Day 19-Swing on an Elevated Plane
4m

(Let Gravity, Momentum, and Force Drop the Club Into the Ball)
If you want to hit solid shots without forcing the club down, you need to rethink your swing plane. In Day 19, Mike Malaska challenges one of golf’s most misleading instructions: “hit down on the ball.” Instead, you’ll learn that it’s momentum, gravity, and centripetal force—not effort—that deliver the club to the ball. When your wrists are relaxed and your swing motion is fluid, the club drops into perfect contact without you having to force it.
Mike introduces the idea of swinging on an “elevated plane,” where the feel is that your club moves level to the ground—but because of the forces in play, it naturally descends into the ball. This lesson ties back to your L-to-L training and teaches you how to blend smooth shoulder rotation with wrist freedom for effortless impact. You’ll also see how tour players use this elevated motion to stay loose, athletic, and consistent.

What You’ll Learn About Swinging on an Elevated Plane:
• Why “hitting down” is a harmful swing thought
• How relaxed wrists allow the club to drop into the ball naturally
• Why the swing should feel level, not steep—especially with irons
• How L-to-L motion and shoulder rotation work together to maintain flow
• The difference between position-based thinking and feel-based motion
This drill is perfect for creating a free, connected swing. Forget tension. Forget holding angles. Once you understand how elevated motion creates compression, you’ll start striking the ball with less effort—and more confidence.

Key Takeaway:
Don’t force the club down. Let it fall. When your wrists are relaxed and your swing flows on an elevated plane, momentum does the work—and solid contact becomes automatic.