Golf Swing Obstacles: 6 Killers of Effortless Power
Why I Stopped Chasing Data
Around five years ago, I began shifting away from hard data and toward softer values in golf instruction.
The impact on my coaching was immediate.
I started realizing that most golfers weren’t struggling because they lacked technical information. They were struggling because they were developing their swings in the wrong order. They chased positions before power, mechanics before movement, and details before function.
The more I studied great players and rebuilt my own understanding of the swing, the more one idea stood out above all others:
Effortless power is the true foundation of a functional golf swing.
This article covers some of the biggest obstacles that prevent golfers from finding that foundation. These aren’t tiny technical details. They are broad concepts that quietly sabotage development and make great golf feel far more difficult than it needs to be.
Obstacle #1: Misunderstanding the Flip
Few concepts in golf are misunderstood more than flipping.
The phrase “I flipped it” is almost always associated with bad golf shots, which has led many golfers to believe that the flip itself is the problem.
I don’t believe that is true.
In reality, the flip is one of the primary power sources in the golf swing. It is the event where the clubhead releases outward and centrifugal force is allowed to express itself.
The issue isn’t the flip.
The issue is when the flip happens.
Poor timing often comes from poor body positions and lack of space. If the body stalls, crowds the hands, or gets trapped, the release arrives too early and creates inconsistent strikes.
The solution isn’t to remove the release.
The solution is to create the conditions that allow it to happen later.
One of my favorite approaches is adopting a more Hogan-inspired setup with additional heel balance and a feeling of keeping the body slightly back through the strike. This creates tremendous space and allows the release to happen naturally.
Obstacle #2: Early Extension
Early extension has become one of golf instruction’s most discussed problems.
My perspective on it is somewhat different.
I believe early extension is often a symptom rather than the disease itself.
Many golfers are trying to deliver a clubface position that doesn’t match their intended release pattern. When the blade becomes excessively shut, golfers often feel forced to push the club through impact.
The body senses that something isn’t working.
Instead of staying organized, it creates room by standing up and moving away from the shot.
In many cases, early extension is simply the body’s attempt to survive a poor power protocol.
For me, the solution has been surprisingly simple. More open clubface conditions combined with old-school release patterns create a body motion that feels freer and less restricted.
The body no longer needs to bail out.
It can remain functional throughout the strike.
Obstacle #3: Undefined Power
Many golfers never truly understand where power comes from.
This is especially common among players who start the game later in life.
Because they possess enough physical strength, they can often manufacture speed through effort. The problem is that manufactured speed is not the same thing as efficient speed.
Effortless power comes from utilizing the swing arc properly.
Young golfers often learn this naturally because older equipment demanded it. The clubs were relatively heavy, forcing players to use leverage, momentum, and sequencing rather than brute force.
When golfers never learn these fundamentals, they often compensate with early chest rotation, tension, over-the-top movement patterns, and a complete lack of downswing arc utilization.
The swing becomes harder.
The speed becomes lower.
The consistency disappears.
Understanding the true source of power is one of the most important educational breakthroughs a golfer can experience.
Obstacle #4: Taking the Hands Out of the Swing
Many golfers have experienced this.
You hit a reasonably solid shot using your normal swing. Then you drop another ball and simply throw the clubhead at it with your hands.
The ball flies farther.
The strike feels easier.
The effort feels lower.
That moment reveals something important.
The hands are an enormous source of power.
Unfortunately, modern instruction often treats them as something that should be controlled rather than developed.
The reality is that great players learned how to use their hands long before they learned how to quiet them.
Having the hands behave as passive hinges attached to a rotating body is a luxury that comes after education.
Not before.
Learn your release style. Understand how the club wants to move. Develop trust in your hands.
Then you can start layering sophisticated body movements on top of that foundation.
From Removing Problems to Building Great Motions
The first stage of development is often about removing bad habits.
This is where drills, corrective exercises, and what I call swing killers become useful. They help eliminate misapplied muscle memory and create a cleaner foundation.
But eventually, simply removing bad things is no longer enough.
Now you need to build great things.
That is where patterns enter the picture.
The patterns I teach are built around softer values, achievable intentions, and athletic movement rather than mechanical perfection.
They help golfers develop motions that are functional, repeatable, and powerful.
Obstacle #5: Chasing Positions Too Early
One of the biggest debates in golf instruction is whether coaching should focus on positions or intentions.
My answer is simple.
Both matter.
But they matter in the right order.
Adding detailed positional thinking to a swing that doesn’t function is a recipe for confusion. Golfers become overwhelmed by mechanics while never addressing the bigger issue.
The bigger issue is usually a lack of effortless power.
Develop speed.
Develop a release.
Develop movement quality.
Then the finer details can become useful.
Position-based coaching becomes incredibly powerful once a golfer already possesses a functional motion.
Until then, it often becomes a distraction.
Obstacle #6: The Impact Black Zone
Impact is the most important moment in golf.
Ironically, it is also one of the hardest moments to directly influence.
For many golfers, impact becomes a black box.
They know it matters, but they don’t know how to improve it.
My approach is to avoid attacking impact directly.
Instead, I focus on inspiring the areas around impact.
I look at what happens during the downswing.
I look at what happens after impact.
By improving those areas, impact often organizes itself naturally.
This develops the incidental strike quality that creates effortless power.
Only after the swing becomes functional does it make sense to directly refine impact conditions.
Final Thoughts
The single biggest breakthrough in my own development was shifting focus away from mechanical perfection and toward fluidity, harmony, and effortless power.
Once speed begins flowing naturally, many of the game’s largest obstacles start disappearing on their own.
The body functions better.
The release improves.
The strike becomes more consistent.
The golf swing starts feeling athletic rather than manufactured.
Add intelligent space creation, a functional release pattern, and a body motion that supports your intentions, and suddenly great golf becomes achievable.
That belief sits at the center of everything I teach.
Not because it looks good on video.
Because it works.
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In the FMM Academy I teach differnt patterns and it’s all about fit – has it’s overview page here.