Golf 247.eu: The Global Platform for Innovative Technologies and Teaching Concepts.

#605 eCoach360° – The Modern Learning Platform for Golf Biomechanics

18 min · 30 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio #605 eCoach360° – The Modern Learning Platform for Golf Biomechanics

Descripción

eCoach360° is a modern learning and communication platform designed to help golf professionals and ambitious golfers better understand biomechanics, kinematics, and Ground Reaction Forces. Rather than focusing solely on ball flight or visual swing positions, the system analyzes the true causes behind speed, consistency, impact quality, and movement efficiency. The platform uses artificial intelligence to simplify complex scientific concepts and make them easy to understand. Users can ask questions and receive immediate, structured answers related to biomechanics, kinematics, and modern golf performance. 👉 Try the AI Golf Coach for Biomechanics, Kinematics, and Ground Reaction Forces here an get a FREE 2-day trial  [https://golf-biomechanics-core-concepts-436089204278.europe-west2.run.app/] The platform is fully available in English, German, Danish, French, and Spanish. The Four Core Areas of eCoach360°1. Workshop Center The Workshop Center serves as an interactive knowledge hub. Instead of reading lengthy documents, users can ask questions directly about topics such as: • Pelvis Sway • Chest Sway • Pelvis Rotation • Chest Rotation • Lift • Side Bend • Forward Bend • Kinematic Sequencing • Ground Reaction Forces and receive easy-to-understand explanations of the cause-and-effect relationships behind modern golf movements. 2. AI Golf Assistant Pro This module has been specifically developed for golf professionals. During coaching sessions, instructors can analyze biomechanical relationships, identify the root causes of movement errors, and instantly receive coaching ideas, corrective strategies, and recommended drills. 3. AI Golf Coach The AI Golf Coach is designed for players. It translates complex movement science into clear and practical language, helping golfers better understand swing feel, ball flight tendencies, technique, and training concepts. Its goal is to make biomechanics and kinematics easy to understand and apply. 4. Assessment System The integrated assessment system allows users to test their knowledge through randomized quizzes or customized examinations. After every answer, the system provides a detailed explanation of why the selected answer is correct or incorrect, transforming every assessment into an additional learning experience. 👉 Would you like to build your knowledge in a structured way? Explore the eCoach360° 30-Day Biomechanics and Kinematics Certification Course here [https://www.ecoach360.com/30-day-biomechanics-kinematics-certification-course-1] Join the Community Learning does not end when a course is completed. Inside the eCoach360° Community, you can connect with fellow golf professionals and golfers, ask questions, share experiences, and continue expanding your knowledge. 👉 Join the eCoach360° Community here [https://www.ecoach360.com/offers/3KFVXsrX/checkout] Conclusion eCoach360° is much more than a traditional online academy. It combines modern golf science, artificial intelligence, and practical coaching support into a comprehensive learning ecosystem. Acting as a virtual 24/7 biomechanics coach, the platform makes complex movement science understandable, measurable, and immediately applicable for golf professionals and players alike. * 📺 The Explainer [https://youtu.be/fmIFXtLzKr0] * www.eCoach360.com [www.eCoach360.com]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Golf 247.eu: The Global Platform for Innovative Technologies and Teaching Concepts.!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

671 episodios

Portada del episodio Länger schlagen, schmerzfrei spielen und Golf besser verstehen

Länger schlagen, schmerzfrei spielen und Golf besser verstehen

Heute ist der Tag, an dem Sie endlich das Geheimnis für mehr Schlagweite und weniger Schmerzen beim Golfspielen entdecken können. Wie viele von Ihnen wissen, habe ich in den letzten zehn Jahren sehr viel Zeit, Energie und Leidenschaft investiert, um den Golfschwung wirklich zu verstehen: Wie entsteht Geschwindigkeit? Wie kann man kraftvoller schlagen? Wie lassen sich Schmerzen vermeiden? Und wie kann man Golf langfristig effizient und gesund spielen? Um diese Fragen fundiert beantworten zu können, benötigt man moderne Mess- und Analysesysteme. Diese stehen mir in meinem Indoor-Studio im Golfcenter Müllheim vollständig zur Verfügung. Wenn Sie erfahren möchten, wie Sie auch in den nächsten 10 bis 15 Jahren schmerzfrei Golf spielen und gleichzeitig Ihre Leistung verbessern können, dann lohnt es sich, vorbeizukommen und sich persönlich zu informieren. Zur Vorbereitung habe ich einen kurzen Podcast aufgenommen, in dem ich erkläre, warum viele Golfer Schmerzen entwickeln und wie moderne Biomechanik dabei helfen kann, diese Probleme zu vermeiden. Zusätzlich finden Sie dazu passende Kurzvideos mit praktischen Erklärungen. Falls Sie Fragen haben, schreiben Sie mir gerne eine E-Mail oder rufen Sie mich einfach kurz an. Ich nehme mir gerne Zeit, Ihnen die Zusammenhänge persönlich zu erklären. Ich freue mich darauf, von Ihnen zu hören. Mit sportlichen Grüßen Henrik Jentsch PGA Golf Professional Gründer von eCoach360°

Ayer10 min
Portada del episodio #634 The Hidden Engine: Mastering Knee and Hip Biomechanics for Power and Longevity

#634 The Hidden Engine: Mastering Knee and Hip Biomechanics for Power and Longevity

While many golfers focus on clubface control and swing plane, elite performance begins from the ground up. As Cochran and Stobbs observed, the hands and arms are merely the transmission—the legs and hips are the true engine of the golf swing. Power is created through the Kinetic Chain, where energy transfers from the ground through the legs, hips, trunk, arms, and finally the club. When this sequence functions efficiently, golfers generate maximum speed with less effort and reduced injury risk. Modern biomechanical research has overturned the myth that golf is a low-impact sport. High-speed motion capture reveals that knee loading during the swing can equal or exceed forces seen in many traditional athletic activities. The lead knee experiences significant stabilizing forces during the downswing, while the trail knee often absorbs the highest cumulative stress throughout the swing. A key factor is hip mobility. The body follows a simple pattern: stable foot, mobile ankle, stable knee, mobile hip. When the trail hip lacks internal rotation, golfers often compensate with excessive lateral sway. This disrupts balance, weakens the Kinetic Chain, reduces power, and increases stress on both the knees and lower back. Elite players rely on Proximal-to-Distal Sequencing (PDS)—the efficient transfer of energy from pelvis to trunk, arms, and club. The lower back acts primarily as a transfer station rather than a power source. Attempting to generate speed with the lumbar spine often leads to back pain and reduced performance. One of the most common faults is Early Extension, where the trail hip moves toward the ball instead of rotating toward the target. This loss of posture disrupts sequencing, reduces clubhead speed, and places additional strain on the spine. The most effective swings balance mobility and stability. The lead knee provides a stable base, while the trail hip creates rotational power. Together they stretch the body's fascial "spiral line," storing elastic energy that is released through impact. Practical Keys • Maintain trail-hip rotation rather than swaying. • Allow natural hip turn—never force restriction. • Feel the trail foot pushing like a sprinter off the blocks. • Keep the trail hip moving behind you and then toward the target. Modern golf biomechanics is no longer about forcing positions. It is about optimizing each player's unique kinetic signature to create more speed, better consistency, and a swing that remains healthy for decades. * 📺 The Explainer [https://youtu.be/KIo-VEHNkt4] * www.eCoach360.com [www.eCoach360.com]

Ayer20 min
Portada del episodio #633 Mastering the Driver: The Science of Face Control, Shaft Physics, and Precision Launch

#633 Mastering the Driver: The Science of Face Control, Shaft Physics, and Precision Launch

Modern driver performance is not guesswork—it is geometry. At swing speeds between 85–105 mph, the clubface largely determines where the ball starts. Research shows face angle controls approximately 85–90% of initial launch direction, making face control the primary key to accuracy. Using launch monitor systems such as GC2/HMT, driver performance can be divided into two categories: ball launch and club delivery. Ball speed, launch angle, azimuth, spin axis, and total spin determine flight, while club speed, smash factor, attack angle, and closure rate define how the club is delivered to impact. The most important relationship is simple: Face-to-Target controls start direction, Face-to-Path controls curvature. A good swing path cannot compensate for a poorly aimed clubface. Shaft dynamics play a major role. Research by MacKenzie and Sprigings shows that tangential and radial forces bend the shaft during the downswing. Radial force peaks near impact and contributes to shaft droop, while tangential recoil helps create lead deflection. Together they influence clubface orientation and launch direction. Equipment geometry further affects performance. An upright lie angle tends to start shots left for right-handed golfers, while a flatter lie tends to start shots right. Shaft droop can make a club play more upright dynamically than it appears at address. Adapter settings, shaft profile, loft, and strike location all influence start-line bias and shot curvature. Human perception is equally important. Eye dominance, excessive head movement, and pressure can distort target perception. Under stress, golfers often rely on inaccurate visual snapshots, leading to inconsistent face delivery. A reliable driver system follows five steps: diagnose launch conditions, select equipment logically, validate performance across different effort levels, and monitor changes over time. The goal is predictable start lines with minimal variation. Effective practice includes start-line drills, strike-pattern mapping, and testing at multiple swing speeds. A simple routine—minimal head movement, a clear start-line focus, controlled breathing, and commitment to the intended launch window—improves consistency under pressure. The driver is not a mystery. When face control, shaft dynamics, equipment geometry, and perception work together, the club becomes a predictable performance tool rather than a source of uncertainty. * 📺 The Explainer [https://youtu.be/M2a0q7rzFAc] * www.eCoach360.com [www.eCoach360.com]

28 de jun de 202621 min
Portada del episodio #632 Mastering the Strike: The Biomechanical Blueprint for Centered Contact and a Shallow Downswing

#632 Mastering the Strike: The Biomechanical Blueprint for Centered Contact and a Shallow Downswing

Great ball striking depends on more than swing path and clubface control. The true foundation is centered contact. Even with a perfect path and square face, off-center strikes reduce ball speed, consistency, and distance control. Heel strikes usually occur when the club moves farther from the body during impact. Common causes include early extension, pressure moving onto the toes, or an excessively in-to-out delivery. These patterns push the hands and hosel closer to the ball. Toe strikes occur when the club returns closer to the body than at address. Loss of posture, pressure shifting into the heels, or a “chicken wing” lead arm action can shorten the swing radius and pull the strike toward the toe. A shallow downswing is not a style preference—it is a biomechanical necessity. Research shows that nearly all tour professionals shallow the club during transition. Shallowing occurs when the club’s center of mass moves below the hand path, creating a more efficient delivery and easier face control. Elite players allow the club to “fall” while maintaining light resistance and body rotation. This prevents the club from being dumped behind the body and keeps the motion synchronized. Many golfers incorrectly pull the hands straight down from the top. In elite swings, the hands move around the body while the shaft shallows behind them. Pulling vertically tends to steepen the shaft and create inconsistent contact. The wrists control clubface orientation. The most effective pattern is moving from lead-wrist extension at the top into flexion during transition—the well-known “Motorcycle Move.” This helps square the face while maintaining body rotation. * Maintain athletic balance with pressure centered in the feet. * Avoid early extension and loss of posture. * Keep hand depth compact at the top. * Allow the club to shallow naturally during transition. * Achieve lead-wrist flexion by P6. Use the Pump Drill to train a controlled shallow transition, the Motorcycle Drill to improve face control, and the Gate Drill to monitor strike location. Mastering centered contact and a shallow downswing creates a more efficient, repeatable golf swing that relies less on timing and more on sound biomechanics. Measure it. Improve it. Trust it. Understanding Heel and Toe StrikesThe Science of ShallowingHand Path vs. Club PathWrist MechanicsKey Performance CheckpointsPractice Drills * 📺 The Explainer [https://youtu.be/Uzn_sjLgMdk] * www.eCoach360.com [⁠www.eCoach360.com]

27 de jun de 202619 min
Portada del episodio #631 Cracking the Distance Code: The Biomechanics of the High-Velocity 5-Iron Swing

#631 Cracking the Distance Code: The Biomechanics of the High-Velocity 5-Iron Swing

While the driver often attracts the most attention, the 5-iron remains one of the best indicators of true ball-striking skill. It demands both speed and precision, requiring golfers to generate compression from the turf while maintaining exceptional impact consistency. Research comparing high-ball-speed and low-ball-speed golfers shows that distance is not simply a product of strength. Skilled players create greater clubhead speed, higher ball speed, and more accurate contact through superior biomechanics and sequencing. They complete the backswing and downswing more efficiently and strike the ball closer to the center of the clubface. One of the most important performance factors is the X-Factor Stretch—the separation between the shoulders and hips during transition. Elite golfers increase this separation by approximately 19% early in the downswing, storing elastic energy that is rapidly released through impact. Less skilled golfers typically create only about 13%, limiting speed production. Another critical component is the trail scapula. During the backswing, scapular retraction helps rotate the rib cage and torso while keeping the arms connected to the body. This creates a stable pivot, prevents excessive arm lifting, and allows greater shoulder loading at the top of the swing. Distance also depends on efficient kinetic sequencing. Elite players generate high hip rotation velocities, shift pressure toward the lead side before impact, and delay wrist release until the final moments of the downswing. This “late release” creates a powerful whipping effect that dramatically increases clubhead speed. Ground reaction forces play a vital role. Skilled golfers move pressure from the trail side to the lead side early in transition, creating a stable lead-side post around which the body can rotate. Players who remain on the trail foot often struggle with compression, distance, and consistency. For golfers seeking more distance with a 5-iron, the priorities are clear: • Create an effective X-Factor Stretch during transition. • Retract the trail scapula to improve pivot mechanics. • Shift pressure early to the lead side. • Increase hip rotation speed. • Maintain a delayed wrist release. • Improve center-face contact. Ultimately, a powerful 5-iron is not built through effort alone. It is the result of efficient biomechanics, precise sequencing, and effective use of the ground. Master these elements, and the 5-iron becomes one of the most reliable distance and scoring weapons in the bag. * 📺 The Explainer [https://youtu.be/itekFIOBWgo] * www.eCoach360.com [www.eCoach360.com]

26 de jun de 202620 min