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Is there a final word on ball position?
Okay, I've taken lessons from Ben Doyle, and he says all balls are played off the left heel (for a right handed player, naturally). This isn't the first time we've heard this philosophy on ball position. I'm pretty sure both Jack Nicklaus and Ben Hogan say the same thing in their books. I've also heard that the ball should be played in relation to the upper body, playing the shorter irons from more of the center of your chest and as the irons get longer, the ball begins to move more left of the center of your chest. Lately, I've been trying to play most shots from somewhere around "off the left heel". However, I am not hitting it as crisp from that position. I would think the easy answer would be, "move it back in your stance", but, if I do that, am I just compensating for some other problem? Is ball position something that we need to just experiment with and see what works for us, or should we be playing the ball from a certain position and learning to hit it from there? I'd love to hear from Yoda or any of the other G.S.E.D.'s that post here, but that isn't to say I wouldn't love to hear from anyone at this point. :?
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This should help, the second at Chuck's is prolly in the archive here now.
http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=176 http://chuckevansgolf.com/forum/show...=ball+position |
It CAN be done.
For some it is the BEST option. It IS the most dificult to master however. I have done it — and taught it — both ways, and like the other 40quadrillion options, in some patterns for some golfers..... |
Well said Manzella!
Todd |
I use the manzella one ball position....however there is a critical thing you have to remember:
As the club gets shorter, narrow up your stance. |
Brian, didn't you say something in your forum b4 about you never putting it back of centre?
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Quote:
From my experience, playing the ball near low point (0-4 inches behind low point) with short clubs (9 iron - lob wedge) is not good with most players. Definitely would not recommend it! Everyone has two choices: change ball location, or change aiming point. The one ball location theory requires aiming point to change for each club. Why? Because the law of conservation of angular momentum says that shorter clubs will reach its in-line condition much sooner than longer clubs. So aiming point needs to be changed (moved forward for shorter clubs) to hit the ball effectively. However, if you change ball location instead, the you can achieve a constant release point feel with all clubs. |
Ben Doyle's Multiple Ball Locations
Quote:
Given the static Location with regards to the Left Heel, the wide Stance automatically locates the Ball forward in the Stance and narrow Stance locates it more back. Similarly, the wider Stance locates the Ball just behind Low Point (opposite the Left Shoulder) and the narrow Stance locates it well aft. So, while Ben teaches a constant Ball Location with regards to the Left Heel, his methodology results in multiple Ball Locations with regards to the Left Shoulder. And in the end, that is all that matters. |
Well said Lynn.
Also, the further FORWARD the ball position, the BETTER storage and flat left wrist is required for 'ball-turf' contact. :lol: |
What about working the ball with this single ball position?
Left and right, high and low. I guess you can go high and low with address body tilt? Thanks, -Paul BTW, is the driver supposed to be played more forward than this? I remember reading something about that when using this "single ball position". |
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