Bobby Clampett 1983 Swing Sequence With Analysis By Homer - LynnBlakeGolf Forums

Bobby Clampett 1983 Swing Sequence With Analysis By Homer

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Old 04-26-2006, 03:29 PM
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Bobby Clampett 1983 Swing Sequence With Analysis By Homer
Here is Homer Kelley's original analysis of Bobby Clampett's swing for the April 1983 edition of Golf Magazine. His commentary on each of the eleven photos in this swing sequence is presented unedited, exactly as Homer wrote it.



Address. Bobby's address is a three-step routine to set up the inclined plane for clubshaft guidance, the knee and waist bend needed to hold the head still, a palms together grip with the left wrist flat (not bent either way), level (neither cocked or uncocked), and vertical (to the ground, not rotated), and to rehearse all the selected relationships and alignments including a through the ball plane line (base edge of plane), and the waggle to establish clubhead feel against the first joint of the right forefinger. This is not a clubshaft "feel" but the sensing of the longitudinal center of gravity (sweet spot plane of rotation). That pressure point is used like the lens of a flashlight strapped to the right forearm to shine its light along the plane line during takeaway and release. The left hand is not held square to the target line but closes (like a door) for true rhythmic power generation.




Backstroke. After the address routine and a preliminary turn of the right hip, the right forearm takes the hands and clubhead back-up-and-in simultaneously and instantaneously and the shoulder turn is as flat as possible and independent of the takeaway action. The left knee flexes only enough to keep the head still and hold it in a strong solid position. Bobby's right elbow appears unusually high here which may be intentional and for a purpose. It appears to be a shoulder turn takeaway action. That always produces an automatic and unintentional shift from a flat first plane to a steeper plane at the top. That could lock a player into a pivot controlled hands procedure unless carefully realigned during the interval at the top. Then it can again be the Golfing Machine hands controlled pivot procedure.




The Top.The clubshaft parallel to the ground must also be parallel to the base line of the plane (plane line). When not parallel it must be pointing at it. All elements of the stroke must be adjusted and aligned during this particular interval in order to move precisely toward the plane line guided by the #3 pressure point (right forefinger clubhead feel). The shoulder turn function here is to place the right shoulder precisely on the inclined plane. Therefore it is mandatory that the steeper the plane the shorter the shoulder turn and foot and knee action must be no more than needed to accomplish those relationships.




Start Down. It is recommended that the hip turn be preceded by a hip slide parallel to the plane line so body power (the coiled left side) then can pull the butt of the clubshaft and the right shoulder toward the plane line before the pivot can turn itself too far inside the plane line and have to stretch unnecessarily to reach the ball. This also disrupts the pivot component release sequence necessary for this swinging procedure of longitudinal acceleration of the clubhead which duplicates the process of pulling an arrow from a quiver which motion is to be maintained until the release swiches ends with adjustable rapidity. The knees passing through the sit down position maintains the left side assignment of turning the body to generate centrifugal force. Power package muscle power (right triceps thrust) can make a miniscule contribution and only with great effort during a swing procedure.




Downstroke. Bobby is in a bit of a bind here because his left shoulder instead of his right shoulder moved downward. But he can and does recover in time for release. A common present-day misconception is surfacing here. That is, a partial, preliminary weight shift through knee motion instead of hip motion which disrupts the on plane start down shoulder turn essential to establishing the precise direction fo both the hands and the clubhead for cranking up the gyroscope of the circling clubhead. Maximum #2 accumulator power (the wristcock) is moving strongly down plane completely contained and retained for the snap release (maximum triggering delay) which is mandatory for developing the clubhead speed and power that Bobby is noted for.
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Old 01-11-2010, 08:52 AM
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The rest of this thread can be found in the archives here:

http://www.lynnblakegolf.com/forum/s...Bobby+Clampett
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Old 01-11-2010, 09:06 AM
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Hi BamBam,

I appreciate you posting this series again. Could you please clarify something for me? Who's notes are to the right of each picture, and who's notes are below each picture?

Thanks very much!

Kevin
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Old 01-11-2010, 09:21 AM
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The Good, The Bad and the Ugly
Originally Posted by KevCarter View Post
Hi BamBam,

I appreciate you posting this series again. Could you please clarify something for me? Who's notes are to the right of each picture, and who's notes are below each picture?

Thanks very much!

Kevin
Homer's actual text below. Golf Magazine's editors to the right. The GM editor's version is what actually appeared in the magazine.
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Old 01-11-2010, 09:33 AM
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Originally Posted by drewitgolf View Post
Homer's actual text below. Golf Magazine's editors to the right. The GM editor's version is what actually appeared in the magazine.
Thanks Drew!

Kevin
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Old 01-11-2010, 12:00 PM
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Just read the old thread, Yoda was kind of feisty back in those days! Nice. Old time hockey.

I heard Gordie Howe on the radio a couple of days ago, his son Marty , a former All Star himself was on too.. Anyways Mr Hockey, Gordie , now into his golden years was waxing on about how things are different now and how back in his day, according to him anyways, he was "a clean" player.........To which his son could be heard to chuckle to himself some and then reply.........."ya Dad you were clean alright.........if you cut someone it was a CLEAN cut. Probably a real bleeder but a good clean cut".

Last edited by O.B.Left : 01-11-2010 at 11:18 PM.
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