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#385 Golf Swing P9 – The Finish Position by Core Type

#385 Golf Swing P9 – The Finish Position by Core Type

Season 2 Episode 385 Published 7 months, 1 week ago
Description

The P9 or Finish Position marks the completion of the golf swing and serves as the final checkpoint that reveals balance, rhythm, and energy efficiency. Although it occurs after impact, it provides valuable insight into the entire motion sequence, deceleration pattern, and the golfer’s ability to manage forces without injury. In the BioSwing Dynamics model, each Core Type—Upper, Middle, and Lower—produces a distinct finish structure that reflects its natural energy pattern and biomechanical sequence.

Why P9 Matters

The finish is more than a pose—it’s a diagnostic tool. A solid P9 position shows that energy has been transferred efficiently from ground to club and that the swing’s kinetic chain has decelerated in the proper sequence. A poor or unbalanced finish often exposes earlier mechanical flaws.

Key indicators of a strong P9 include:

  • Sequenced Deceleration: Proper slowing of hips, torso, and arms.
  • Efficient Energy Flow: Momentum directed through the strike, not wasted afterward.
  • Posture and Balance: Stable lead side, centered spine, and relaxed release.
  • Injury Prevention: Balanced deceleration limits stress on joints and spine.

Upper Core Golfer – Vertical Finish

Upper Core players exhibit a tall, extended, and high finish reflecting their vertical energy pattern.

  • Body & Arms: The torso stands tall with full extension through arms and spine; the club finishes high—often above shoulder height—and exits left and upward.
  • Rotation: Shoulders rotate fully toward or slightly past the target.
  • Lower Body: Weight rests entirely on the lead leg, the trail foot vertical or off the turf. Hips are open but not deeply rotated since vertical extension dominates.

This upright finish shows efficient upward force and timing rather than heavy rotation.

Middle Core Golfer – Balanced Finish

The Middle Core player demonstrates the “classic tour finish” — centered, square, and athletic.

  • Body & Arms: The club wraps around the lead shoulder; arms extend naturally but remain soft. Hands finish in front of or above the chest.
  • Torso & Spine: The torso rotates fully to face the target; spine remains neutral, neither upright nor tilted. Head moves freely with rotation.
  • Lower Body: Weight fully on the lead leg; trail toe grounded lightly. Knees close together, hips and pelvis facing the target, signaling controlled deceleration.

This finish shows perfect sequencing and balanced energy transfer—hallmarks of consistency and longevity.

Lower Core Golfer – Deep Rotational Finish

Lower Core golfers express a ground-driven, rotational finish emphasizing power and stability.

  • Body & Arms: The club finishes lower, wrapping around the body. Hands may end behind or beside the head.
  • Torso & Spine: The torso rotates deeply past the target line while maintaining spine tilt. The head releases later, staying behind slightly.
  • Lower Body: Hips rotate completely; weight drives into the lead heel with strong glute activation. The trail foot lifts, the knee moving toward the target.

This finish highlights deep rotation, efficient use of ground forces, and full energy release.

P9 as a Diagnostic Tool

Across all core types, the finish position “tells the story” of the swing that came before it:

  • Upper Core: Tall, vertical, and extended – signifying upright control and fluid energy release.
  • Middle Core: Balanced and
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