A Malaska Golf Member wants to know about the right shoulder in chipping. Mike explains when you swing, the shoulder doesn't go lower than where it started.
The biggest problem most golfers have is setting up to the ball and having their right shoulder tilted down. This causes you to hit behind the ball because your legs will drive into the ball, and your shoulders will tilt. When you set up in chipping, you want to feel like your shoulders are level through the swing.
The Malaska Golf Member wants to know if this is relevant to your full swing. Mike's answer to this is yes. The only difference is that your shoulders turn significantly more in a full swing, and the right shoulder goes a lot higher. When your right shoulder comes down, it will be level through the swing. This is called "covering the ball." It is not swinging "over the top."
When you go back during the full swing and turn in the downswing, the right shoulder is just below your left shoulder, your left leg pushes out of the way, and your right shoulder will level out and go right through the ball.
Mike concludes that it does have relevance to a full swing as it is the same move with a lot less shoulder turn. Again, the shoulder turn is minimal in chipping before it levels out on the downswing. The bigger the shoulder turn, the more your shoulder will go down before going around. This depends on the shot, but the relevance is the same.