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JHern wrote:But just a split second before the disc rips out, you should still try to stop your arm from swinging open with all your might as if it would break if you failed to stop it. Grip and clamp down as hard as you possibly can on the disc with all your might during this moment, and feel the disc fling off your fingers with a rapid spin.

keltik wrote:I think ZAM had the right idea.
dgdave wrote:Listen to ZAM.
i post things at facebook.com/PostIDjsun3thousand wrote:zam is already in your pants.
josser wrote:I picture the "stopping your arm from swinging open with all your might" to be similar to the end of a towel flick where you kind of stop your elbow from opening all the way and even let it bounce back slightly so that your wrist flings your hand and the towel forward. Right at that point you even grip the towel tighter. Am I on the right track?
Leopard wrote:I like that drill JHern wrote up, and I tried to illustrate it
This doesn't show the hands being pulled behind the shoulder or elbow, which is key to the whipping action. But that'd be hard to show in 2D. OK step 3 should have the hands lagging behind in rotation.
Lemme know what else is off -- maybe we can get a diagram outta this thread
keltik wrote:I think ZAM had the right idea.
dgdave wrote:Listen to ZAM.
i post things at facebook.com/PostIDjsun3thousand wrote:zam is already in your pants.
Blake_T wrote:during the first rotation, make sure the upper arm moves WITH the shoulder. it sounds like you are letting it lag behind which causes a narrowing of the angle between the shoulder and upper arm. you want to guide the disc with your arm. the arm shouldn't be tense, but it shouldn't be absolutely limp either.
my elite art skills diagramming the 3 stages of the throw across 4 panels.
the way you are throwing skips panel #3.
BU: what you are describing is exactly why step 3 usually gets bypassed by players. the hips don't go from closed to open, they go from closed to neutral to open.
1 to 2 = your hips go from closed to "neutral". if your right foot sets down ~90 degrees away from the target, your upper body is in alignment when the right shoulder is pointing at the target.
2 to 3 = the hips don't really do anything here.
3 to 4 = the hip opens.
your focus should be on driving your body forwards with your legs. the pivot should take care of itself, assuming your timing is working.
In order to late accelerate the forearm, wrist and hand you do actually consciously use forearm muscles to backhand a midget. AKA punching toward the target first with the elbow getting into the right pec position then giving all you've got to remove a whig from the midget by chopping the elbow straight. And the arm should move fastest just after the disc left the thumb lock. This means hitting the muscle power around 6-8" before the arm becomes straight. Prior to that the torso and legs are doing what JHern has described throwing around the string that is the upper arm of your throwing side.
MrScoopa wrote:This visualizations of "punching towards the target", "slinging the head of the hammer", and "snapping the towel" are helping me with the elbow stop.
I have a question though. There is a conflict in my head. MB says from the right pec go like hell and punch toward the target. Bradley says once the disc is coming away from the right pec and into the "apex" accelerate and sling the head of the hammer. With JHern it is sling the forearm out with the power created from the lower body and leave my arm muscles out of the equation. To make matters worse there is a post by Blake where he says don't accelerate the arm until the very last second.
I don't know if I am misinterpreting ,having major brain-fog, mixing throwing techniques, or what. But, I am royally confused!
I know from personal experience watching a guy at my local course you don't need much acceleration at all. He pulls straight across at his belly-button and snaps the ever living holly s#!t out the disc. He throws like Lundmark. Snap is all his throw is. and it glides foooreverr.
MrScoopa wrote:This visualizations of "punching towards the target", "slinging the head of the hammer", and "snapping the towel" are helping me with the elbow stop.
I have a question though. There is a conflict in my head. MB says from the right pec go like hell and punch toward the target. Bradley says once the disc is coming away from the right pec and into the "apex" accelerate and sling the head of the hammer. To make matters worse there is a post by Blake where he says don't accelerate the arm until the very last second.
MrScoopa wrote:I know from personal experience watching a guy at my local course you don't need much acceleration at all. He pulls straight across at his belly-button and snaps the ever living holly s#!t out the disc. He throws like Lundmark. Snap is all his throw is. and it glides foooreverr.
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