Golf posture fundamentals video

Keith Wood has some tips to help you improve your golf posture fundamentals and strike the ball consistently more solid

posture basics

Keith Wood has some tips to help you improve your golf posture fundamentals and strike the ball consistently more solid

Golf posture fundamentals video

People talk about posture as a basic but it’s not, it’s a fundamental that lies at the very heart of the golf swing.

The angle of your spine at address will dictate your swing plane, it will place your arms and hands in a position where they can function properly and it will determine how effectively you can rotate.

So it is impossible to over-emphasise the importance of setting and maintaining good posture in the golf swing.

 

Feel the strain

The perfect address position should NOT be comfortable. Most of us, whether we are gym-goers or not, can understand that doing 10 proper press-ups offers a much better workout than doing 100 cheating press-ups.

This is exactly how you need to view your address position. If you get the right posture, you’ll engage certain muscles that a poor posture will not.

Your abs, glutes, thighs and calves will all be engaged at address and as such they take on a certain amount of strain.

A good address position is one that will be uncomfortable to hold. But that doesn’t mean it’s wrong. Of course, we all have a tendency to gravitate to wards doing what is comfortable (think about how you are sitting right now) but you need to resist that temptation.

 

Finding your posture

A great way to find the ideal posture is to stand perfectly upright and then, bending at the hips and keeping your back straight, tilt your upper body over the ball.

At the point at which you begin to lose your balance, flex your knees a little. This represents good posture with the right amount of knee flex. Notice how many of your muscles are engaged – this is you in an athletic, dynamic position.

Read Keith's address fundamentals

Posture faults

By far the most common posture-related fault is that players don’t stick the bottom of their spine (or bum) far enough out.

Players, because it is comfortable, will often tuck their pelvis under and create too much knee flex – it’s a sitting action.

This causes the spine to be too upright at address and the weight to fall onto the heels. The knock-on effect during the swing is that the plane gets too flat and often the body turn will lack power.

Read more top golf swing tips

Posture & Ball Striking

Once you have set your posture, the idea is to maintain it during the swing. Setting and then maintaining that spine angle is something that every good player has in common, regardless of his body shape.

So as you rotate your upper body, reaching the top of the backswing and then you drive through the downswing and into the ball, aim to keep your back at the same angle throughout.

If your height changes during the swing so will your swing arc, making fat and thin shots far more likely. So think of your spine angle at address as the constant fulcrum around which your body rotates during the golf swing.

Thomas Patrick Clarke
Sports Digital Editor


Tom Clarke joined Golf Monthly as a sub editor in 2009 being promoted to content editor in 2012 and then senior content editor in 2014, before becoming Sports Digital Editor for the Sport Vertical within Future in 2022. Tom currently looks after all the digital products that Golf Monthly produce including Strategy and Content Planning for the website and social media - Tom also assists the Cycling, Football, Rugby and Marine titles at Future. Tom plays off 16 and lists Augusta National (name drop), Old Head and Le Touessrok as the favourite courses he has played. Tom is an avid viewer of all golf content with a particularly in depth knowledge of the pro tour.