In the fourth video of this Player Lesson, Mike Malaska and Certified Coach Julie Yang expand on the grip adjustments made in Part 3 and move into one of the most important skills in golf: face control. With the grip now aligned properly, the athlete begins learning how to use his hands to control the clubface and curve the ball intentionally.
Mike demonstrates how the palm, thumb, and fingers connect to the shaft to stabilize and accelerate the club through impact. Using simple checkpoints, the athlete learns how different hand positions change ball flight—low, high, left, or right. Just as in lacrosse, where a player twists the net at the last second to curve a pass or shot, golf relies on precise face control to shape shots.
To reinforce the concept, Mike sets up drills where the athlete must curve the ball left, curve it right, hit it high, and hit it low. The goal isn’t distance—it’s learning how subtle changes in the face affect ball flight. Mike explains that the best players in the world can adjust the face by just one degree, and that level of precision separates elite golfers from average ones.
Julie adds another key lesson: when making swing changes, it’s smart to tee the ball up rather than fight poor lies on the ground. Practicing from a tee gives players margin for error, builds confidence, and allows them to focus fully on path and face control before layering in the skill of compressing the ball off the turf.
This session emphasizes the M-System philosophy: master your grip, connect your hands to the face, and build a foundation of control. Once you can consistently start the ball left or right and bring it back on command, every other part of the game becomes easier.
Key Takeaways
• Face Control Is Everything: Whoever controls the clubface best controls the game.
• Grip Creates Control: Proper grip alignment allows the wrists to hinge naturally, without twisting.
• Ball Flight Awareness: Players must learn to intentionally hit the ball low, high, left, and right.
• Small Changes, Big Impact: Just one degree of face difference can send a ball 20+ yards offline.
• Practice Smart: Tee the ball up when learning changes—it reduces variables and builds confidence.
• Sports Connect Lesson: Just like curving a lacrosse pass, golf requires precise face adjustments to shape shots.