At the end of aggressive carved turns, especially in GS, I find myself drifing toward the tail of the ski toward the end of the turn (which is okay) but unable to get back on the front of the boot during the transition.
During the turn, I am flexing my inside leg while maintaining a straight outside leg, which is creating a strong angulated position. As the turn progresses, I am moving toward the tail, which brings me out of my carve and allows me to generate speed from the tail. It is at this moment I want to initiate the new turn, 1) partially by relaxing my downhill leg to end the old turn and start the new one (get my CM moving downhill) and 2) partially by getting to the front of the boot (so I can initially bend the tip of the ski and tighten up the turn initially). I feel that I am only doing #1 well. I am relaxing the downhill leg and transferring weight, sending my CM down the fall line as a result, and generating edge angle early in the turn. Unfortunately, I feel that I am still somewhat riding the tail of the ski at the beginning of the new turn. This results in a turn that is determined only by the angulation I set up, not by fine-tuning the arc by pressuring the tip/tail as needed.
During the transition, how can I get my hips forward to the front of the boot for the start of the next turn? Any drills or cues that I should be looking for will be helpful.