Day 4-The Three Grips in Golf
5m

If your grip is wrong, your swing will always be limited—no matter how much you practice. That’s why Day 4 of this series is dedicated to one thing: understanding and mastering the three essential golf grips. Mike Malaska explains how each grip serves a different purpose depending on the shot you’re hitting, and how your hands need to adjust between putting, pitching, and full swing.
You will learn why the putting grip sits deep in the palms to reduce motion, why the pitching grip allows for precise control of your wrist angles, and why the full swing grip belongs in your fingers to allow proper wrist hinge and maximum speed. Mike breaks down each one, shows how to find the correct position for your hands and fingers, and explains how grip influences wrist action, clubface control, and power.
This lesson is not about theory. It is about feel. You will learn how to spot the differences between the three grips and train the sensitivity needed to switch between them confidently. Mike also shares a powerful reminder—even tour players like Scottie Scheffler check their grip daily to maintain consistency.

What You’ll Learn About the Three Grips:
How putting, pitching, and full swing grips differ in hand position and purpose
Why the full swing grip belongs in your fingers for leverage and speed
Why putting and pitching grips sit higher in the palm for stability and control
How your grip directly affects your wrist function and angle of approach
Why daily grip work is essential—even if you think your grip is fine

Mike emphasizes that the grip is not something you check once and forget. It is something you build feel for and revisit constantly. A small change in your thumb or hand placement can have a big effect on your contact, trajectory, and distance. This is not just a setup detail—it is a swing fundamental.

Key Takeaway:
Your grip controls your swing. Train all three—putting, pitching, and full swing—and know why each one matters. The way your hands connect to the club determines what your body can do with it.

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