In this sixth episode of the Malaska Golf Player Lesson, Mike Malaska guides Jeff Coburn and Jeff Krull through a practical on-course session focused on approach and pitch shots—one of the most critical areas for lowering scores.
Mike begins by explaining how to evaluate each lie and determine where the club’s low point should be. Many golfers hit behind the ball because their natural swing bottom is in the wrong place. The fix, he explains, isn’t mechanical—it’s positional. Before every shot, make practice swings and watch where the club brushes the turf. If it happens behind the ball, move your setup slightly forward until the club consistently contacts the ground after impact.
This awareness forms the basis of controlling ball-first contact and creating consistent spin and trajectory. Mike emphasizes that golfers need to pay attention to their feedback, not ignore it. If you take a divot before the ball, you have immediate information about your setup and motion. Learn from it, make one correction, and swing again.
Throughout the session, Mike reinforces that golf is a game of adjustments. Every shot gives you feedback—how the club interacts with the turf, where contact occurs, and what the ball does afterward. Great players use that feedback to adapt. He explains that the “yips” occur when golfers ignore what their swing is naturally doing and try to override it consciously. Instead, players should learn to “duplicate the circle”—find the bottom of the swing and let the ball get in the way.
Both Jeffs practice this process, making subtle changes to ball position and release while observing turf interaction. Mike shows how this simple awareness builds a repeatable short game without technical overload. Golfers don’t need to chase new mechanics—they need to learn how their motion produces results and make real-time corrections based on feedback.
By the end of the lesson, the players are striking cleaner approach shots and learning to trust the process of awareness and adaptation. Mike’s philosophy is clear: you don’t fix your swing—you learn it, adjust it, and make it work under pressure.
Key Takeaways
Ball-First Contact: Focus on hitting the ground after the ball for cleaner impact.
Low-Point Awareness: Watch where your club brushes the turf to improve consistency.
Adjust, Don’t Overthink: Make small setup changes based on feedback.
Duplicate the Circle: Recreate your natural swing path and let the ball get in the way.
Golf Is a Learning Process: Treat every shot as feedback to improve awareness.