L to L And Tipping The Club
5m

In this episode of Ask Malaska Golf, Mike Malaska answers a question from Parker Schlemeyer about the relationship between the L to L drill and “tipping” the club.

Mike explains that if you’re performing a true L to L drill, where the lead arm is parallel to the ground and the shaft forms a clean 90-degree angle, the club is already in a delivery-ready position. From there, very little adjustment is required. If the club is set correctly at the top of the L, you can simply return it to the ball and mirror the same L on the follow-through side.

The confusion begins when players let the club get too vertical or out of position in the backswing. When that happens, they must reroute or “tip” the shaft excessively on the way down just to find the correct arc. Mike emphasizes that L to L is about precision and structure. The shaft should generally point at or slightly inside the target line, not laid off dramatically and not steep or vertical.

He clarifies that tipping the club can be used as an exaggeration drill to develop awareness. Working with Joe Nichols, Mike would intentionally over-feel the tipping motion to sense how momentum directed the club back into the correct arc. He would progressively lower the club, first brushing the top of the ball, then striking it cleanly, to understand how the shaft shallows naturally when guided by motion rather than manipulation.

Mike cautions against artificial shallowing. If you drastically change the shaft angle without the body and hands working in harmony, you create compensation, tension, and inconsistency. The club, hands, and body must circle together. When synchronized, as taught in the M-System, the club returns to the ball with minimal effort.

The goal is simple: position the club correctly so it swings in its natural arc. Let momentum work. When everything harmonizes, the center of the face finds the ball without force.

 What You’ll Learn in This Video:
• Why true L to L requires very little shaft manipulation
• How incorrect club position forces excessive tipping
• The difference between exaggeration drills and real motion
• Why artificial shallowing creates tension and compensation
• How body, hands, and club must circle in sync

“You want that club swinging in an arc where it doesn’t take any strength or effort to hit the center of the face.”
— Mike Malaska

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