LEE TREVINO SWING ANALYSIS

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► About Christo Garcia's Channel
This video is brought to you by Christo Garcia, the founder of the Miracle Swing Experience. Christo is a highly experienced Golf Instructor, with over 20 years of experience in the field.
He has been sharing his expertise on KZread for more than 13 years, providing top-quality Golf Instruction to help golfers of all levels improve their game.
Throughout his channel you will learn about the Golf Swing, including Golf Backswing Drills, Golf Takeaway Tips, Golf Impact Positions, and more. His expert Golf Tips will help you perfect your posture, alignment, grip, and weight transfer, and achieve a consistent and powerful Golf Swing.
Christo also shares his insider secrets on how to create solid iron contact and increase your Golf driver distance. With his guidance, you'll learn how to make small adjustments to your swing mechanics that can make a significant impact on your game.

Пікірлер: 183

  • @MiracleSwingExperience
    @MiracleSwingExperience Жыл бұрын

    TRANSFORM YOUR GAME HERE - > miracleswingexperience.com/

  • @Jsizzle6809

    @Jsizzle6809

    8 ай бұрын

    I’ve watched a lot of Lee swing vids and I’ve noticed he started taking it a little more outside on the backswing in his later years. It’s interesting. Why do you think that is?

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Jsizzle6809 Not sure. Gary Player told me he was the only elite player that did it that way. Everyone else was inside.

  • @Pmihealthfitnessfindus
    @Pmihealthfitnessfindus6 жыл бұрын

    Great analysis! I’ve been studying the basic components that make up the golf swing for a few years now. Recently (April 2018) I decided to work with a golf coach, in order to understand and build the necessary foundation for achieving an effective golf swing. As a former college athlete and now strength coach, I believe that each individual’s biomechanics play an important role within achieving their natural swing plain. I have been watching your videos for years and I’ve enjoyed your take on breaking down legendary swings like Lee’s and Ben Hogan’s. These guys were natural athletes! And they moved the club according to how they loaded their bodies. Definitely seems like a forgotten art within today’s golfing world. As amateur golfers we can all learn a thing or two about the past and blend those principles to the present, in order to improve our games. Keep the videos coming! Well done.

  • @majorsmythe1
    @majorsmythe18 жыл бұрын

    Trevino was GREAT. Grew up Dirt poor, served in the Marines, was a caddy for years, self taught, just a great story. A great champion, tells a hilarious story how he beat Ray Floyd who was a pro, when he was working as a cart boy. Fierce player and actually a quiet man off the course.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    8 жыл бұрын

    Great comment and description of this great man.

  • @majorsmythe1

    @majorsmythe1

    7 жыл бұрын

    When you grow up dirt poor...Confidence is all you can count on.

  • @Jim_Harwood

    @Jim_Harwood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Can you imagine a PGA tour player today stopping at a club in Dallas to play an unknown player for their own cash? It would never happen as the guys today make so much money.

  • @johnmule9419
    @johnmule94196 жыл бұрын

    Christo - This is some of your best work. The great Carl Lohren teaches this. You'll also find similarities in Couples and Duval if you look carefully. Over 40 years ago Mr Hogan commented upon reading Carl's book "This is the way I play".

  • @jonathanbristow3208
    @jonathanbristow32083 жыл бұрын

    Tom Watson: I sat there at Torrey as a senior in High School and watched the man hit wedge after wedge from the same spot on the ground. He then proceeded to hit cut 3 woods from the same spot. Lee Buck was hitting balls next to Faldo a bit further down the line. Man, Lee, Faldo, Watson... they all hit ALL BALL. It was total back of the ball, solid contact time and time again through solid fundamentals and a right head. The confidence just ooozed from each one of them. I met and shook hands with Arnie that day too. It was a world-class day man! Keep the passion you have because nothing works without that fuel.

  • @mikeparishy
    @mikeparishy3 жыл бұрын

    just rewatched this video,super good 1 here,great content and my favorite golfer of all time,nice job bud

  • @scottfife1
    @scottfife16 жыл бұрын

    Trevino's book Swing My Way written with Dick Altman & published in 1976 explains his reasoning for why he did what he did. It's a very interesting read.

  • @mynaturalswing9707
    @mynaturalswing97078 жыл бұрын

    Wow! Great stuff Christo!

  • @blairsterling6141
    @blairsterling6141 Жыл бұрын

    By having a very very straight left arm, this forced Lee to turn the shoulders. The key to Trevino is that ram rod straight left arm.. his left side controls the entire swing... the right hand is completely passive... it does nothing...Lee learned the left hand , arm , shoulder hir the ball accurately. His strong left hand grip allowed him to dominate the entire swing with the left. His rhythm was incredible, as his loop allowed him time ( like a pause) at the top of the swing.

  • @fly1327
    @fly13275 жыл бұрын

    I learned to copy Lee's swing 20 years ago and continue to bring it back out when whatever else I'm doing isn't working. Did it again this morning playing a round with another single, and really striping the ball off the tee. My playing partner was impressed at the solid contact and trajectory. Mostly well struck irons and then came short pitch shots on par 5's from 40-80 yards, and using Lee's motion for these shots REALLY shines. Now my playing partner is stunned, asking how to hit shots like this. Alas, many birdie putts barely missed before making a few near the end. So why don't I swing this way all the time? Don't know!

  • @TheSteve1126

    @TheSteve1126

    3 жыл бұрын

    I have a similar situation with my game. The reason we don’t do it all the time is we aren’t Lee Trevino LOL

  • @johntatum1951

    @johntatum1951

    3 жыл бұрын

    I like to imitate Lee for fade shots...and love the lag he gets...similar to Sergio.

  • @simplecarnivore
    @simplecarnivore6 жыл бұрын

    He said i back hand it through impact.. I wasnt a releaser of the club.. I would block it on purpose... Such a great way to hit solid shots.

  • @part1801
    @part18013 жыл бұрын

    One of the things that I've learned about good players is that you want to be tall like you said on the right side and then squat while turning then back up straight to a solid left side. Thanks for the cool video

  • @ebenlaubscher4153
    @ebenlaubscher41533 жыл бұрын

    I make a similar swing and it works great when my lower back allows it .Unfortunately at 194cm and old football injuries my golf game only lasts 9holes .I studied Ben Hogans swing for years .Great way of hitting a ball with a bowed left wrist in the backswing .

  • @tedmartinpadres
    @tedmartinpadres Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video! Nice work!

  • @kentbernard9842
    @kentbernard98425 жыл бұрын

    Trevino cured my slice with advice from his teaching article by Guy Yocum in June 1992 Golf Digest magazine after winning his second U.S. Open. The critical advice for me was in the title "Aim Left, Swing Right, Walk Straight". He said "For accuracy, strengthen your grip and aim left...while swing out to the target"... (to the right and down the target line). This instills a thought and feel that keeps the club going inside to out and down the line. Avoid a block slice with a stronger grip that helps turn the club over. So, Trevino is actually aiming left and swing right in the swing clips.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    5 жыл бұрын

    Kent Bernard Hi Kent, thanks for the great comment and amazing articles! This has helped my game so much, just like yours.

  • @TheSteve1126
    @TheSteve11263 жыл бұрын

    I have a Trevino type swing. Now keep in mind I’m like a 7 but the philosophy took me from 12 to 7. I literally block it down the fairway like he does but a few go WAY left. I’ll take it.

  • @quantumpotential7639

    @quantumpotential7639

    11 ай бұрын

    Yeah but this is a form of gaming the swing and is not quite cheating, but definitely gives you a super competitive advantage. I would be careful about making the game too easy, for mastering it too quickly will cause great boredom to creep in with no where else to take it. So you gotta make the game hard, so you keep chasing after the elusive rabbit lest you quench your thirst for the secret with no new novelty on the horizon you seem to hit every shot so pure and on demand the luster of the game could wain and you feel left out in the rain. This is why I'm now working on mastering the shank, and learning how to play a deliberate shank, akin to Trevino's playing of a push fade. If you can break 80 with a minimum of 36 full shanks per round, then I feel like I will have conquered the unconquerable.

  • @PMiller3425
    @PMiller34258 жыл бұрын

    This is great. Insane the amount of room he creates.

  • @lancebaker1374

    @lancebaker1374

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yes, The Man creates room!!!!!! It's INSANE!!!!

  • @cole1404
    @cole14047 жыл бұрын

    Great analysis! Waiting for that speed! So difficult for amateurs.

  • @michaelsparks8632
    @michaelsparks86324 жыл бұрын

    I've always loved Lee's swing, it truly is poetry in motion! IMHO

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    4 жыл бұрын

    Michael Sparks he really cracked it!

  • @neilp190
    @neilp1902 жыл бұрын

    Lee was a true genius, never tire of watching him

  • @thomasfraser9072
    @thomasfraser90728 жыл бұрын

    Hi Christo, great analysis. Recently I discovered the importance of my left knee moving lateral approx 3 to 4 inches towards the target at the beginning of the downswing to the end. This seems to put everything in proper motion for me to complete my downswing to a great finish. Perhaps I see you are doing the same? Your videos are great. Wishing you continued success.

  • @jc238
    @jc2383 жыл бұрын

    Lee was my favourite golfer so great to see this video. It’s amazing that you can see the power at impact in freeze frame. In real time it looks so effortless, incredible swing.

  • @markpeytonennis149
    @markpeytonennis1497 жыл бұрын

    Thank You...

  • @johnclark3697
    @johnclark36975 жыл бұрын

    Witnessed Lee at Birkdale 40 years ago. Fantastic. . & with that equipment!! Ain't seen the likes of since... & I've seen them all..

  • @tonytomlin5674
    @tonytomlin56743 жыл бұрын

    This is how I swing. There's so much talk about dropping the arms into the 'slot'. Trevino just dropped into the slot with his body too. Yes his hips are very open at impact but they are open at address - maybe that is the key to super-open and super solid impact. I think that Trevino's swing rhythm is often neglected. It was fantastic and .... similar to Hogan's.

  • @STEVE-lk2ft

    @STEVE-lk2ft

    2 жыл бұрын

    He dropped his shaft in the slot! You can see his hands /forearms rotating clockwise/right elbow going internal at the start of the downswing. I think he has the best looking move through impact of any golfer!

  • @blairsterling6141

    @blairsterling6141

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes...incredible rhythm,,, pausing and looping at the top.

  • @martingonzales6178
    @martingonzales61785 жыл бұрын

    Awesome vid analysis! of Mr. Trevino. 🏌🏽Thanks for the vid. I request you make another on Mr. Trevino covering putting and chipping. I've seen his videos but would like to see one yours. - Martin

  • @sappermade6012
    @sappermade60124 жыл бұрын

    My God what a ball striker .... one of the greatest

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    4 жыл бұрын

    sapper made He was incredible. Gary Player said second to Hogan!

  • @justinepstein6654
    @justinepstein66543 жыл бұрын

    Great video!

  • @shellcrackerlover5889
    @shellcrackerlover58892 жыл бұрын

    The flattening of the shaft is the key to these great ballstrikers' success. Garcia flattens the shaft on the downswing and he is regarded as a superb striker. It's probably the key to low handicap golf for the amateur player.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    2 жыл бұрын

    I believe it reduces face rotation at impact

  • @gretel1015
    @gretel10157 жыл бұрын

    Great video of a great golfer.

  • @simonrussell1444
    @simonrussell1444 Жыл бұрын

    I have spent a lifetime trying to stop rolling my wrists on the backswing - now I accept it and I’m nearly identical to Trevino takeaway but readjust and get under to shallow using my legs - I,m 70 and playing off 9

  • @brianfantana8510
    @brianfantana85104 жыл бұрын

    Look at his spine angle. Trevino actually gets lower into and through the hitting area...so tough to do and why he was so pure. He stayed in the ideal position longer than anyone else.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    4 жыл бұрын

    Brian Fantana I have little range of motion in lateral side bend. I can’t do that. Could be why he had back trouble.

  • @kevinpaul180

    @kevinpaul180

    Жыл бұрын

    Other than Moe Norman....Trevino said Moe stayed through impact longer than him.

  • @johntatum1951
    @johntatum19513 жыл бұрын

    Lee really cleared his hips and got all that torque through the ball.

  • @jamescameron314

    @jamescameron314

    3 жыл бұрын

    It is a biological impossibility to produce torque in muscles. By "clearing his hips" he moved his weight onto his left side. an essential in golf.

  • @billygraham5589
    @billygraham55895 жыл бұрын

    Lee Trevino says here he would "...lay it back off...". So was he talking about "shallowing" the club (i.e. "laying it back off" the swing plane), and so he could (as he says) "let it go." Just an observation. On this channel (MSE) we learned about Ben Hogan's move to "shallow" the club.

  • @gordenscottfan3107
    @gordenscottfan31076 жыл бұрын

    I think his set up with hips a little open was a big key, I know for me (almost 70) there is no way for 18 holes I can count on the hips turning back and coming around leading the swing, but setting up open (not shoulders just hips and feet) I feel I have a clear path back to the ball every time...

  • @127notout

    @127notout

    6 жыл бұрын

    Gorden Scottfan And more torque. I am also seventy, player that way, and have more power and accuracy than my traditional swing of five years ago. The sound of clean shots is amazing.

  • @jamescameron314

    @jamescameron314

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@127notout It's NOT torque---you cannot produce torque in a biological entity, i.e. a human body.

  • @ben_joven
    @ben_joven10 ай бұрын

    Love this!! Could you do Tony Finau?

  • @jonathanbristow3208
    @jonathanbristow32083 жыл бұрын

    Lee Buck Trevino is an American treasure.

  • @MM-qi5mk
    @MM-qi5mk4 жыл бұрын

    His swing is legendary. Trevino really knew how to flush it. Dig it out of the dirt baby

  • @Chendoart
    @Chendoart Жыл бұрын

    I thought it was Mr. Plinkett's living room at the end there with that song 🤣

  • @wreckim
    @wreckim7 жыл бұрын

    Thank You! A unique looking swing, with fundamentally sound physics when you explain it. The golf swing is not natural to most of us IMO.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    7 жыл бұрын

    Agreed, my natural swing was very flawed and I had to search high and low to figure it out.

  • @lancesilver9658
    @lancesilver96585 жыл бұрын

    Amazing video!!! Awesome work. Best teaching video on KZread. Do a Bryson one if you have not. I want to see it asap :)

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    5 жыл бұрын

    Lance Silver Hi Lance! I just made one. It should be up in about an hour. Bryson vs Rose!!!

  • @lancesilver9658

    @lancesilver9658

    5 жыл бұрын

    So funny I just ask for that. I can not wait to see it. Rose is way over my comprehension but Bryson I can relate to. Maybe your video will change my mind. Come play at the Ford Plantation in Georgia sometime!

  • @billygraham5589
    @billygraham55894 жыл бұрын

    "...Ya know, a lot of people today talk about keeping the hips level at impact..." says Christo, and, indeed, they say things like that. But Trevino knew very well what he was doing for HIS swing, and with his deep waist bend AND his very open configuration with his hips at the point of contact -- resulting in a very big side bend too -- the right hip would naturally be dipped below the left hip. We might think that Mr. T was pulling from his left side. Note Mr. T's right elbow, shoved under his left elbow and even forward under his left elbow at the point of contact.

  • @mrc9513
    @mrc95132 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of reading Tony Jacklin saying he spent hours practicing what he called Hogan's 'legs first' move. Coincidentally Trevino pipped Jacklin to an Open title back in the day.

  • @paulblaesing4615
    @paulblaesing46152 жыл бұрын

    The swing positions he goes through on the downswing, in my opinion, is why he had back problems. I know about the lightening strike, but i do not believe anyone can swing down and through like that and not eventually have back problems. He is not alone in that either. The golf swing is not what humans evolved to do. i believe anyone hitting hundreds of balls a day over many years is setting themselves up for back problems. Just look at his and any other really good player through the hitting area in slow motion while watching their back and I think you will see what I am talking about. Of course i love hitting balls, and trying to emulate great players like everyone else, and watching and studying videos, reading golf books, etc. And the real secret to a great swing.....digging it out of the dirt like Hogan said......there is NO substitute. LOl One thing one can do is build up strong back and stomach muscles by lifting heavy weights, i. e. squats, deadlifts, straight leg deadlifts, bent over rows, etc., various types of trunk exercises, sit ups, etc. Remember to build gradually, and be careful, get proper coaching on lifting safely. Still, hit enough golf balls and eventually.....hell, we are still gonna do it. Have fun!

  • @pkincy
    @pkincy4 жыл бұрын

    Is this everything but the address from the Mo Norman Single Plane swing?

  • @turtleflegel6816
    @turtleflegel68162 жыл бұрын

    Every golfer who's ever played swings the club. Except Hogan n Trevino. The club swings them. No guiding. Total freedom. Pure reaction. Only 2 guys ever.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    2 жыл бұрын

    Interesting thought. 🤔 When the club is swinging me, it tends to move me out of position and I hit a bad shot.

  • @turtleflegel6816

    @turtleflegel6816

    2 жыл бұрын

    Me too. It takes freakish ability to make it work. Have to be so loose yet so strong. Stability I believe is the key ingredient. When I've watched Hogan n Trevino, their swings stood out to me in 2 ways: 1) they looked the coolest 2) they looked like the most fun and exhilarating. I think if you asked lots of golfers to pick any swing they could have many would pick one of these two for those reasons. And they were the most dependable swings. The secret was in the ability to cherish the grind, the relentless, obsessive pursuit of the unattainable. I bet if you had a count of the number of golf swings every person has ever made, these two would be at the top of the list by far and away. Maybe Moe Norman. That made their golf muscles the strongest and most limber, allowing them to reach positions noone else could. Point of note, how stocky all three guys are from the waist down. True of all great players, but these three stand out -- Nicklaus, too. This keeps them at the ball, allowing for the action I'm referring to, the "no help" swing, where the body never acts, only reacts. Finally, think of the lives both these guys had. Hard scrabble roots. Hogan's father, Trevino's ex wives. Hogan smoked, Trevino drank. Both had injuries, both in the military. How much would they have won if they had Nicklaus' privileges, or lived Player's lifestyle, or had Tiger's rearing, or Snead's athletic ability? Not only do I think they were the best, I don't think it's really close.

  • @joeyyamamoto5810
    @joeyyamamoto58107 жыл бұрын

    The idea of the "level hips" is that the higher you can get the trailing hip at impact, the more trail lateral bend you can achieve. (right lateral side bend for a righty, Left lateral side bend for a lefty) The more you can minimize the distance between your trail shoulder and your trail hip, the more you can achieve the true lateral side bend + the famous and hard to achieve bent right arm. :) hope that helps a bit. although I don't really think anyone had true "level" hips. It's just the idea that you want to try and get that idea through in your transition of leveling them.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    7 жыл бұрын

    That's an interesting thought about the hips. What I find more important is that the trail hip leads the trailing shoulder. I believe that's the way you create the most side bend.

  • @PaulGPhotography
    @PaulGPhotography5 жыл бұрын

    Christo do you think Lee Trevino pulled with his left arm on the downswing as well as throwing with his right arm or would his left arm have been passive and all right arm in the downswing? I've adopted an open stance and my ball striking has greatly improved. Thanks for this video :)

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    5 жыл бұрын

    Paul Gallagher I’ve heard him talk a lot about his left. I suspect he pulled with his left into Shangi-LA and then fired the right side.

  • @ScratchArkkitehti

    @ScratchArkkitehti

    5 жыл бұрын

    In his book Groove your Golf Swing My Way (shameful that its out of print) he swing with the left arm only. Right arm is there for support. IG: Livenearpar_golf for more on Lee!

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    5 жыл бұрын

    O. G. Very interesting!

  • @radiantonion8615
    @radiantonion86152 жыл бұрын

    the right arm bend at impact is a result of a very strong grip... his head dip and right arm extension are the anti-left move...he really holds off the club face from turning over....hitting the ball to the right would obviously have everything to do with the clubface and ball position at set up. So where is it?

  • @npwarr2651
    @npwarr26515 жыл бұрын

    When I try to swing like this, my driver becomes a big fade. Wonder what component I’m missing? I love how the outside takeaway makes the hips activate on their own. Are his shoulders aimed left as well?

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    5 жыл бұрын

    Everything is left, yes. It definitely encourages outside to inside, but it is easy to get open!

  • @alanshields8036
    @alanshields80363 жыл бұрын

    Picasso of the golf swing. A true artist.

  • @claricejanelle
    @claricejanelle6 жыл бұрын

    Awe-some-ness at a whole nother level!

  • @pierremystique5335
    @pierremystique53353 жыл бұрын

    I've found this swing most effective for me off the tee. So good that my 5 wood can go like a rocket. Gives me the most control, provided club face at impact is between swing path and target line. If so then ace!

  • @patricklee780
    @patricklee7804 жыл бұрын

    Open you feet left of the target and swing at the target, it's the easiest way to swing a golf club. Freddie Couples and Jack Nicklaus did it too.

  • @dannyjames9986

    @dannyjames9986

    4 жыл бұрын

    Freddie was smooth

  • @rmr24

    @rmr24

    3 жыл бұрын

    Bruce Lietzke was another, aim left, swing hard.

  • @ron2117
    @ron21175 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Seems that his left hip ges to 10 o'clock to start.

  • @gatesmw50
    @gatesmw505 жыл бұрын

    At 10:19 you point out that Trevino started the swing with an inward RIGHT side knee kick. Charlie Sifford did this even more so than Lee did. I saw both of them at senior tour events do this.

  • @jamescameron314

    @jamescameron314

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sam Snead too.

  • @raybowles8587
    @raybowles85874 жыл бұрын

    Did you ever get to talk to Lee Trevino? I always hit the ball more solid when I swing like Trevino, the problem is I haven't been able to learn to control it consistently. Probably because I don't have time to practice enough.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    4 жыл бұрын

    Ray Bowles No. I have had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Trevino. Would love to one day!

  • @raybowles8587

    @raybowles8587

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@MiracleSwingExperience Trevino seems like he would be really fun to me with. He has lots of funny stories.

  • @mofojohnson1
    @mofojohnson14 жыл бұрын

    Aim your feet and hips left with shoulders and club face square. Put the ball back 1 inch and swing on the inside. See how pure you strike it and be prepared to be amazed

  • @drkside53

    @drkside53

    3 жыл бұрын

    This so works for me, always been more comfortable playing from an open stance. I love how Trevino shallows the club on the downswing👍

  • @ryanhorenci6275
    @ryanhorenci62758 жыл бұрын

    Remember put the ball in the back of your stance and hit down on it ~ Lee Trevino

  • @IMHARDNBEHINDU

    @IMHARDNBEHINDU

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ryan Horenci haha u watched that vid

  • @super20dan
    @super20dan8 жыл бұрын

    cristo-i would like to see you do a video on on bruce lietzke.swing. he was a execellent ball striker with an unorthodox swing

  • @Jim_Harwood

    @Jim_Harwood

    8 жыл бұрын

    Trevino was "outside" to "inside" while Lietzke was "inside" to "outside"

  • @sambking

    @sambking

    7 жыл бұрын

    Trevino was "outside" to "inside".....Not that I can see. All the best players swing the club around their bodies. If you look at Lee's club head you can see it go back up high (but it's still going around his body) but then it drops down and then back around as he swings down and through. His right elbow is tucked in close to his body. This is where the power comes from for all the best, Hogan especially.

  • @Jim_Harwood

    @Jim_Harwood

    7 жыл бұрын

    Paraphrase from Trevino: "I took it a little outside, a little shut, and had to reroute it.............". or "I aimed to left field, swung to right field and hit it to center field" I haven't a clue why you think you know what you're talking about.

  • @Jim_Harwood

    @Jim_Harwood

    7 жыл бұрын

    In fact the video you're watching Lee states the very thing that he was outside , shut and had to reroute in order to slot the club. You idiots don't even watch the video

  • @TheNYgolfer
    @TheNYgolfer3 жыл бұрын

    That lateral slide, instead of turning in a barrel, is why Lee had so many problems with his lower back, which ultimately required surgery.

  • @Simple_Man_Golf

    @Simple_Man_Golf

    11 ай бұрын

    To be fair getting struck by lightning probably didn’t help.

  • @C.Adams82
    @C.Adams822 жыл бұрын

    That lateral side bend also destroyed his back. When I was younger I had a similar late delivery into the ball. Players that do this typically have alot of lateral side bend. But it's hell on your lower back. It puts so much pressure on your lower vertebrae. By the time I was 30 I had done serious damage to my back and had to completely change my swing. I had a more round, flatter swing and now it's more vertical. But now I don't hit the ball as well as I did before

  • @fredfish4316
    @fredfish43162 жыл бұрын

    Mr Hogan won a shitload of $ during the war. He joined the army late 1943 and was stationed in Texas, so the war did not disturb his golf "career". Won a shitload after too. Of course, there was not a lot of veterans who had had the same practice and training opportunities to challenge Mr Hogan after the war.

  • @melvinkay1875
    @melvinkay18757 жыл бұрын

    Groove Your Swing My Way - 1976. Check it out.... While Lee's swing made him one of the best strikers of the ball ever, he admitted his swing was not conducive for good long iron play. Just imagine if he had access to hybrids in his day...

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ooh, that's a heck of a point. He did use a 7 wood that he loved.

  • @LokiLures
    @LokiLures4 жыл бұрын

    A lot of Seymour Dunn in that swing 👍

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    4 жыл бұрын

    I'll have to look up Seymour Dunn!

  • @billygraham5589
    @billygraham55894 жыл бұрын

    It is almost as if Lee Trevino decided that he would hit balls off to the right -- and we've all done that at one point, and we work on squaring the clubhead a the range... -- but not Lee Trevino. No, it seems he decided that he was going to keep on "pushing" the ball to the right -- straight right or right with a fade -- and he just set up left so that his "push" was "pushed straight down the fairway." I have often thought to myself why I don't just do that too. Lord knows I can push it off to the right with the best of them. Long, straight (right), and very predictable! Why not just "go with it?" Just to be thorough; note how Lee Trevino had his right shoulder stay on the swing plane, chasing his left arm bicep, and with his right elbow very "tucked," and his hands ahead of the clubhead, so his turning is just dragging the clubhead around the swing plane -- you can't overlook how bent over at the waist he is through the downswing and into the hitting area. As I always point out to my friends at the driving range, job number one is to keep the clubhead on the swingplane. As soon as you start hitting the ball uncontrollably, you are getting off plane somehow. To be even more thorough, you can check out this video, by another swing analyst guy, analyzing Fred Couples's swing, which is, in my opinion, another such "block it down the fairway" swing, but from a more upright position. Here's the link: kzread.info/dash/bejne/oK2hvNCSg7G5ftI.html Maybe Lee Trevino was a more winning/successful pro than Fred Couples? Maybe because Lee Trevino was more acutely aware of the swing plane than Fred Couples. Not that Fred Couples was not aware of the swing plane as an important point of focus, but, Lee Trevino was way into keeping the swing on the plane.

  • @leelepper3836
    @leelepper38367 жыл бұрын

    at 827 the wind was no doubt howing

  • @gregorybenoit8526
    @gregorybenoit85263 жыл бұрын

    Do a side by side of Trevino and Joaquin Niemann!

  • @ToddSloanIAAN
    @ToddSloanIAAN7 жыл бұрын

    O-o-o-o 0:08 side and rerouted it .... Similar style to12:49 Paul Azinger ?

  • @JayZoop
    @JayZoop7 жыл бұрын

    HIs feet are open a lot to promote hip turn. At ball contact his shoulders are still aligned with the target. Proper shoulder turn is more important with aim than feet alignment, wouldn't you say?

  • @KYIRISH1

    @KYIRISH1

    7 жыл бұрын

    Bingo! I'm one of the last of the old school PGA professionals who are still trying to find something or some kind of a swing to keep me in the game a little longer. I've taught thousands of players on all levels over a 60 year career so I realize there are a "lot of ways" to hit a golf ball. Personally I'm 78 years old, a 9 year pancreatic cancer survivor, and am afflicted with severe arthritis in every joint. I show up though thanks to the Great Scorekeeper. ***When I was young and still able to scrape it around pretty good in competition, my swing looked somewhat like Tommy Bolt's did in his heyday. However, as the ageing process subtly progressed I lost flexibility and fluid in my knees, spine, hips and left shoulder. Guess what happened to my big powerful Tommy Bolt swing! It seemed on almost a monthly basis I was adjusting my swing just to mainly find something that didn't hurt and still make good contact with the ball.***I still teach some of my former students but also practice and play several holes six days a week. No stamina for long grinding rounds anymore however. (Just wait it can happen when you approach that 80 YO milestone.)***What I have done is develop what I call my modified Trevino swing which is studied in the video and what you've mentioned above.*** Naturally I cannot completely copy Lee's swing but I try to incorporate some of his action into what remains of my old swing. I'm not Lee, and he's not me." I've found since my spine and hips cannot clear on my forward swing without pain, by widening and opening my stance I can make a decent move through the ball without flinching and locking up my hips and going over the top. I try to keep a consistent spine angle throughout with my shoulders aligned normally, and the wider open stance keeps me behind the ball through impact. I take the club back slightly outside and without rushing start the forward swing with a coordinated move with my left knee and right ribcage moving under and down the line. (Hard to explain.) The right elbow is tucked in, but relaxed not forced or jammed in. To keep my mental "vision" of what I'm "trying" to do I watch the You Tube video In The Dirt of Lee's repetitive swing with his driver whenever I need a fix. Outstanding video. That's all from the old windbag and PLEASE remember, we are all different individuals and there is no cookie cutter swing theory that works for everyone. As Manuel DeLaTorre once said "We don't teach golf, we teach people!"

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this inspiring and informational comment. It is greatly appreciated and we appreciate your contributions to this great game, sir. Thank you!

  • @johnseal56

    @johnseal56

    6 жыл бұрын

    KYIRISH1 I appreciate your insight as a Trevino fan who wandered here, and congratulations on beating-nay, taking out back and kicking the s*** out of the odds!

  • @gabardjean-paul3779
    @gabardjean-paul37793 жыл бұрын

    ANCER is also quite bent at impact

  • @CaribSurfKing1
    @CaribSurfKing13 жыл бұрын

    So many people cannot lay their left hand off that way or move their legs that way and be consistent

  • @cbcredit
    @cbcredit7 жыл бұрын

    Lee Trevino's "move" came from the fact that he concentrated on backhanding every shot, ie: hitting with the back of his lead (left) hand. It's a very accurate way of hitting, but you lose a little distance. Trevino lost even a little more distance because he would open up just before he started his takeaway, and essentially blocked it. Colin Montgomery also backhanded every shot.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    7 жыл бұрын

    Very very cool thought about the backhand!

  • @cbcredit

    @cbcredit

    7 жыл бұрын

    There are 5 downswing methods: 1)"Pull down on the club handle" method of downswing. "Pull down" is a very good method, many pros and many of the greatest players ever, use this method. (Nicklaus, Garcia, Els, Rory, Oosthuizen, Geiberger, Knudson) 2) "Throwing the club through the ball" is a very smooth downswing method, easy to teach, produces a very relaxed body and hand motion. (Mike Austin, Paul Goydos) 3) "Flailing" is where the hands are very quiet, wide arc, and clubhead speed is produced by rotating the torso and letting the quiet hands lag and catch up. You will recognize a flailer because their hips nearly face the target at impact. 4) The rarest is the "backhander" (Trevino, Montgomery), where the golfer focuses on hitting the ball with the backhand of his lead hand, much like a backhand in tennis. You lose a little distance, but it is very accurate. 5) "Baseball hit" (Hogan, Couples, Kenny Perry, Bubba Watson, most long drive competitors).

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    7 жыл бұрын

    This is fantastic, sir. I appreciate you telling us about this!

  • @jakesnake66

    @jakesnake66

    7 жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure what you mean by "backhanding." Every high level ball striker hits the ball with the "back" of his lead hand. In fact, if you compare 100 professionals, the only component of their swing that looks identical is the relative position of their hands. This is the only facet of the swing that really means anything - impact. IMO, what separates Trevino from every golfer who's ever played is the extraordinary "lateness" of his hit, and very few human beings possess the physical traits to accomplish it. His lower body rotation in relation to his upper torso and shoulders is near super-human. IIRC, Lee had some serious back problems, but it's incredibly impressive that he was able to play world-class golf well into his 50s with so much stress on that lower back and hip area. Just look at his body at impact!! Certainly, by all means, he's delivering the club into the ball with the back of his hand, but I don't regard this as anything unique with Trevino. Cut out the bodies and compare only the hands at impact and I'm pretty sure one could not identify Trevino's hands.

  • @A-FrameWedge

    @A-FrameWedge

    6 жыл бұрын

    Trevino was not a short hitter at all in his prime. The clubhead in everybody’s swing is decelerating before it hits the ball.

  • @tonyvasquez1393
    @tonyvasquez13934 жыл бұрын

    Lee Trevino was the best ball striker of all time. There's no doubt about it. Forget about Moe Norman, and Hogan was the second best.

  • @billygraham5589
    @billygraham55894 жыл бұрын

    I’ve seen videos of Hogan from earlier in his career with as much side-bend as Trevino.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yup. I can't bend like that!

  • @andrefecteau
    @andrefecteau3 жыл бұрын

    few golfers understand the movement of the lower body...it takes decades to perfect it

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    3 жыл бұрын

    I say "learn to hit the ball with your legs." I still get lazy and forget and that's when my ball goes sideways!

  • @davida.4933
    @davida.49337 жыл бұрын

    Hogan, Moe Norman, Trevino all EZ if you know how. Let's include a few others. Should be able to go from each model within seconds. No 30 days, no weeks, no hours, no warm ups at all. Just seconds, switch between 'em all at will.

  • @warholscircus
    @warholscircus3 жыл бұрын

    He looks like he's throwing a hammer for Pete's sake. I grew up watching the greats play during the 60s and 70s. They were always fun and funny too. All the great golfers of that era hit the pee-pee out of the ball. They were animals. A guy joked with me about my having a ""Hubert Green" Sand Wedge." I love that wedge in all but three states. lol Hubert Green was a genius player. It's how he won.

  • @2379nick
    @2379nick8 жыл бұрын

    Do we know if Lee T played a draw or fade?

  • @ThezGodzRaiding

    @ThezGodzRaiding

    8 жыл бұрын

    fade

  • @Leemz100

    @Leemz100

    8 жыл бұрын

    More of a block, than a fade.

  • @zaxophne

    @zaxophne

    8 жыл бұрын

    You can talk to a fade, but a hook won't listen. -Lee Trevino.

  • @JJMcKinnon1

    @JJMcKinnon1

    8 жыл бұрын

    Bread and butter off the tee was a push or block with a touch of fade. He could work the ball either way though. Lots of his wedges could be described as a push draw. He had a baby draw from an open stance that he could go right at the pin with it. You'll notice often the draw spin when it lands. He draws the ball much more now in his later years with all clubs as well.

  • @kenboyer8635
    @kenboyer8635 Жыл бұрын

    Great video clips, but 15 minutes of analysis and no mention of Trevino's hands and left-wrist flexion? This is a big miss. Everything he did with his stance, take away, transition and open body at impact was to deliver a shallow club with a square clubface through impact as long as possible. Anyone who tries to mimic any of the body motions you mention without first understanding Trevino's hands and wrists, will fail at hitting the ball.

  • @Jim_Harwood
    @Jim_Harwood6 жыл бұрын

    Christo-- if you havent been able to reach Lee Trevino, why not try comedian George Lopez, who is on friendly terms with Trevino. Trevino has said he doesnt use a cell phone, no email, no twitter and he is a recluse off the golf course.

  • @thatwilldonicely1314
    @thatwilldonicely13147 жыл бұрын

    Trevino must be, one of the most fascinating golfers who ever lived, his 'swing my way ' is essential reading for the Lee Trevino lover. its all in there, 30 to 40 degrees open body, very strong grip, holding on firmly with the last 3 fingers of the left hand. Then the Shuttle of the knees and hips that drops the club in the slot, where the back of the left hand goes so does the club face etc. I think those who have tried his method often cannot bring themselves to aim the club face to the left (square to his open stance) and instead aim the club face at the target, so that when the club is rerouted from the top by the knee/hip shuttle to the slot, the club face then becomes open! and chaos ensues. He was really late starter on the tour if he had had his swing on the tour from the very early 60's ala Nicklaus and had not been hit by lightening we may be saying he would have won a dozen majors. Mind you I am led to believe he was a streaky putter to some extent, 1970 British open, he was leading by 2 at the start of the last round and then went and 3 putted 5 greens ! In fact he said and I think he meant it, that "he was unbeatable" if he putted well, his style was admired immensely by Jack Nicklaus, who said if he had to play like anyone else it would be Trevino's way.

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    7 жыл бұрын

    I believe there is a good chance I will get to meet Mr. Trevino in the near future!

  • @thatwilldonicely1314

    @thatwilldonicely1314

    7 жыл бұрын

    that is good to hear, as you can then really get what he did from the mother load!! thanks for reply, even though i cannot swing like Mr Hogan, what you have done with your swing is a tremendous achievement, cheers

  • @DavidLee-oc4qd

    @DavidLee-oc4qd

    7 жыл бұрын

    Hope you get him to discuss as honestly as possible and in detail who was the best ball striker, Hogan, Moe Norman, himself or ??....Also, what his opinion would be on at who was the best golfer in their prime, Hogan, Nicklaus, Tiger, etc.

  • @loganutsler9771
    @loganutsler97717 жыл бұрын

    Tatyaha golf

  • @TrevinoNo1
    @TrevinoNo12 жыл бұрын

    High left shoulder low right… Peter Thomson all over

  • @cajuncharles2941
    @cajuncharles29415 жыл бұрын

    You are Hogan. I could be Trevino!

  • @jeffreylardizabal3964
    @jeffreylardizabal39644 жыл бұрын

    When I taught ASP tactical baton strikes in law enforcement and later in the military, the baton strike to the knee is exactly as Trevino hit with his right arm bend. For this reason I purposely incorporated a type of baton practice into my driving sessions, shown here: kzread.info/dash/bejne/k3WWu86GmZTLiNI.html

  • @nate_feag8044
    @nate_feag80443 жыл бұрын

    Moe Norman

  • @barbara_4041
    @barbara_40412 жыл бұрын

    0:44 - 0:52 Niemann?

  • @Jim_Harwood
    @Jim_Harwood6 жыл бұрын

    Lee is definitely the premiere "blocker" in history

  • @lancebaker1374

    @lancebaker1374

    5 жыл бұрын

    I guess you were hoping someone would ask "What it a blocker"?

  • @kevinbraden798
    @kevinbraden7984 жыл бұрын

    It always looks like his shooting off to the right, like there is no way its going to find the fairway:)

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    4 жыл бұрын

    Kevin Braden I always think that too which shows he’s even more open than you think!

  • @JohnProph
    @JohnProph7 жыл бұрын

    if you just look at Lees outward personality you would think he would be a totally "intuitive" golfer so it is interesting how he is very technical. He wasnt doing anything by accident

  • @MiracleSwingExperience

    @MiracleSwingExperience

    7 жыл бұрын

    Agreed

  • @quantumpotential7639
    @quantumpotential763910 ай бұрын

    ... you CAN'T turn, you gotta break your knees first to get the club into the money slot.

  • @steveking2144
    @steveking21448 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/mYydvKqendnXhrA.html Now Christo...here is Paige Spiranac... aside from looking at her and as every guy says "She's totally hot" ... what a golf swing... she's trying for the LPGA tour. Anyway...the use of ground forces... Check out: 1) The early wrist set 2) The athletic knee bend 3) The increased knee bend on the downswing and 4) The straightening of the knees to push up from the ground up... totally athletic!!! And I hear.. I could be wrong.. I think she hits it about 275-280.

  • @davidjackson7051
    @davidjackson705111 ай бұрын

    If he copied somebody's swing I don't know who he found a swing that worked for him

  • @cullensogroovy3127
    @cullensogroovy31273 жыл бұрын

    HMU for beats

  • @cndvd
    @cndvd7 жыл бұрын

    Nobody can swing like that, especially leaning his knees forward. He's one of a kind. Many have a "one of a kind" swing, ha ha ha but you need score good. Then you have to learn to play in front of people or you will kill someone in the gallery.

  • @DavidLee-oc4qd

    @DavidLee-oc4qd

    7 жыл бұрын

    They said that about Moe Norman, too. You're wrong. The problem is dead accurate modelling plus dedication. People who are nay sayers can't, that's true.

  • @cleanpig6883
    @cleanpig68833 жыл бұрын

    Moe Norman.....

  • @caemenstudios410
    @caemenstudios4103 жыл бұрын

    Right after studying these golf swing techniques , Jοmtοnο Naha (Go ogle it) and rehearsing the drills as I read, I went out and also shot a 73. Another achievement I have done is reaching 13 of 18 greens in regulation. On the other 5 holes, I got close to hitting 5-10 yards with the green. 73s is not a normal thing for me because I have a handicap of 9. It has been actually a very long time since I made an excellent round..

  • @exitar1
    @exitar13 жыл бұрын

    Much Lag pressure

  • @gregschulte2953
    @gregschulte2953 Жыл бұрын

    unicorn

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