– There's one really easy
way to swing a golf club. And simply put this, everybody that swings really effortlessly has
a very repeatable swing they're gonna shallow that
club out from the inside. Where the inconsistency comes from is if I get a little steep on the down swing all of a sudden, what I mean by steep is when my hands are about shoulder height or chest height on the down swing, if I drew a line down this club shaft, if it hit inside the golf ball that would be a steep swing.

If I get it at the golf ball or even a little bit outside the golf ball that would be shallow, what
people call in the slot, all these great terms that you hear, those are from shallowing
out this golf club from the inside. And that's what you see
virtually every single pro do. Now, there's a great, easy way to learn this that's intuitive. Imagine I had both of my hands, I just made a golf grip here, and I was gonna hit somebody with my elbows. That's kind of a weird feeling, but I'll walk you through it. So, I wanna get my elbows, my right elbow is tucked, my left elbow
is out toward that person, imagine I was gonna hit them
with my elbows this way.

That would get the club way inside. There's a great way you can feel this. Go ahead and choke up on your grip to where your hands are actually on the club shaft here and
the grip's stickin' out. Now if I did this same motion, I got this grip sticking out and I hit somebody with my elbows, it'd be like kinda I'm hittin' 'em in the belly button here
with this grip of the club, the butt end of the club. So as I get into that
position I could really just put that into 'em
and all I'd have to do is rotate my body to make that happen. I wouldn't be doin' some kinda weird manipulation with the hands and arms or I'm tryin' to do somethin'
funky with the club. I'm just gettin' my
elbows toward that person and I'm rotating my body. And you can see here if
that was a golf swing that would be very
shallow from the inside. And the great thing about this is when I get that far
shallow, when I get that far inside, now I can open up
as hard as I want to and I don't have to worry about
comin' over the top.

I don't have to worry
about bein' steep, right. So once my elbows get here and the club gets in, I can forget about this steep shaft and worrying about goin' this way. So, that's piece number one. Now this is gonna get you to swing well out to the right. But, we may hit a few
blocks when we do this. We're gonna go hard. We're gonna go a long way, but that may end up just going out to the right. Let me give you an example of what that would look like if I did that in a full swing. So this one's gonna, I'm gonna hit the heck outta this thing, but it might go a little bit too far to the right.

There you go. And again, that was killed,
straight as a string, good as I can hit one,
319 total, 173 ball speed. Look at the spin. This is the one thing I love about this. 1800 rpms of spin is fantastic. That's really, really low. That's gonna get that ball
to knuckle through the air and just go a really long way. That's from being
shallow also, because now I'm hitting it more on
a level angle of attack or even up into it. You don't even have to think about that. That just comes naturally. But that's the first step. That ball may be going out to the right a little bit too much. Now the second step is
to get the club head to release the proper way. Now when I come through, let's go ahead and get in this, you know, I'm gonna jab somebody in the belly button with this butt end of the club. That's my lag position here. That's kinda half way in the down swing. The second piece is gonna be what I call parallel in the follow through. So, as I swing through here, when my club shaft is
parallel to the ground, I want it to do two things.

Number one, I want the club face to be past vertical. So, this would be my club
face straight up and down. You can see the top edge of the club is straight up and down. If I'm straight up and
down that's gonna be a fairly straight shot. If I'm anywhere to the
right of that, that's gonna be a fade. I wanna go ahead and draw this ball, so I'm gonna close it quite a bit. Let's overdo it to start. I get in this elbows in front position and then from there I release this club, let's say 45 degrees to close. That's gonna be the first piece. Now as I'm doing that,
notice how that club, the shaft is pointing out to the right.

I don't wanna do this
as I'm coming through and have the shaft to the left. I wanna release that out to the right with a closed club face. That's the first piece. The second piece is, I want my right elbow when I do that to be lower than my left elbow, so I don't want to roll my body and do this and try to kinda stand up outta my posture to roll that club, and now all of a sudden my right elbow is higher
than my left elbow as I'm comin' through. So that would be this,
and then I kinda lose it and I stand up outta my posture.

I don't wanna do that. I wanna go ahead and release this club, keeping my right arm under my left arm. It feels a little bit unnatural when people do this at first until they see how far
they hit those draws. This is a very powerful position, then you just release it on out there and that ball's gonna
draw every single time. So, let's go ahead and give it a whirl. I'm gonna go ahead and try to get that good release we just went over with that lag shallow position we went over in the
beginning of the video.

We're gonna pair both of these up. There we go, hit that one great. And I even overdid it there a little bit, talking about releasing that face a little too much and got
a big draw, totally fine. That's exactly what I
want you to do at first. Then, once you get those draws going, just back up off of it a little bit. Instead of closing the
face say 30, 45 degrees, we get it more toward that vertical straight shot like I
was talkin' about there. Now, there's a right way
and a wrong way to do this. A lotta people try to do this by rolling their forearms
over each other this way.

That would mess everything up. You see, if I got in that position and I rolled my forearms, all of a sudden my right arm is well above my left. I have to do something different with my wrists to be able to solve that. So, what the pros are doing is they're moving their
wrists in a certain way that allows them to square that face up and roll it without having to get that right arm over it. So, we talked about the elbows. What makes it even easier than that is understand what the pros are doing with their wrist angles
to make that happen. It's what I call the anti-roll method. And I'm gonna teach it to you. It's a really cool technique. I can't wait to show it to you. I'm gonna play a preview
of the anti-roll method video here in just one second. All you need to do is go ahead and click on one of the cards that
pops up on your screen. If you don't see one of those cards just go down to the link
in the description below, click the link there, you'll get instant access to that video.

I can't wait to share it with you. Hope you hit the best drives of your life. Let's go ahead and get started. So, here's the bottom line. If you've been taught to roll the club in the early down swing, that causes the staff to get steep,
and that steep club causes all your problems, causes you to hit it way behind the big hitters and way inconsistent with your quality of strikes. You're in the tall grass and the trees and the hazards all day long. Now, the great news is this. There's really only two pieces that you need to know to
fix all these problems. The first one is we need to learn the proper way to square up the club face. Instead of rolling the
forearms and getting steep there's another way that the pros do this. Once you learn this right way to square up the club face, then you can shallow out from the inside and everything starts to fit together.

Now, I'm gonna teach you this right now and what I call the anti-roll method. You may also hear this
called the motorcycle move or the tour twist, but let's walk through exactly how to do that. Now, what I want you to do is go ahead and go kinda in the last parallel in the down swing. So here I want my hips to go ahead and be opening up. I want my club to be
parallel with the ground, and I want my hands to be in front of my right thigh. Now, when I take my
grip you're gonna notice that when I do this the club face is basically straight up and down.

So, if I'm looking at it from this angle you'll see the face is
straight up and down and my logo of my glove is pointed out in front of me. Now from there….