Ask Malaska Golf: How Long Should Your Backswing Be?
In this episode of Ask Malaska Golf, Certified Coach Matt Baker answers a great question from member Gonzi Trevino:
“How far back should I swing the club?”
Gonzi, a former college pitcher, feels his golf backswing is too long and gets out of control, especially compared to the compact, powerful motion he used on the mound. Matt explains that backswing length is not about copying a model–it’s about matching your body’s mobility and how you transition.
The key takeaway? It’s not just about how far the club goes back, but how and when your body starts moving forward during that backswing. Great athletes—from pitchers to tennis players–create a stretch between the upper and lower body. That’s what creates power. In golf, this stretch is created in transition, where the club is still going back, but the body begins moving forward.
Matt walks through practical drills that connect these athletic moves to the golf swing and shows how to find the ideal swing length for your body type and flexibility—without overthinking mechanics.
What You’ll Learn in This Video:
• Why swing length depends on mobility, flexibility, and body awareness
• Why there’s no top of the backswing – just motion and transition
• How to create stretch and coil by moving forward as the club goes back
• What baseball and tennis have in common with the golf swing
• Drills to help you feel proper transition: Left-Right-Left and the Step Drill
• Why learning transition naturally shortens your swing without losing power
“The swing isn’t backswing, top, and downswing. It’s motion. You’re already moving forward while the club’s going back.”
– Matt Baker
Key Takeaway:
There’s no one-size-fits-all backswing. The right length for you comes from understanding your body and mastering transition. If your club feels too long at the top, chances are your body isn’t starting forward soon enough. The M-System trains you to move like an athlete, building coil, balance, and power without forcing positions.