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Asked On The MyGolfSpy Forum: What’s The Best Swing Tip You’ve Ever Gotten?

Asked On The MyGolfSpy Forum: What’s The Best Swing Tip You’ve Ever Gotten?

Every golfer has that one piece of advice that sticks. It might not come from a famous coach or a big-name YouTube star. It may have been something you learned from watching golf or that your grandfather told you when you were a kid.

When I posed the question on the MyGolfSpy Forum, I admitted that one of the most helpful tips for me was learning to load my weight on the inside of the trail foot during the backswing. For years, I never gave much thought to the difference between the inside and outside of my foot but once I adjusted, my balance and ball-striking completely changed.

The Forum’s advice was once again too good not to share. I organized it into a few categories so you’ll have no problem finding a great tip to take with you.

1. Visualization and mental cues

One of the recurring themes was the power of visualization. Golfers shared tips about shifting your mindset, such as swinging through the ball instead of hitting at it or picking an intermediate target to guide the swing path.

Visualization removes tension and clutter, making it possible to move past mechanics. Instead of forcing positions, you give your brain a clear picture of what you want the swing to feel like.

Forum Favorite Tip: Visualize swinging through an intermediate target. Like threading the ball through the uprights of football goalposts. It’s a simple way to encourage a complete swing and better direction control.

2. Practice with obstacles

Another category that stood out was the idea of “put something in the way and try not to hit it.” I’ve always found this to work for my game. With physical barriers in place, it’s much easier to get the swing on plane or improve the path.

Whether it’s an extra ball, an angled alignment stick or even a bucket on the range, these drills force you to move the club correctly. The real key here is that feedback is immediate. If you hit the obstacle, you’ll know it and you’ll stop.

Forum Favorite Tip: Place a ball 12 inches ahead of your shot ball and try to knock it forward. This prevents flipping or scooping and helps engrain proper forward shaft lean through impact.

3. Balance and tempo

When the swing gets out of sync, balance and tempo can be the culprits. A couple of Forum members shared how swinging with their feet together helped them reset. Good balance is the foundation of consistency. Narrow-stance swings and practicing with your feet completely together force you to stay grounded.

Forum Favorite Tip: Take practice swings with your feet together when balance or tempo starts to feel off. It’s a simple reset drill that quickly restores rhythm to your swing. (Incorporate it into your warm-up routine to set the tempo for the day.)

4. Contact and impact

Several members pointed out that distance and consistency don’t come from swinging harder. Hitting the center of the face is important and most amateurs don’t do a great job of it. Pure strikes maximize distance, spin and accuracy. A centered hit with 90 percent speed usually goes farther than a mishit at 110 percent.

Forum Favorite Tip: Start your driver practice with your feet together and make slow, sweeping swings focused only on center contact. Once you can find the middle, gradually widen your stance and add speed without sacrificing strike quality.

5. Swing philosophy

Finally, some of the best advice wasn’t about drills or mechanics at all. It was about mindset. Golf is a target sport. The more you think about mechanics mid-round, the more you interfere with your natural motion. Playing the shot instead of the swing keeps you athletic and frees up your mind.

I’ve found this to be the most effective golf tip for me when playing competitive golf. If you prepare and then arrive at the course, trying to control the ball instead of swinging at it, the result is rarely a positive one. Use the course for playing and the range to work on your game.

Forum Favorite Tip: Stop playing “golf swing” and start playing golf. Don’t overanalyze positions on the course, just pick a target, make your swing, and move on.

Final thoughts

What stood out most from the Forum responses is that the best swing tip doesn’t have to be complicated. For one player, it might be a visualization trick, for another, it’s a setup checkpoint, and for someone else, it’s simply learning to stay balanced. However, most of the tips were simple and if you can build your next practice session or round around one simple swing tip, it may do your game some good.

The post Asked On The MyGolfSpy Forum: What’s The Best Swing Tip You’ve Ever Gotten? appeared first on MyGolfSpy.

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