1 Athletic Ballance 2 Spaghetti Arms 3 Ball position appropriate for the club 1 Hip Hinge 2 Arms Hanging Down 3 Slight Knee Bend 1 Pause at Shaft Parallel

The pause is important. It forces you to use your reliable big muscles, instead of your whimsy small muscles, to load the backswing.


2 Relaxed Trail Forearm 3 Pressure Builds on Trail Foot
C Checkpoint

At shaft parallel, face angle is, more or less, parallel to spine tilt. Clubhead is slightly forward of shaft.


M Motion

Load the backswing by imagining a striped shirt turning vertical against your pants. Pressure increases on the trail foot. Let the arms and club follow, not lead the turn.
M Motion

Unload with the legs by nudging an imaginary knee-high table towards the target with your lead sheen. Feel like your "falling" down and forward towards your lead knee and ankles.
R Reminder

Feel like your arms stay up, allowing it to naturally fall down.
M Let the weight and mass of the club swish through impact. Hear the swish past the ball. The ball is just in the way. C Checkpoint

Finish tall with chest facing the sky. Balance is a must.
R Arms and hands are shapers that follow the body rotation, not the other way around.
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