(Master Face Control with One-Handed Swings)
This is where your range routine should begin—every time. Day 10 focuses on face control and how your hands influence the clubface from takeaway to impact. Mike Malaska teaches a simple but powerful one-handed drill that he’s used since childhood to develop feel, precision, and trajectory control. The concept is simple: train one hand at a time to control the clubface—and you’ll start every practice session with purpose.
In this video, Mike shows how hitting short pitches with your trail hand only teaches the club to work correctly through impact. Then he switches to lead hand only to develop strength and face awareness. You’ll learn how the hands influence the club’s path, face angle, and shot height—all without flipping or twisting. Mike explains how small changes in hand position affect trajectory and control, helping you train touch and accuracy from the very first swing of your day.
This is not just a warm-up—it’s the foundation for everything else that follows.
What You’ll Learn About Face Control and Hand Training:
How to train the clubface to stay square through impact
Why starting your session with one-handed swings improves consistency
How to control trajectory based on wrist and knuckle position
How lead and trail hands work differently through the swing
Why this drill is the first thing Mike does—every day
Mike emphasizes that this isn’t just a drill—it’s your daily checkpoint. These short swings train your hands to square the face, control height, and develop feel. Whether you’re warming up or rebuilding your motion, start with this drill.
Key Takeaway:
Train your hands before you train your swing. Start every practice session with short one-handed shots to teach your hands how to control the clubface. Better face control equals better golf, simple as that.