Shallow The Club Naturally
3m

Malaska Certified Coach Brian Gott from The Club at Rolling Hills in Golden, Colorado answers a question from Parker Shellmeyer about where the hands should move during shallowing in the downswing.

Brian explains that shallowing isn’t about dropping the club behind you or forcing the hands out toward the ball. Instead, it’s about learning how to let the hands work down and in while the momentum of the clubhead moves out. This motion allows the shaft to shallow naturally as the body transitions back into the lead side.

He emphasizes that this is an exaggerated feeling drill, not a literal move that happens at full speed. As the player transitions, the lower body shifts into the lead side, creating a natural side bend that helps the arms drop into position. The key is to feel the hands move closer to the chest while maintaining spacing — not pulling them tight into the body.

To train the sequence, Brian recommends rehearsing the motion slowly: shift pressure into the lead side, let the arms fall, and feel the hands move down and in as the clubhead shallows. Once that rhythm is built at slower speeds, it naturally repeats in the full swing without conscious effort.

In this lesson you will learn:
• Why shallowing is a result of motion, not a forced position.
• How the hands move down and in as the clubhead moves out.
• Why shifting into the lead side creates natural side bend and space.
• How to avoid pulling the hands toward the ball or body.
• Why slow-speed rehearsals develop natural timing and sequence.

He leaves golfers with a key reminder:
“Feel the hands work down and in — the club will shallow naturally as you shift into your lead side.”
— Brian Gott, Malaska Certified Coach
This Makes Sense. Own Your Swing.