Improving your golf swing is rarely about rebuilding everything. More often, it is about identifying the right fault, then fixing it in the right order. That idea sits at the heart of this lesson.
The player in this session was hitting weak iron shots that leaked to the right. At first glance, many golfers would blame the downswing, the release, or the clubface through impact. But the real issue started earlier. By changing the backswing shape, the club began to approach the ball better on its own, and the ball flight improved almost immediately.
If your golf shots start left, curve right, or feel weak off the face, this step by step guide will help you understand why a better backswing can clean up your downswing without trying to force it.
Table of Contents
Step 1: Diagnose the real golf problem at impact
The starting point was ball flight. The iron shots were tending to finish right, with the occasional pull mixed in. That pattern usually points to a club path that is moving too much left through impact.
Using launch and swing data, the

0 Comments