Mechanical vs Athletic Drilling — When the Centipede Fell Down
When the Centipede Fell Down
“A centipede was happy quite,
Until someone asked which leg goes after which…”
The moment it started thinking about mechanics, it fell into a ditch.
That’s what happens to many golf swings.
The more we consciously control every moving part, the more the motion collapses.
The Problem with Mechanical Drilling
Mechanical drilling has its place.
But only when the power protocol is already understood.
Only when the engine is functioning.
Most golfers don’t have that.
So they drill positions.
They rehearse checkpoints.
They try to consciously move body parts.
And the result?
Tension.
Fragmentation.
Loss of athletic flow.
Mechanical thoughts often create more control — not better motion.
Athletic Drilling Is Different
Athletic drills teach you how to respond to the club.
They don’t tell your body what to do.
They let the club organize the body.
That’s a completely different learning pathway.
Instead of controlling the motion, you allow it.
Drill 1 — Walk to the Target
Hit the ball and simply walk toward the target.
Mechanically, this does several things:
• It gets you out of your forward bends
• It forces dynamic weight shift toward the target
• It teaches when centrifugal force should release
But the important part isn’t the checklist.
It’s the feel.
You can’t walk to the target if you’re stuck.
You can’t walk if the release is mistimed.
The drill exposes your motion instantly.
Drill 2 — One-Handed Hitting
Most golfers have destroyed their power structure to the point where they can’t feel the clubhead.
One-handed hitting restores that.
With the trail hand, you’re forced to release grip pressure and deal with your control habits.
If you over-manipulate, you won’t hit the ball.
If you open the chest too aggressively, you won’t hit the ball.
It strips the motion down to raw power application.
With the lead hand, the body moves reactively to the follow-through intention.
No forced body mechanics.
Just synchronized behavior.
Drill 3 — Hitting from the Knees
This one is brutally honest.
From the knees, you can’t fake power.
You can’t rely on lower body thrust.
You can’t compensate.
If the club isn’t working, nothing works.
It teaches you what “make the club work” actually means in its purest form.
Not perfect shots.
Pure behavior.
The Real Difference
Mechanical drilling tries to build movement from the outside.
Athletic drilling builds movement from the inside.
It connects directly to the inner layers of the swing.
When the club works, the body organizes itself.
When the club is controlled, the body tightens.
The Point
The centipede fell because it started analyzing its legs.
Your swing falls when you overanalyze mechanics without understanding power.
Athletic drills reconnect you to what actually drives the motion.
We are far more athletic than we think.
The key is allowing it.
Check out the Forgotten Master Moves homepage here.
In the FMM Academy I teach differnt patterns and it’s all about fit – has it’s overview page here.