How Intended Hand Action Shapes Your Swing

One of the biggest challenges in golf instruction is achievability.

A golfer can understand a concept intellectually and still have absolutely no idea how to perform it. They can understand that they need more rotation, more space, or a better sequence, yet when they stand over the golf ball, none of those ideas feel particularly actionable.

That is why I have become increasingly interested in concepts that create movement indirectly.

Ideas that don’t tell the body what to do.

Ideas that allow the body to organize itself.

One of the biggest coin drops in my own teaching is the realization that the club often shapes the motion. If you intend certain forces into the club, the body responds. The motion becomes a reaction to a task rather than an attempt to place body parts into positions.

But there is a second realization that sits right beside it.

Your intended hand action can move the body.

And one of the best examples I have ever found comes from David Duval.

The David Duval Idea

I have always enjoyed David Duval’s golf swing.

During his peak years he was one of the few players who genuinely looked capable of challenging Tiger Woods on a consistent basis. His motion was powerful, athletic, and very distinctive.

One of the things that fascinated me was how Duval described his release.

Rather than talking about positions or body movements, he often described the feeling of throwing the club behind himself through the strike.

At first glance that sounds like a simple release thought.

But when you actually experiment with it, something much more interesting happens.

The body begins responding to the intention.

The Body Organizes Itself

If you genuinely try to throw the club behind yourself, you quickly notice that your body cannot remain passive.

The motion demands a response.

The lead side begins moving out of the way. The body rotates through the strike. Space starts appearing naturally. The arms feel as though they can continue travelling without becoming trapped.

In many ways it becomes difficult to determine which comes first.

Are you rotating because the body knows it should rotate?

Or are you rotating because the intended hand action requires it?

That is where the idea becomes powerful.

The body starts solving problems for you.

Instead of consciously trying to clear your hips or rotate harder, you simply focus on the intended movement of the club and the hands. The motion begins organizing itself around that intention.

Beyond David Duval

What makes this idea valuable is that it extends far beyond Duval’s release pattern.

The same principle can be applied almost anywhere in the golf swing.

If I intend for my hands to finish high above my lead shoulder, my body will begin organizing itself to make that happen.

If I intend for the club to travel low after impact, the body will make different adjustments.

If I intend to sling the club around my body, the motion changes again.

The important point is not the specific movement.

The important point is that intention creates organization.

Many golfers spend years trying to move the body directly when a simpler route might exist.

Instead of forcing rotation, create an intention that requires rotation.

Instead of forcing space, create an intention that requires space.

Instead of forcing motion, create a task that encourages motion.

Why This Matters

One of the reasons I like this concept so much is that it removes complexity.

Golf instruction often assumes that understanding the movement is enough.

In reality, understanding and performing are two very different things.

A golfer might fully understand what good rotation looks like while having no practical way of producing it.

That is where intended hand action becomes useful.

It gives the golfer something achievable.

Something they can actually do.

And when the task is simple enough, the body frequently finds a solution on its own.

That doesn’t mean positions are irrelevant.

It simply means that positions may be the result of intentions rather than the starting point.

A Simple Experiment

If this idea is new to you, I would encourage you to experiment with it.

Take Duval’s concept and try it for yourself.

Make a few swings with the intention of throwing the club behind you.

Do not worry about whether the feeling is technically correct.

Simply observe what happens.

Then try a different intention.

Feel as though your hands finish high above your lead shoulder.

Or feel as though the club stays low through the strike.

Notice how the body responds.

Notice how different intentions create different motions.

The goal is not to discover a perfect swing thought.

The goal is to understand the relationship between intention and movement.

Final Thoughts

One of the most beautiful aspects of golf is that the body often knows more than we give it credit for.

When we become obsessed with positions, we can accidentally interfere with natural athletic behavior. We try to control movements that might have emerged automatically if we had simply given ourselves a meaningful task.

That is why this idea has become one of the major coin drops in my own swing development.

The club shapes the motion.

The intended hand action shapes the body.

And sometimes the fastest path to a better golf swing is not telling the body what to do at all.

It is giving the hands a job and allowing the body to find a way to accomplish it.

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In the FMM Academy I teach differnt patterns and it’s all about fit – has it’s overview page here.