A Malaska Golf Member is struggling with his driver, almost to the point of throwing it away. He finds himself moving too much. Mike explains that when you set up and start to swing back, you shouldn't mistake force into your right foot as weight shift.
Mike demonstrates that you can see how much your head has moved back when you do this. What happens is that when you realize you have done this, you slide forward to compensate. Your upper body becomes the change of direction instead of your lower body.
You will hit the ground behind the ball if you shift your weight on the backswing. The key is that you are moving a lot of force into your right foot. This is a dynamic weight shift. Mike can't stand on his right foot when he swings back. When he changes directions, it would measure that he has 100 percent of his force or weight in his right foot.
Mike explains that it's not weight shift but force. As Mike swings on the follow-through, 100 percent of his force is now in his left foot. Throughout this swing, Mike's head has not moved.
When you move force into your right, you're moving force into your heel, not swaying your body to the right. When you sway to the right, you have to get back up to the ball, and this causes problems.
When people finally do it correctly, they say it feels like a reverse weight shift. This has nothing to do with weight shift. It is about force going into your right foot.
Mike says the member is trying too hard to get into his right side. His head is moving back, and he has to move forward to get back to the ball.