Blend the Legs, Rotate the Hips
3m

In this episode of Ask Malaska Golf, Mike Malaska and Certified Coach Billy Fitzgerald respond to a question from Malaska Golf member Richard Tracy:
“Which leg drives the transition—left or right?”
The answer is simple: both.
Many golfers try to isolate one side of the body during the transition. But real power and balance come from a coordinated blend. Mike explains that in the change of direction, the right leg pushes into the ground and rotates, while the left leg pushes back and up, creating the dynamic movement that rotates the hips properly around the spine angle.
Billy builds on this concept by showing how each leg contributes to the pattern and how to train each side individually, then blend them into a unified motion.
This lesson highlights the M-System’s focus on building your swing from the ground up. When your legs and hips interact properly with the ground, you unlock consistent movement, rotational power, and a swing that holds up under pressure.
What You’ll Learn in This Video:
• Why both legs work together to power the transition
• How to isolate each side in practice to build better feel and function
• How ground force works: right foot pushes down and in, left leg pushes back and up
• Why hip movement should match your spine angle to avoid compensations
• How proper lower-body motion produces balance, power, and rotation
• How this leg blend reflects natural movement found in other sports
“Most people can’t focus on both legs at once. You train the right side. Then the left. Then blend them into motion.”
– Mike Malaska
“Your left leg pushes your hip back and up. Your right foot pushes down and in. That’s how your hips rotate around your spine and stay in balance.”
– Billy Fitzgerald
Key Takeaway:
This drill teaches you how to sequence the lower body for a powerful, connected transition. It’s not about picking one leg over the other – it’s about learning how both sides of your body work together to produce efficient movement. By understanding and mastering this blend, you’ll rotate better, strike the ball more consistently, and maintain your posture through the swing.
It’s a perfect example of how the M-System simplifies complex swing mechanics into motion that just makes sense.