Fix Your Takeaway Feel
3m

In this episode of Ask Malaska Golf, Certified Coach Matt Baker from Manchester Golf Club in England responds to a question from Chris H. about the takeaway – specifically why it feels under-explained in most instruction. Matt addresses the concern by reframing the takeaway not as a position, but as a motion driven by momentum and feel.
Instead of forcing the takeaway through rigid body parts or overthinking it, Matt explains how great swings often start with a throwing or tossing sensation. Whether it's a forward press or a soft "toss" of the clubhead behind you, these movements create rhythm and flow, helping the club swing back naturally and loading the wrists in the process.
Matt demonstrates drills like the Front Loader Drill and a ball toss feel to help golfers unlock a smooth, motion-first takeaway. These drills train your body to initiate the swing with instinct, not mechanics, allowing the M-System to kick in from the very first move.

What You’ll Learn in This Video:
• Why the takeaway should be a motion, not a position
• How to use a tossing or throwing feel to start the swing
• Why forward press or hand triggers can create better rhythm
• How the Front Loader Drill helps build natural momentum

Key Insights
Most golfers force the weight shift at the wrong time, often trying to push off their trail leg after the backswing has peaked – which leads to poor sequencing and mistimed swings.
In reality, the transition starts during the backswing, as your body instinctively counters the movement of the club. This is how athletes in other sports (like baseball or tennis) create powerful, fluid motion without thinking about it.
Mike explains that the club’s momentum is the cue. As the club goes back, your pressure moves into the trail foot. As the club starts down, the energy transfers forward, and you’re already on your lead side before you feel like you’ve pushed.
This reactive, not forced motion is a core principle of the M-System: building a swing based on natural forces and learned motion, not mechanical effort.
Mastering this concept leads to better timing, increased speed, and more consistent ball striking – without feeling like you're "trying" to shift.


“There’s no perfect position to start the swing. You just want to feel like you’re tossing the club away – not forcing it.”
– Matt Baker