BACK INJURY FREE FULL SWING
3m
This question comes from a 68-year-old Malaska Golf Member who has had back problems and wants to keep playing and not have similar issues. Mike discusses that you need to eliminate having side bend. Side bend and twist put a lot of pressure on your lower lumbar spine. The key is to eliminate or minimize that. When Mike swings, there is virtually no side bend. He used to swing where he would hang back and have a lot of side bend. This eventually resulted in Mike having back problems. First, when you swing, you want your spine angle to stay fairly neutral. It will tilt a little, and after you hit the ball, you will stand up on the follow-through. A mistake is continually staying down as you drive through the ball. Many Tour Players talk about “standing up through the ball.” Second, you want to match the rotation of your pelvis with your arms. You definitely don’t want to fire your hips in front of you. Mike pushes his left hip socket as the club descends. His hips appear to rotate, but not as he comes through the ball. There is no twist, he is not torquing his hip, and it is not coming up. Mike’s left hip moves back, and his pelvis is tilting instead of moving up. When you are rotating, you want to be able to push your left hip back so your pelvis feels like it is rotating with the right side of your body and arm. If you do these two things, you won’t cause any additional pressure in your lower lumbar spine. The chances of hurting your back are minimal.