Malaska Certified Coach Billy Fitzgerald from The Beverly Country Club in Chicago answers a question from Ben Carroll about where the V’s in the grip should point and how they influence clubface control.
Billy explains that both hands serve different purposes in the golf swing — and the direction of the V’s reflects those roles. For a right-handed golfer, the lead-hand V (left hand) should point toward the right shoulder, while the trail-hand V (right hand) points more toward the chest.
The lead hand acts as the chopper, folding and hinging through the swing. The trail hand, positioned closer to the clubface, acts as the controller, matching what the face is doing through impact. When both V’s are positioned correctly, the hands can work together — the lead guiding motion, the trail guiding face control — creating a natural and balanced release.
In this lesson you will learn:
• Where to align the V’s in both the lead and trail hands.
• Why each hand has a different role in controlling the clubface.
• How the lead hand “chops” and folds naturally through impact.
• Why the trail hand mirrors the face and maintains direction.
• How balanced hand positions promote control and consistency.
He leaves golfers with a simple reminder:
“Your lead-hand V points to your shoulder, your trail-hand V to your chest — each has a job.”
— Malaska Certified Coach
This Makes Sense. Own Your Swing.