We r essentially agreeing as far as te second point but cf pulling the object towards it's cog is what close the clubface making swinging truly effortless
This is true to a certain extent. For a driver, this alignment "mechanism" will induce toe- down and a backward leaning shaft towards impact. But this mechanism doesn't really care where the face is pointing. It happens because centripetal force pulls the rope in one direction and club head inertia pulls it in another direction. If the face is aimed towards the sky, your "hook face" will "close" towards the sky as well. The golfer has to produce a geometrically flat left wrist to square the face at impact. Luckily, the geometry of the pivot and the power package is such that this can be made to happen without any deliberate club face manipulation in an uncompensated golf stroke.
PS: I like 40 years of research too, but I read TGM through a pair of Newtonian glasses. Some of the stuff that appears to be written between the lines in TGM takes on a different meaning then....
Look I'm an an instructor of the golfing machine and what is outlined in it I am not looking into new theories or frontiers as far as I'm concerned homer wrote the book, the end there is nothing missing, incorrect or anything else required. You are telling me what's right and wrong based on your own minimally researched theories vs homers forty years unless you can show me and prove to me how what you are saying is true rather than just throwing out arno penzias name and you're engineering expertise, let's see it then... For you to convince me otherwise it better be backed up
My book is autographed by both Ben Doyle and Lynn Blake, but I haven't learned the secret TGM handshake.
I do not have LB autograph but I have read Joel Chandler Harris in dialect and that is MUCH harder than TGM. (Being in the neighborhood counts doesn't it?)
I do not have LB autograph but I have read Joel Chandler Harris in dialect and that is MUCH harder than TGM. (Being in the neighborhood counts doesn't it?)
HB
Never heard of him before, but I see the connection.