Your swing looks fine in the mirror. You’re rotating. You’re shifting your weight. You’re doing all the things you’re supposed to do. But the ball still goes everywhere except where you want it to go. The problem isn’t what you’re doing. It’s when you’re doing it.
Sequence is everything in the golf swing. You can have perfect positions and still hit terrible shots if those positions happen in the wrong order. The golf swing is a chain reaction. Each part triggers the next. Get the order wrong, and the whole thing falls apart. Get it right, and everything clicks.
Why sequence matters more than positions
Most golfers focus on positions: top of the backswing, impact position, follow-through. They try to copy what they see in photos of pros. But golf isn’t a series of poses. It’s a motion. And motion has an order.
When you start the downswing with your arms, you lose all your power before you even get to the ball. When you spin your shoulders first, you throw the club over the top. When you fire everything at once, you have no lag, no compression, no distance. Sequence creates speed. Sequence creates consistency. Sequence is what separates a smooth, powerful swing from a violent lunge at the ball.
The backswing sequence: Ground up
The backswing starts from the ground, not your hands, not your shoulders. Your feet and lower body move first. You feel pressure shift into your back foot as your hips begin to turn. Your torso follows. Your shoulders rotate last, pulling your arms and the club along for the ride.
Think of it like a coil. The lower body turns less than the upper body. This creates tension and stored energy. Your hips might turn 45 degrees while your shoulders turn 90 degrees. That difference is where your power comes from. If everything turns together, there’s no coil and no coil means no power.
Your arms don’t do much in the backswing. They stay connected to your body. The club goes back because your body turns, not because you lift it. When you lift with your arms, you lose connection. When you lose connection, you lose sequence.

The downswing sequence: the magic order
This is where most golfers get it wrong. They start the downswing with whatever feels natural: usually their hands, sometimes their shoulders, but almost never the right thing.
The downswing starts with your lower body, specifically a slight shift of your hips toward the target. Not a spin, a shift. Your weight moves to your front foot and then your hips begin to rotate. This happens before your hands move, before the club moves, before anything else happens.
Next comes your torso. Your chest starts to unwind and your shoulders begin to rotate through. But your arms are still waiting and the club is still lagging behind. This is the separation that creates speed: lower body, then torso, then arms, then club. In that order, every time.
By the time your hands reach hip height on the downswing, your lower body should already be well into its rotation. Your hips should be open to the target. Your weight should be shifting forward. And the club should still be behind you, storing energy like a whip about to crack.
Impact happens when everything finally catches up. Your body has already rotated. Your weight is on your front foot. Your hands release the club through the ball. Not before. Not after. Right at impact.
| Stage | What should move first | What it should feel like | Common mistake |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lower body | Small shift toward target | Starting with shoulders |
| 2 | Hips | Begin opening without spinning out | Sliding too much or spinning too early |
| 3 | Torso/chest | Unwind after lower body starts | Firing everything at once |
| 4 | Arms | Drop into place, not throw from the top | Pulling down with the arms |
| 5 | Club | Lag behind, then release through impact | Casting early |
The sequence mistakes killing your swing
The most common mistake is starting with your upper body. You get to the top of your backswing and immediately fire your shoulders. This throws the club outside the target line. You come over the top. You slice. You pull. You hit weak shots that go nowhere.
The second mistake is firing everything at once. No separation between your lower body and upper body. No lag. No stored energy. Just a simultaneous rotation that looks athletic but produces nothing. You feel like you’re swinging hard, but the ball doesn’t go far.
The third mistake is starting with your hands. You cast the club from the top. You release all your angles early. By the time you get to impact, you have nothing left. The club is already past its fastest point. You hit fat shots, thin shots and everything in between.

How to learn proper sequence
You can’t think your way through sequence during a full-speed swing. It happens too fast. You need to feel it in slow motion first. Take practice swings at half speed. Focus on the order: your lower body shifts and then rotates, the torso follows, the arms and club come last.
Use a mirror or record yourself. Watch for the separation. At the start of your downswing, your lower body should move while your hands stay back. There should be a visible gap between when your hips start and when your arms drop. That gap is sequence.
Do the pump drill. Get to the top of your backswing. Bump your hips toward the target. Stop. Feel that position. That’s where the downswing starts. Not with your hands. Not with your shoulders. With your hips shifting forward.
The simple truth
Sequence isn’t complicated but it’s not natural. Your instinct is to hit the ball with your hands. Your instinct is wrong. The golf swing works from the ground up: lower body first, torso second, arms and club last. Get the order right and everything else gets easier. Get it wrong and nothing else matters. Learn the sequence and you learn the swing.
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