A Malaska Golf Member has a question about your swing path relative to the target line.
Some people believe you should swing from the inside out, which is untrue. This concept was developed to help people who were swinging over the top. Instructors told them to swing from the inside out to the right field to remedy that. Mike explains that it is an exaggeration and not what happens.
Mike sets up with his oversized iron and an alignment stick in front of him. As he swings the club back, you notice that he swings on an arc up to the top. As the club comes down, it comes slightly from the inside before it hits the ball.
The point at which the club hits the ball is the apex of the circle. There are no straight lines in your swing. After you hit the ball, the club continues on an arc around to the left. The club does not swing down the target line.
This was a concept, unfortunately, that Mike was taught, and it killed his swing. They said Lee Trevino kept swinging his club down the target line on his follow-through. Mike got to stand behind Trevino one day and watched him swing and hit balls. He didn’t swing the club down the target line; it went around to the left.
His clubface stayed at a 90-angle angle to his swing arc, but he wasn’t changing his arc.
Whether you fade or draw the ball, you are hitting slightly from the inside, and then the club continues around to the left. Again, it does not go down the target line.