Posture and Swing Plane
5m

In the fifth video of this Player Lesson, Mike Malaska builds on the foundation of grip and face control from the earlier sessions and introduces two critical concepts: swing plane and posture.

Mike explains how the swing plane is measured by drawing a line from the clubhead through the mid-thoracic spine (T12). Good players keep the clubhead on this plane by waist height, but the athlete’s old grip caused his arm to twist and the club to go inside too quickly. With the new grip, that twisting disappears, and the club tracks straighter on plane naturally.

Another focus is posture. Mike demonstrates how proper balance is measured by drawing a line up from the transverse arch of the foot, ensuring the body weight is evenly distributed. While the athlete’s knee alignment is solid, his hands start too low, creating excess forward angle. By raising the hands slightly at setup, posture becomes more balanced, setting up better consistency through the swing.

The lesson also connects posture and grip adjustments back to ball flight. A slice occurs not because of poor alignments but because the face is open at impact relative to the path. By pivoting correctly and maintaining proper grip alignment, the face returns square, allowing for compression. Mike explains that learning to hit a controlled draw is essential—it’s the shot that shows the ball is compressed, traveling faster and farther than a glancing slice.
This video reinforces the M-System philosophy: fix the root cause (grip and posture), connect your hands to the face, and then build swing plane and compression into your game.

Key Takeaways
Swing Plane Defined: Good players keep the clubhead on plane by waist height; grip alignment drives this.
Grip First: Fixing the grip stops the arm from twisting and naturally keeps the club on plane.
Posture Balance: Weight should be evenly split over the feet; hands slightly higher at address improve alignment.
Face Control at Impact: Even with a good swing plane, an open face causes slices.
Compression Comes from a Draw: Learning to curve the ball left ensures the ball is compressed for speed and distance.
Practice with Purpose: On the range, test which curve you control best and make that your go-to shot.

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