The most common thing I see when I watch a golf “guru” trying to sell their particular argument or swing mechanics is the Strawman Fallacy.
I see it time and time again, and this is something you can watch for, to amuse yourself, if you happen to watch someone attacking something as “wrong,” and how their way is better or the correct one.
If you’re unfamiliar with that term, here is the basic overview from Wikipedia, with what Jimmy Ballard did trying to sell something Hogan did or didn’t do in his swing highlighted:
A straw man fallacy occurs when someone distorts, exaggerates, or oversimplifies an opponent’s argument to make it easier to knock down. Instead of refuting the actual point, they attack this fake, distorted version (the “straw man”) and pretend they have defeated the original claim. [1, 2]
When you see what I mean, you will know why I call this stuff out when I see it, because they are selling snake oil and using famous players or swingers to do so.
First, Ballard says that you can’t be in a position with the hips and legs leading the upper body and with the spine tilting away from the target, which we already know is exactly what every great swinger has done:
I can use the exact same pictures from yesterday, with a little gif. of Ballard “explaining” his genius, to completely invalidate the straw man he builds to try to knock down.
First, the gif. of what Ballard says will happen if you find yourself in this position on the down swing:
And there is your straw man, because I challenge anyone on this planet to show me a swing where Ben Hogan got to this position and then stopped his down swing rotation and merely flipped at the ball.
Show me anyone, really – who rotates from the top to the halfway down position and then stops the rotation and flips at the ball?
No one. Even someone who “flips” the ball is still rotating towards the target as they early release.
You can even see it, as I have promised to use only the two comparison photos from yesterday to prove my point.
The first shows Hogan in the same position as Ballard with the left arm:
Notice however that Hogan’s shoulders are still fairly closed to the target at this point, because he’s in the middle of rotating to the target halfway down – that’s why we call it “halfway!”
He did not arrive at that position with his shoulders nearly square to the target line as Ballard is doing above, and he still has a full wrist cock where Ballard would have you believe that, instead of continuing the rotation and releasing naturally to the swing bottom, Hogan was trying avoid stopping his rotation halfway down and having to flip the club through.
I agree that this would be ridiculous, but it only makes Ballard ridiculous because Hogan never had a problem squaring his clubface – he was a hooker whose problem was squaring the face too early, not that he couldn’t!
Now, look at what Hogan actually did:
You see that?
From closed shoulders to the target line and square hips to the target line, Hogan has come into impact with squared shoulders, a vertical left arm and open hips (which means that he has obviously continued his rotation toward the target from halfway down) and his right arm has extended with the release of the left wrist angle, to bring the club to the swing bottom and square the club face.
Hogan even says it in the clip where I have it to start at 00;21 when he’s at the top of the back pivot:
What does he say?
… you move the lower part of your body – not your shoulders – the lower part of your body, letting your arms and hands follow, bringing you into position to hit… then you release at the bottom.
Not this:
Again, here is your straw man fallacy – invent something Hogan never did (stopping his rotation halfway down to impact), and invent a problem that Hogan never had (squaring the club face), and create a completely ridiculous straw man to knock over.
So, yet another “expert” on the Ben Hogan swing who is either outright fabricating something about Hogan, or has absolutely no idea what Hogan was doing with his swing – it’s either one or the other, friends, and there is no third option other than it’s both.
And I would really love to see this video Ballard claims to have of Hogan doing these drills in 1956 at the Masters, before every swing…






oh gosh *facepalm* actually had a discussion about him irl with someone and he was confused by why ballard compared (in his book) ben hogan’s swing to throwing a sandbag lmao he’s a joke amongst the (GOOD) coaches
I seriously can’t recall ever hearing about this chap before yesterday, AK.
I saw another short of his on IG this morning where he was doing more straw-manning, perhaps in the old Gold Channel studio from the 90s or early 2000s.
Absolute bunk.
Hi DJ, long time no talk. Hope you and Renya are well. I actually took a lesson from Jimmy Ballard in the mid 80’s. A pro in Florida who knew him said I should look into Ballard since my swing reminded him of his teachings. At that time, his stable of golfers were Jim Colbert, Rocco Mediate, Curtis Strange and Hal Sutton. Remember, I was in my early 30’s and no injuries. The teaching pro at Firestone CC in Akron, Rick Jones who won the NCAA individual title was a follower of Ballard and set up a 4 day session in Ohio. 2 groups of 2 days. I filled up before I heard about it. I have his video and visited the location about lunch. When all the students went to lunch, I walked in with the VHS tape and asked if he would sign it as that the sessions filled quite quickly. He could not have been nicer and was thrilled to be asked to autograph his video. I was in a coat and tie with dress shoes. He asked me to hit a few and it turned into a 90 minute private lesson. He continued to say move more off the ball … you would have strangled him 🙂
As was mentioned above, his philosophy was that of a shortstop being ready to catch the ball or someone tossing a bag of cement. His mentor was a NY Yankee playing with Babe Ruth by the name of Sam Byrd who after retiring became a golf instructor. The head moved all over the place if you remember the players mentioned above. I could do it then, quite well actually. Now at 74, I am MCS all the way … but Ballard had quite a following before Y2K.
He must be mid 80’s by now and his time has passed. He believed what he said and taught, whether right or wrong. It was a pleasure to meet him as it was to spend so much time with you. He took what he learned from Sam Byrd and ran with it, you were not that trusting and dug and examined all models until you broke the code.
Currently, I need another shoulder replacement. The one 9 years ago has come loose and I now need a reverse replacement. It hurts like heck, but I still play everyday and am breaking my age a third of the time. No other injuries, so MCS does in fact work … it just didn’t prevent a shoulder injury because of a snow blower LOL Have a great week.
David
Well, hello there, DK! Long time indeed, and everyone is great here. I hope you and Nancy are doing well 🙂
None of what you tell me about Ballard surprises me – it all falls in with the charismatic golf guru type. I thought he was a televangelist talking about Hogan from a stage somewhere until I saw the name and looked it up. 😂
Sorry to hear about the shoulder – I remember how happy you were after the surgery, and I actually thought of you when I had the Frozen Shoulder hit me last year. I was wondering “am I going to need a shoulder replacement like my old friend DK?” 😬
Luckily for me, it is nearly good now, but I’m not rushing the return to swinging.
Great to hear from you, all the best with your summer rounds!
DJ