the short-back swing
A swing drill that gives the hands less time to freelance and the body more reason to lead
The Short-Back Swing Drill takes away the luxury of a long backswing, not because short is magic, but because less runway makes the body self-organize faster, better. From a shorter, paused position, the lower body and core have to show up in the proper order—resulting to better face control, contact and … yes, effortless speed.
Use this for irons and driver.
Instructions—
Set up to the ball.
Make a short backswing, somewhere hip-high where the shaft is parallel to the ground.
Pause.
Swing through from this paused position.
Repeat once or twice—or until you find a natural rhythm.
Swing with your normal backswing.
Note—
Even with a short backswing, shift pressure from your lead foot to the inner part of your trail foot.
From the paused shaft-parallel position, and intention to swing through, pressure would naturally shift back to your lead foot.
From the paused shaft-parallel position, you could set the clubface angle to influence ball direction. You could also influence swing path by having the shaft parallel to the target, clubhead slightly behind (in-to-out) or slightly in front (out-to-in) the hands.