The Range Session That Made Everything Worse
I spent an entire afternoon trying to copy a tour pro’s swing I saw online.
Paused the video. Rewatched it. Tried to match the takeaway, the position at the top, the way the club dropped in transition. I was convinced if I could just get those positions right, everything would click.
By the end of the session, I was hitting it worse than I had in months.
Not a little worse. Completely lost.
That was the moment I started questioning the whole idea.
You’re Copying a Snapshot, Not a Swing
What you see in slow-motion videos are positions.
Not the actual movement that creates them.
That’s the trap.
You see a perfect position at the top of the backswing and think, “If I can just get there, I’ll be fine.” But that position is the result of a specific motion, timing, flexibility, and sequence that you don’t see.
You’re copying the end product without understanding how it was created.
It’s like trying to copy a finished painting by staring at it long enough.
Your Body Isn’t Built Like Theirs
This one is uncomfortable but true.
Tour players have different levels of flexibility, strength, balance, and coordination. Their swings are built around what their bodies can do consistently under pressure.
Yours isn’t.
Trying to force your body into positions it can’t naturally reach or control leads to compensation. You might get there once or twice, but it won’t hold up.
And when it doesn’t, your timing falls apart.
I Tried to “Fix” My Backswing for Months
I got obsessed with having a “perfect” backswing.
Thought that was the key.
I shortened it, lengthened it, tried to get the club more on plane, less on plane. I was chasing this idea that if it looked right, it would work.
What surprised me was how little it mattered compared to what happened on the way down.
My contact didn’t improve. My ball flight didn’t stabilize. I just became more mechanical and less athletic.
That was frustrating.
You’re Ignoring What Actually Matters
Here’s the opinion I’ll defend all day.
Most golfers should care less about how their swing looks and more about what the club is doing at impact.
Face angle. Path. Low point. Contact.
Those things decide where the ball goes.
Not whether your backswing looks like a tour pro’s.
You can have a swing that looks unconventional and still play great golf if you control those impact conditions.
Plenty of good players do.
Timing Is Doing More Work Than You Think
When you copy a pro’s swing, you’re also copying their timing — or trying to.
That’s the problem.
Their timing is built from thousands of repetitions, their physical abilities, and how they sequence their movement.
When you try to force their positions, your timing changes. Now you’re trying to match something your body doesn’t naturally produce.
That’s when you get those swings that feel completely out of sync.
One shot feels okay, the next feels awful, and you have no idea why.
You Don’t Need Perfect Positions
This is something I wish someone told me earlier.
There isn’t one perfect way to swing a golf club.
There are patterns that work, sure. But within those patterns, there’s a lot of variation.
You don’t need your club to be in the exact same spot as a tour pro at every checkpoint.
You need something repeatable.
Something you can rely on when the pressure’s on, or when your timing isn’t perfect.
Because your timing won’t always be perfect.
The Range vs The Course Problem
Here’s where copying swings really falls apart.
On the range, with no pressure, you can sometimes get close to those positions. You can slow things down, think about every movement, try to make it look right.
Then you get on the course.
One ball. Real consequences.
Suddenly you don’t have time to think about five different swing positions. Your body reverts to what it actually knows, not what you practiced for an hour.
That’s why it feels like your swing “disappears.”
It didn’t disappear. It was never fully yours to begin with.
What You Should Be Doing Instead
Focus on ball flight first.
What is the ball doing? Starting left, right, curving, flying too low, too high?
That tells you what the club is doing at impact.
Then make small adjustments based on that.
If the ball starts right, your face is likely open. If it curves too much, your face and path relationship is off.
You don’t need to fix ten things. You need to influence the outcome.
That’s a much more direct way to improve.
I’m Still Not Sure About “Feels”
There’s a lot of talk about swing “feels.”
Do this, feel that, imagine this movement.
Sometimes it helps. Sometimes it confuses things even more.
I’m not fully convinced there’s a universal set of feels that works for everyone. What clicks for one person might do nothing for another.
So I treat feels as temporary tools, not permanent solutions.
Use them if they help. Drop them if they don’t.
The Swing You Trust Beats the Swing That Looks Good
I’ve seen players with technically beautiful swings struggle to score.
I’ve also seen players with unconventional swings play consistently solid golf.
The difference isn’t aesthetics. It’s trust.
If you trust your swing, you commit to it. If you’re constantly trying to adjust it to match something you saw online, that trust never builds.
You’re always in between versions of your swing.
And that’s a tough place to play from.
You’re Chasing the Wrong Goal
Copying a tour pro’s swing feels productive.
It looks like improvement. It gives you something concrete to work toward.
But it’s not the goal.
The goal is to hit the ball where you want, more often.
And that doesn’t require your swing to look like anyone else’s.
It requires you to understand your own tendencies, build something repeatable, and stop chasing positions that don’t belong to you.
That took me way longer to figure out than it should have.
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