I saw such an improvement in my golf swing by being a free member that I wanted the full benefits of a premium membership. I'm a notorious range rat who has learned more with my premium membership than I have from thousands of dollars of lessons and training aids over the past 20 years.
Excellent, thorough, detailed and comprehensive free information had me wanting more and the price/value was excellent.
The swing instruction offered by the free version made it apparent that this is the right way to perfect the golf swing (or get as close as possible). Just a few videos on how to start the backswing and initiate the downswing made a huge difference in my consistency.
After watching the free videos, I quickly realized the golf action Chuck is teaching is based on common sense fundamentals that most tour professionals use today. I also realized Chuck had a talent for explaining the golf swing in a way that makes sense.
| By Chuck Quinton, Master RST Instructor (Video also features Alison Thietje of Motion Memory Golf, St. Louis, MO) |
full bio
|
The role of right arm in the takeaway is often misunderstood and has been the source of much confusion and bad golf swings.
In fact, perhaps 90% of the students I see in the first lesson incorrectly use their right arm during this crucial first phase of the golf swing. Because most golfers are right handed, the right arm tends to dominate the takeaway and put the club in a position where it moves behind the body to early.
This gets the club deep and out of sync with the rotating torso and usually creates a very deep position at the top of the swing.
In this video, I talk about the specific role of the right arm and how it gets the club moving back correctly and simply.