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 |
full bio
|
Taking the club back on too shallow a plane is perhaps the number one most common fault I see on a daily basis with most golfers learning a one plane swing. It puts the golfer in a very deep and around position where the clubhead gets too far behind the hands and the club never works up on plane.
A very simple drill to check this is the Shaft Plane drill. Set two shafts end to end in the ground at the same angle as your clubshaft at address as shown below:

As you take the club back, slide the club back up the shafts until the club reaches parallel to the ground. At this point, the clubhead should still be inline or slightly outside your hands and your left arm should be into your body.

At this point, the club will leave the plane and work up to the top position. But it is the takeaway that most golfers struggle with. So, work on getting the club to start back and up on plane and you will be well ahead of the curve.