How to set your spine angle

Golf Monthly Top 25 coach Paul Foston has some tips to help you set and maintain the correct spine angle throughout the swing.

how to set your spine angle

Golf Monthly Top 25 coach Paul Foston asks how to set your spine angle and has some tips to help you set and maintain it throughout the swing.

How to set your spine angle

Posture is one of those factors that is crucial to get right, but is also incredibly easy to let slip. Lots of my students have office jobs, as I expect many of you reading this do, and sitting all day at a desk and on the phone causes you to hunch over.

The effects of this can been seen as soon as you address a golf ball. Your spine is curved and not straight as it should be.

It’s a slightly lazy, undynamic position that will have numerous detrimental effects on the swing, from its path and your body rotation to the quality of the strike itself.

So, to help you avoid this, run through this simple three-step routine,. Start by standing at ease with your back straight and your arms hanging straight down by your side. Now bend from the waist, and flex your knees just a little.

This is what a good, athletic posture looks like. You should feel in a dynamic position with your core muscles engaged and ready for a powerful golf swing

How close?

Even if you regularly set a good posture at address, there’s another trap you should avoid falling into when you address the golf ball.

Make sure that you’re standing the right distance from the ball – the butt end of the club should be a hand’s width from the top of your thigh.

Closer or further than this and you’ll need to make unnecessary compensations in your downswing to find a good strike.

Core strength

As I’ve already mentioned, at address you should feel your core muscles are engaged – most notably your thighs and stomach muscles.

This is an athletic position from which to make a dynamic swing. If you find it hard to maintain your spine angle during the swing, you may need to find some simple exercises to build the strength of these core muscles.

Early extension

One of the most common faults I see is, what I call, early extension. You set a good posture at address and successfully maintain it to the top of the backswing, during the transition.

But just as you start down, your midriff extends out towards the ball instead of rotating through the shot.

Read more top golf swing tips

This alters your spine angle just at the critical moment of impact. As you can see here, the alignment stick runs through the seat of my trousers at address, at the top of my backswing and at impact – my left side is in line with the stick at the finish. Maintaining your spine angle is crucial – use this drill to help you check it.

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.