A Malaska Golf Member has a question about the Malaska Move.
Mike says the funny thing is that he had nothing to do with it. It was a move that Joe Nichols taught Mike, and several other coaches talked about it.
Mike shows the Malaska Move, where you start down on your swing, and the club works back out in front of you rather than going out in front of your body.
The Member’s question is if he does the Malaska Move, will it make his hands tip over the top and go over in the follow-through? Mike explains that won’t necessarily happen. When the club is on the downswing, when you change directions, the handle comes down, and the club will go out.
The momentum of the club will be in the right arc as you turn into the ball. You don’t have to catch it up.
A lot of the twisting of the clubface happens because the club is too back and out. Mike demonstrates this. You have to either twist your body hard or catch the club up with your hands.
If you do the Malaska Move, where the arms and handle come down, with the club going out, you can just turn on the ball, and the clubface will run into the ball. There is no twisting of your forearms because the momentum of the club is out in front of you, and everything stays together as you hit the ball.
It is all about directing momentum. It feels one way. It does something different.