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The human brain takes about 100 ms to process information, then about another 100 ms to decide to move in response.
Did you just blink reading that sentence? That’s about how long we’re talking about.
That’s impressively fast. The problem is it’s not quite fast enough for golfers.
Most downswings take in the realm of 250 ms. And that time isn’t equally distributed. Downswings start slow and then speed up very quickly. If we do a little educated guesstimating, it means that if your golf swing isn’t where you want it right about here, then it’s too late.
David Cannon
You haven’t hit the ball yet, but the train has left the station. Even if you wanted to make the perfect last-minute correction, you couldn’t. Your brain simply couldn’t process the information fast enough.
You may be wondering: How in the world am I supposed to make this swing thought stick, if my brain and body may not even have time to react?
Great question! Here’s how…
1. Setup changes are the most important
Golfers have maximum control over the things they do before they hit the golf ball—grip, posture, ball position—so consider those of maximum importance. You have all the time in the world to get that right. No reaction time required, and if there’s a good chance to fix something in your swing, start with your setup.
Reminder setup questions:
2. Know where your control ends
After your setup, the best time to use a swing thought is on your backswing, especially early in your backswing.
As the Titleist Performance Institute explains, most backswings take between 750 ms and 950 ms. Your transition from backswing to downswing is pretty much where your ability to influence your swing ends, and in order to land in a good spot there, you need a swing thought which starts, at the latest, before you reach the top of the backswing.
Early backswing swing thoughts:
3. The ball is gone—but your swing still matters
TPI pegs the time it takes from impact to the end of your follow-through between 500 and 800 ms. That’s plenty of time to implement a swing thought, and even though the ball is gone, trying to change the way you follow through can change what happened before it. One way you’ll often see coaches help students with this is to give them obstacles to swing around, which land their golf swing in an overall better spot.
Go-to Release drills:
This article was originally published on golfdigest.com