Here’s something I see almost every time I step on a driving range: golfers desperately trying to fix their steep swings by manipulating their hands. It never works.
Most weekend golfers fire their shoulders first instead of using their legs. This creates an over-the-top casting motion that makes solid contact nearly impossible.
The solution isn’t more conscious control — it’s setting up conditions where shallowing happens automatically.
What actually goes wrong
Your steep swing follows predictable physics. When you fire your shoulders first, you’re essentially throwing the club over the top of its natural path. Think about it: your arms are connected to your shoulders, so when those shoulders spin out early, they drag everything with them — including the club shaft. There’s literally nowhere else for that club to go except over the plane.
This is why every “quick fix” you’ve probably tried — stronger grip, closed stance, different ball position — makes things worse. You’re treating symptoms, not the cause. The real problem? You’re asking your upper body to do the lower body’s job. Once you understand that physics always wins, everything changes.
The setup foundation
Your address position determines everything. Most golfers crowd the ball, forcing an upright swing plane. Instead, stand with your arms hanging naturally.
Weight should slightly favor your lead side at address — about 55 percent to 60 percent for right-handed players. Ball position matters more than most realize. Too far back promotes steep attacks; too far forward encourages fat contact.
The move that changes everything
Start your downswing with your lower body, not your arms. Think of cracking a whip — your hips are the handle, everything else follows.
I tell students to imagine their belt buckle leading toward the target.
When you nail this sequencing, you’ll feel tremendous lag with your hands angled back behind the ball. The compression is incredible — like the ball melts into the clubface.
Practice that actually works
Skip hitting balls initially. Master the motion with this progression:
Step 1: Start with feet together, take a small step with your lead foot as you begin the downswing. This forces your lower body to lead.
Step 2: Put a towel under your trail armpit and keep it there throughout the swing. This maintains the connection that shallows the club.
Step 3: Add balls only after the motion feels automatic.
Why most golfers fail
Players who get too steep often manipulate the club or stay too tight at the top. To shallow properly, let the club lay off slightly and feel pressure build in the back of your trail wrist.
The biggest mistake? Trying to shallow with your hands. Your hands should feel passive. Tension in your bottom hand destroys the natural dropping motion that creates proper plane.
The honest truth about timing
This won’t feel natural immediately. I spent months ingraining this motion before it became automatic.
But once it clicks, everything changes. The compression, the distance, the accuracy — it all flows from proper sequencing, not manipulation.
Start your next practice session with lower body movement. Let everything else follow.
The post How to Shallow the Club Naturally — Even if You’ve Always Been Steep appeared first on MyGolfSpy.
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