Malaska Certified Coach Billy Fitzgerald from The Beverly Country Club in Chicago answers a question from Brandon Pitman about the Left Foot, Right Foot Back Drill — a setup and motion pattern that helps golfers feel more compression and solid impact by favoring the lead leg.
Brandon found success keeping most of his weight on the lead (left) leg throughout the swing and wanted to know if that could cause issues down the road or lead to an overly “stack and tilt” style motion. Billy explains that the concept has real merit — particularly for short irons and wedge play — because staying on the lead side promotes a downward strike and proper hip action through the ball.
However, he cautions that this technique can limit speed and depth of rotation with longer clubs. To generate more clubhead speed and shallow the swing with mid- to long-irons, golfers need to incorporate dynamic pressure shifts: moving left → right → left through the swing. This movement pattern allows the hips to push back, the shoulders to tilt correctly, and the body to create speed through natural sequencing.
Billy recommends practicing left-right-left swings to feel the rhythm of shifting pressure without forcing weight transfer. With short clubs, you’ll stay more on the lead side. With longer clubs, you’ll feel a slight trail-side load before returning left through impact — keeping the motion powerful, athletic, and repeatable.
In this lesson you will learn:
• Why staying on your lead leg improves compression and short-iron contact.
• How the left-right-left rhythm generates speed and natural momentum.
• Why too much lead-side bias limits rotation with longer clubs.
• How pressure shifts, not weight shifts, create effortless power.
• Why using your lead leg to push away from the club shallows the swing.
He leaves golfers with a key reminder:
“Lead-side pressure is great for short clubs — just remember left, right, left for power and balance.”
— Malaska Certified Coach
This Makes Sense. Own Your Swing.