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Fix Your Golf Swing: Choose Your Problem

Every swing issue has a root cause. Select your problem below and I will show you the exact solution.

Most golfers try to fix the swing by adjusting the arms or the club path. If the body is not biomechanically stabilizing the movement, the swing breaks down under pressure. No amount of technical correction will hold if the body is not supplying a stable source of force.

Everything here follows the natural way the human body is designed to move. It is based on physiotherapy principles and proven biomechanics. When the body is aligned, sequenced, and stabilized correctly, the swinging arm connects to its true power source and the motion becomes efficient and repeatable.

Each problem you select leads to specific neuromotor exercises that stabilize the exact weakness causing your issue. These exercises build stability, mobility, and strength so the technique becomes reliable and the swing you want becomes physically achievable.

Your body must stabilize the swing before technique can become consistent.
The swinging arm must connect to a stable source of force from the body.
Neuromotor exercises correct the exact weakness that causes your swing problem.
Stability, mobility, and strength must work together for a powerful and repeatable swing.
Slice Problem
Slice
Ball curves right unintentionally. Caused by face‑path mismatch and rotational timing errors.
Hook
Ball snaps left due to over‑closure and sequencing breakdown in the release pattern.
Early Extension
Hips thrust toward the ball, losing posture and power. A core‑pelvis sync issue.
Over‑the‑Top
Club moves outside‑in from the top. A transition and ground‑force timing problem.
No Power
Weak contact and low speed from poor kinetic loading and incomplete coil.
No Hip Rotation
Lower body stalls, upper body takes over. A rotational sequencing breakdown.
Early Hip Rotation
Hips rotate too early in the backswing, removing coil and reducing torso‑pelvis separation.
Casting
Club releases too early, losing lag and compression. A wrist‑pivot control issue.
Chicken Wing
Lead arm folds through impact, killing rotation and compression.
Reverse Spine
Upper body tilts toward target in backswing. A stability and pivot‑axis error.
Sway
Hips slide laterally instead of rotating. A balance and ground‑anchor issue.
Slide
Lower body moves excessively toward target, losing rotational power.