How to Warm up for Golf
7m

In this opening episode of the Malaska Golf Player Lesson, Mike Malaska welcomes Jeff Coburn and Jeff Krull to a true on-course learning experience. When the players arrive to find the range closed, Mike shows how to warm up for golf without hitting a single ball.


He introduces a fast, functional golf warm-up routine that prepares the body for the motion of the swing. Starting with hand and forearm activation drills, followed by shoulder circles, elbow mobility work, and controlled hip and back stretches, the routine targets every muscle group used in the golf swing. Each movement is simple, takes seconds to perform, and helps prevent stiffness or injury before the first tee shot.


Mike explains how golfers often skip physical preparation and rush to the range, which causes tension and inconsistency. Instead, a short pre-round stretching routine ensures freedom of motion and improves tempo from the very first hole. Tight shoulders change swing shape; stiff hips block rotation. Being loose isn’t about flexibility—it’s about feeling the same every day so your swing stays consistent.


As both Jeffs follow along, Mike connects every movement to the M-System fundamentals of posture, rotation, and balance. He emphasizes that golf performance begins with the body’s readiness, not swing thoughts. If you only have ten minutes before a round, spend it stretching, rolling putts, and chipping instead of rushing through range balls. You’ll start the round confident, coordinated, and ready to swing naturally.


This first lesson lays the foundation for the entire series. Mike’s approach shows that great golf starts with body awareness and that preparation equals performance. By getting physically ready and mentally calm before teeing off, golfers create the consistency and rhythm that carry through every shot that follows.


Key Takeaways:
Warm Up Before You Hit: Five minutes of movement is worth a bucket of balls.
Consistency Starts in the Body: The same level of looseness creates repeatable swings.
Freedom of Motion First: Tight shoulders and hips change your swing path.
Connect to the M-System: Preparation sets up better posture, rotation, and balance.
Preparation = Performance: Physical readiness builds confidence and control.