1. Prevent injuries due to instability at the wrist
2. Lessen chances of an overuse injury
3. Create a more consistently accurate shot
Here's a guy that announcers on television compare to a linebacker in football, but the injury that could have derailed his career was an injury to his wrist. Fortunately, we were able to rehab it intelligently and logically and any doubts about his successful recovery were erased with his second straight US Open victory last month at Shinnecock Hills.
The golf swing is very unforgiving. In baseball, it doesn't matter if you hit a home run to dead center or if you hook it around the foul pole. Either way, you're running around the bases with a smile on your face. In golf, that "home run" that hooked around the foul pole might put your ball on the fairway of the wrong hole and cost you a few strokes.
So, how does the wrist factor into all of this?
OK, that's a bit of an exaggeration. But there are almost 30 bones that make up the wrist and hand. That's a lot of hardware, but think of all the ways the wrist can move. It can flex forward, extend backward, shift from side-to-side, and rotate.
Now, add in all of the ways the fingers can move. To articulate all those bones and take advantage of their full range of motion, you need to have an amazing number of muscles, tendons (which connect muscle to bone), and ligaments (which connect bone to bone) located around the wrist.
The good news is that all this freedom of movement lets us do things like paint, type, and perform surgery. (It's also why the piano sounds better when played with the hands than when played with the elbows.)
The bad news is that all that freedom of movement comes with a price. Just like I wrote about the ankle in a previous blog, the more mobility there is around a joint, generally the less stability there is.
Lack of strength and stability around the wrist can result in traumatic injury due to a single poorly executed swing. Lack of strength and stability around the wrist can also increase your chances of overuse injuries.
Most golfers don't give a whole lot of thought to forearm, wrist, and hand strength, but -- ultimately -- the movement (or lack of movement) around your wrist is going to be the final and deciding factor as to where your club face is at impact.
If you have the forearm, wrist, and hand strength to control the club face throughout your swing, your game will be a whole lot more consistent. If you don't have that strength and stability, not only will you be setting yourself up for some unpredictable play, but you also may be setting yourself up for injury.
Check out my video below and add this fast, simple, and effective way to strengthen the muscles around the wrist to your workout.
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