Reviving this thread as I am trying to figure out this problem myself. In the last couple of months, I have finally been able to feel my way into using more of my body versus my arm. Feeling my hip was a good sign but more recently, my knee has started feeling sore.
I looked around, read a bit and prompted an LLM based on how my right foot is rotating and found some interesting bits which confirmed an intuition about my error.
Could anyone help assess whether the following advice is true when it comes to rotation:
- "During the Backswing (Loading): Your back foot is mostly flat, absorbing the weight. Your hips turn back, and your back knee points slightly outward (aligned with your toes).
- During the Forward Swing (The Shift): As you push off the ball of your back foot to drive your hips forward, your weight shifts toward your front foot.
- At Contact & Follow-Through (The Release): Your back heel must come off the ground. Your back knee, thigh, and foot all rotate inward together as a single unit. By the end of the swing, you should be up on the ball/toes of your back foot, with your back heel pointing out behind you.
- The Golden Rule: Your knee and your toes must always point in the exact same direction. If your knee rotates inward, your toes must rotate inward with it. Lifting the heel is what makes this synchronized rotation possible."
I shadow trained my FH using this my knee felt under less stress. Is this golden rule really golden?