In this episode of Ask Malaska Golf, Malaska Certified Coach Matt Baker from Manchester Golf Club in England responds to a question and comment from Guy Broadband about how the M-System has simplified his game.
Guy shares that once he understood impact and added L to L, his scores dropped into the seventies and low eighties. Matt reinforces the principle behind that improvement: train impact first.
He explains that impact is a position that can be rehearsed. From setup, the lead leg pushes the lead hip back, shifting pressure into the lead side. The hands move slightly forward, the trail arm aligns behind the shaft, the lead shoulder moves up, and the trail shoulder lowers. This is impact.
Matt emphasizes that the brain thrives on clear instruction. If you repeatedly rehearse what correct impact feels like, the brain begins to organize the swing around that task. Instead of chasing positions in the backswing, you give your brain a clear destination.
From there, L to L becomes simple. Move to the L, return to impact, and mirror to the other L. Add basic face control and the swing becomes far less complicated. Compression improves. Strike improves. Consistency improves.
Matt encourages golfers to rehearse impact frequently—both at home and on the range. Train the task. Give the brain a clear picture. Let repetition do the work.
“If you train what impact should feel like and just go L to L around it, the ball striking gets so much easier.”
— Matt Baker
What You’ll Learn in This Video:
• Why impact should be trained before anything else
• How lead leg pressure moves the hip correctly
• How rehearsing impact programs the brain
• Why L to L works when impact is clear
• How simple rehearsal improves compression