Top golfing instructor Jim Mc Lean uses rare film footage of Ben Hogan to break down the greatest swing of all time
Golf legend Ben Hogan had the perfect golf swing, but how exactly it worked has long been a mystery?until now. Using footage from three never-before analyzed films of Hogan at his very best, Jim Mc Lean analyzes the crucial motions of Hogan’s entire golf swing and shows you how to integrate his mechanics into your own game. You’ll study Hogan’s blend of club head, club shaft, hands, ankles, knees, hops, shoulders, and head motion?a symphony of movements with an ideal sequential development of power. It’s as close as you can get to teeing it up with Hogan yourself.
- Uses more than one hundred stills from three rare films to analyze every key detail of Hogan’s perfect swing before the car accident that changed his play, something no book on Hogan has ever done
- Reveals the fifteen secrets of Hogan’s swing, covering important topics such as the grip, the waggle, the left hip action, lateral motion, rotation and turning movements, head position, and more
- Draws extensively on the knowledge of Hogan’s friends and competitors, many of them golfing greats themselves
- Written by one of Golf Digest’s top five teachers , a pioneer in video analysis who also saw Hogan play first hand
There have been many books on Hogan’s swing, but never one, including his own, that illustrates his swing at its most perfect, and never one that shows its mechanics so clearly and completely.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword by Ken Venturi v
I ntroduction: Watching Hogan 1
1 The Many Secrets of Hogan’s Swing 7
2 The Three Sides of a Swing 29
3 The Eight-Step Analysis 41
4 Face-On View 53
5 Down-the-Target-Line View 103
6 Forty-Five-Degree-Angle View 131
7 Left-Handed Swing Sequence with Analysis 159
8 Hogan’s Practice Routines and Drills 171
Conclusion 177
A Personal Ben Hogan Bibliography 181
Further Resources 213
Über den Autor
JIM Mc LEAN has worked for more than 30 years with tour players such as Keegan Bradley, Cristie Kerr, Alexis Thompson, and Erik Compton. His golf schools are ranked as the best in America. Since the 1960s, he has worked with his research partner, Carl Welty, pioneering the use of video in detailed analysis of both professional and amateur golfers.