The trail arm works the same in most shots. It lines up with the shaft of the club you are hitting at impact. Start with your putter. Set up with just your trail arm. Your wrist is parallel to the clubface. Hit putts just using your trail arm. Your forearm should line up with the shaft. It pushes the shaft through the ball. The key is that your forearm does not twist. You can then do the same thing with your lead arm. The task is to make a stroke where the arm does not rotate. Put both hands on the putter and hit some putts. This is the same relationship of your trail arm, even with your driver.
Set three or four balls on the green with lines around the ball. Set up to the ball. Align the line on the putter, if you have one, with the line on the ball. Take a stroke and make the line roll with no wobble. Once you can do that, do the same thing making the ball go different distances and at...
When you set up to the ball, your trail wrist is at a 90-degree angle to your swing arc. As you swing back to waist high, your trail wrist is still at a 90-degree angle to the swing arc. As your arm swings to the top of your swing, your trail arm externally rotates in your shoulder socket. That r...
Take your putter and set up 4 or 5 balls. Start hitting putts longer than 3 feet but shorter than 60 feet. Just find a tempo that you like. Once you find it, count it out. Using a count of one, two. Or one, two, and three. Regardless of the length of the putt or the swing, maintain the same tempo...
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