
How to Use Your Hips to Generate a More Powerful Golf Swing
- It’s All About Timing. The key to using your hips successfully in the golf swing is finding just the right time to put them to use.
- Creating Separation. One of the important keys to keep in mind is the need to separate your upper body and your lower body during the transition.
- Staying Down. ...
- Finishing Your Turn. ...
- One Final Note. ...
How to properly clear your hips in the golf swing?
Notebook Page Two
- You can see the numbers in grey that represent the amount of pressure on each foot (the number in the middle shows the stance width)
- The “hotter” colors show where the pressure is located on the feet from front to back and side to side
- The grey dot that you see on each foot represents where the CoP is on that particular foot
How to get more hip rotation in golf swing?
What Are The Different Methods for Hip Rotation in the Golf Swing?
- George Ganakas. The first, who promotes getting open and allowing the hips to be a main driver in the swing is George Gankas.
- Jim Venetos. ...
- Shawn Clement. ...
- Mike Malaska. ...
- Mike Bender. ...
- Summary of Hip Rotating and Teaching Methods. ...
What should my hips do during my golf swing?
Role of the Hips During a Golf Swing
- Proper address. In order to hit the ball properly, you need to have the correct starting position. ...
- Initiating the backswing. The first move in golf is your backswing. ...
- Continuing the swing. Turn your hips until you have gone as far as you can go and your weight is on your right side. ...
- Downswing. ...
- Follow-through. ...
How to master the hip bump in the golf swing?
- “Feel your weight push off your right leg.”
- “Feel your weight move to the left side.”
- “Feel like your lower body turns and your hands passively drop behind you.”
- “Feel like you are swinging out to right field.”

How to turn your hips to swing?
Here’s how to properly turn your hips to generate power through the swing. Turn — don't slide — your hips through the ball. Even casual golfers understand that at impact the hips need to be open to the target. (Picture your belt buckle pointing to the left of where you want the ball to land.)
How to get your hips square to the ball?
Don’t just slide — try to get your hips square to the ball by the time your left arm reaches parallel to the ground ( above right). Keep the width in your stance, too. Simply sliding your hips negates needed rotation — you’ll never get where you need to be at impact. Stay “low” and focus on continually turning your hips.
Should hips be open when hitting golf ball?
(Picture your belt buckle pointing to the left of where you want the ball to land.) In reality, your hips shouldn’t just be open but continually rotating to the left until your swing comes to a stop.
The Mirror and Practice
Practicing the swing in front of a mirror or large glass pane is the easiest and simplest method of watching the swing movement. Setup in a golf stance without a club, and swing an imaginary club to the top of the swing. Now let the arms fall into place in front of the right hip while rotating the left hip away towards the intended target.
How much Should the Hips turn on the Backswing?
In a perfect swing, the hips should rotate from the setup position, 45-degrees away from the ball on the backswing. The shoulders ideally turn at 90-degrees to the top of the swing. Now, this is not possible for all golfers due to age, suppleness, or injury.
Sliding the Hips
The most common fault in the swing is to slide the hips away from the ball on the backswing, rather than rotate or turn them. This is a Swing Killer! Sliding them robs the swing of all the power generation, and to hit the ball squarely or solidly from this position, requires exactly the same amount of forward slide to get back to the ball.
Swaying off the Ball
Another common error is to sway away from the ball initially on the backswing, before rotating the hips. Another swing killer for the same reasons as above! Some top players do move off the ball slightly on the backswing, but the many hours spent practicing, allow them to get away with it on the course.
Staying in the Barrel
I have used this analogy of the “barrel” before and it was a tip from Sam Snead, one of the best strikers of a golf ball in his day. Set up to the ball and imagine your friend places a large barrel over your body. The thought process and drill are to turn the lower body within this barrel.
Completing the Hip Turn after Contact
To generate power and control through the ball at impact requires the continuous turning of the hips all the way through to the finish of the swing. This may sound a “no brainer”, but many golfers do not complete the follow-through, and tend to hit at the ball rather than through the ball.
Hips Facing the Target
The swing is completed when the hips and shoulders end up facing the intended target. After impact, the hips continue to rotate until the “belt buckle” faces the target. Without the completion of the hip turn, the swing will lose its rhythm and balance will be affected. Another swing killer!
