In this Malaska Golf Player Lesson, Mike Malaska works with Kenneth Garcia to improve the foundation of consistent ball striking. Kenneth has been making good swings but experiencing inconsistent contact, sometimes hitting behind the ball and other times striking it thin. Mike begins by addressing the first and most important connection between golfer and club: the grip.
Mike adjusts Kenneth’s lead hand position, placing the club more in the fingers and slightly strengthening the grip. This small change helps Kenneth see more knuckles on his lead hand and gives him better control of the clubface throughout the swing. With a more stable grip, Kenneth immediately hits a more solid shot, showing how setup changes can dramatically improve ball striking.
From there, Mike introduces a key concept in the M-System: the three essential skills of impact. Every golfer must learn to control the clubface, the swing path, and the angle of approach. While golfers often focus on the first two, Mike explains that the angle of approach, where the club bottoms out in the swing arc, is often the most difficult skill to master.
To demonstrate this, Mike shows Kenneth how to practice controlling the low point of the swing. By placing a tee in the ground to represent the back of the ball, Kenneth practices making swings where the club brushes the ground slightly in front of that point. This simple drill helps golfers understand how the swing arc should move forward through impact rather than bottoming out behind the ball.
Mike explains that good players constantly monitor where their club hits the ground. If the club bottoms out behind the ball, the shot will likely be heavy. If it bottoms out too far forward, the player may hit the ball thin. Learning to control the strike location relative to the ball is one of the most important skills in golf.
Through these simple adjustments and practice swings, Kenneth begins to understand how grip, strike setup, and swing arc all work together. By starting with the right grip and learning to control where the club meets the ground, golfers can build the foundation for consistent, powerful ball striking.
This lesson reinforces a core Malaska Golf principle: great golf swings are not about manipulating positions but about understanding how the club moves through the ball.
Key Takeaways
• Grip Controls the Clubface: A stronger lead-hand grip improves face stability.
• Three Skills of Impact: Face, path, and angle of approach determine ball flight.
• Control the Low Point: Solid shots happen when the club bottoms out in front of the ball.
• Practice Without the Ball: Training the swing arc builds better strike awareness.
• Ball-Then-Turf Contact: Good players strike the ball first and the ground after.