Centrifugal application of power can and does develop the greatest speed possible from a given supply of power.
Now suppose we look at the movement of the club head in a golf stroke by comparison with the action of a pendulum. It does not matter how long or how short the stroke is; this is merely a matter of the size of the angle through which the pendulum or the club head is moved. No matter how large or how small this angle may be, the nature of the action remains the same and the movement of the club head is always under control. The speed of the movement is dependent on the amount of power applied, but the nature of the response is always uniform.
MOVING a weight back and forth on the end of a string, in this fashion, is possibly the simplest demonstration of a swinging action. A pocketknife attached to the corner of a handkerchief serves the same purpose. Since the handkerchief is flexible, it cannot transmit power through leverage.
A swinging action in moving the club head is the source of control in a golf stroke, and it is the only reliable and dependable source. Therefore we arrive at the conclusion that, in order to acquire control, we must learn to move the club head with a swinging action. This must be the chief aim, first, last, and all the time, if we are to acquire a positive and recognizable base on which to build in developing skill in playing golf. It is the one essential present in the stroke of every good golfer. A swinging action dominates the stroke of the experts, one and all, regardless of how different individuals may seem to vary one from another in outward appearance while playing a stroke.
The problem of how to acquire and apply control calls for much fuller discussion, to be taken up in later chapters. I want now to turn to a consideration, of balance, second of the three basic factors. Balance is a state, a condition. It is simple and easily understood. When a person stands erect with his weight evenly distributed on his two feet, he displays a simple form of easy balance in a condition of rest or absence of movement. When he walks, he exhibits balance in motion. In either case he is a ready and simple exhibit of easy balance, maintained entirely without conscious thought or effort.
Balance in playing a golf stroke starts with a condition of rest, and develops into a condition of movement. In both phases it is quite as simple as in standing or walking, if we only cease to look at it as an end consciously to be attained. Only when we insist on considering it in the light of transfer of weight, as a matter for conscious effort, does balance