Matt Baker: Stop Sliding, Start Rotating
4m

In this Malaska Golf Player Lesson, Mike Malaska continues working with Certified Coach Matt Baker from England during the annual Certified Coaches Summit in Arizona. Building on concepts introduced earlier in the session, Mike helps Matt replace an old sliding motion with a more athletic rotational movement through impact.

Mike begins by drawing comparisons between golf, baseball, and tennis. He explains that powerful athletes do not continue moving laterally through impact. Instead, they plant, stabilize, and push back against the ground, creating rotation and speed. Whether hitting a baseball, a tennis forehand, or a golf shot, the body must stop drifting and begin rotating.

Using a simple "right, left, boom" drill, Mike helps Matt feel how the lower body should move before the lead side pushes back and creates space through impact. As Matt practices the movement, he immediately begins producing straighter shots and a more powerful release.

One of the most important moments in the lesson comes when Mike addresses the mental side of performance. Although Matt understands the movement and teaches it to his own students, he still struggles to fully trust it in his own swing. Mike explains that many golfers know what they should do but rarely perform the movement to the degree necessary to create lasting change.

As Matt begins exaggerating the motion, he experiences a completely different feeling through impact. The lead hip moves back more aggressively, the body rotates more freely, and the club releases naturally through the ball.

Mike reinforces a key Malaska Golf principle: athletic movement creates efficient golf swings. By using the ground correctly and allowing the body to rotate rather than slide, golfers can generate more speed, improve consistency, and eliminate unnecessary compensations.

As Mike reminds Matt throughout the lesson, the goal is not to manufacture positions but to move like an athlete. Once Matt commits to the movement and trusts the clubface, the ball flight begins taking care of itself.

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