Very few golf shots are hit from a perfectly flat lie. On the course, you are constantly facing subtle slopes—sidehill, uphill, downhill—and if you don’t adjust your setup, your contact will suffer. In Day 7, Mike Malaska explains exactly how to make clean, consistent contact from any lie by adjusting your posture and upper body to match the slope beneath your feet.
You will learn why setup and ball position must change based on how the ground affects your body’s angle. Mike shows how to handle sidehill lies (ball above or below your feet), uphill lies, and downhill lies. In each case, your job is to tilt and adjust your body so that your spine angle matches the slope, which keeps your swing arc and club path connected to the ball.
You will also learn how each lie affects ball flight and clubface angle. Ball above your feet? It tends to go left. Ball below? It tends to fade. Downhill reduces loft. Uphill adds it. Mike emphasizes the importance of taking practice swings to find where your club naturally bottoms out—then adjusting your ball position accordingly.
What You’ll Learn About Uneven Lies:
Why your upper body must match the slope of the ground
How ball position, posture, and knee flex change lie to lie
How each slope affects clubface angle and ball flight
Why you should take practice swings to check contact point
How to build comfort with uneven lies using wedges around the green
This is not something you fix mid-swing. You must prepare for it during setup. Mike recommends spending an entire day just practicing uneven lies with wedges and short shots. The more you do it, the more natural it becomes—so when you get on the course, you adjust instinctively.
Key Takeaway:
The ground will always change. Your setup has to change with it. Match your body to the slope, adjust your expectations, and take practice swings to find the right contact point.