If Your Driver Spins Too Much, This Is Why
Instruction

If Your Driver Spins Too Much, This Is Why

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If Your Driver Spins Too Much, This Is Why

You step up to the first tee with your driver and make what feels like a solid swing. The ball launches high into the air, climbing and climbing, then stalls out and drops straight down. Then your playing partner makes an identical swing and the ball bores through the air far down the fairway. Your high-spin balloon ball just cost you serious distance.

The problem you can’t see

Spin is invisible. You can’t see it. You can’t feel it in your hands. But it’s there and if you’re generating too much of it, you’re bleeding distance on every tee shot. A tour player launches a driver with around 2,200 to 2,500 rpm of backspin. Most amateurs are spinning it between 3,200 and 4,000 or even higher. That extra spin creates lift which sounds good until you realize it also creates drag. The ball climbs too high, hangs in the air and falls short.

The frustrating part is that high spin often comes from swings that feel powerful. You’re trying to crush it and the ball goes up instead of out. You think you need to swing harder. Actually, you need to change how you’re delivering the club.

Why your swing creates too much spin

The primary cause of excessive spin is an attack angle that’s too steep. When you hit down on the driver, even slightly, you’re adding loft at impact. More loft means more backspin. The clubface also tends to contact the ball lower on the face during a steep attack which compounds the problem because the lower part of the face generates more spin.

Your setup might be working against you. If the ball is too far back in your stance, you’ll catch it on the downswing. If your weight favors your front foot at impact, you get the same result. If your hands are too far ahead of the ball at address, you’re delofting the club and guaranteeing a downward strike.

The other culprit is an over-the-top swing path. When the club approaches from outside the target line, it creates a glancing blow that adds sidespin and backspin. You’re essentially cutting across the ball and that action generates spin the same way a pitcher’s curveball does.

What actually works

Good drivers of the ball hit up on it. The club is moving upward through impact, not downward. This reduces the effective loft which reduces spin. It also means you’re catching the ball higher on the clubface, in the low-spin zone that manufacturers engineer into modern drivers.

I know this feels weird. Every other club in your bag requires a downward strike. The driver is different. It’s the only club where you want an ascending blow. That’s why you tee it up. The tee allows you to position the ball forward and catch it on the upswing.

The technical fix

Start with your setup. Tee the ball high with at least half of it above the crown of your driver. Position it opposite or slightly forward of your front heel. Your spine should tilt away from the target so your front shoulder is higher than your back shoulder.

During the swing, feel like you’re staying behind the ball. Your head and upper body should remain back as you swing through impact. This isn’t a sway or a hang-back that kills power. It’s a subtle retention of your spine angle that allows the club to approach from the inside and move upward through the ball.

Your weight shift matters, too. Yes, you want to shift into your front side but not so aggressively that you drive your upper body forward. Treat it as your lower body moving forward while your upper body stays back. This creates the separation that produces an upward strike.

What good players do differently

Good drivers of the ball trust the loft. They don’t try to help the ball into the air. They let the club’s design and their upward attack angle create the optimal launch conditions. They also understand that a flatter, penetrating ball flight often goes farther than a towering one.

Good players also match their equipment to their swing. If you’re a steep swinger, you might need less loft on your driver to compensate. If you’re already hitting up on it, you might need more loft. Launch monitors reveal these truths in minutes.

The simple truth

Your instinct says hit down to make solid contact. With a driver, that instinct is wrong. The ball is on a tee. You have permission to sweep it off there with an upward blow. Once you start catching it on the upswing, once you see that ball flight flatten out and keep carrying, once you’re picking up more yards without swinging harder? You’ll never go back. The driver was built to be hit up on. You just have to trust it enough to let it work.

For You

For You

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Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

PGA of America Golf Professional Brendon Elliott is an award-winning coach and golf writer. Check out his weekly Monday column on RG.org, and to learn more about Brendon, visit OneMoreRollGolf.com.

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

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Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott





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      00RynTinTin

      5 months ago

      The LAW… Thanks Brendon

      I cannot remember whom said that “Golf is a Game of opposites”
      Great coaching and nice visualization have been delivered on the screws!!!

      Will you please give us a lesson on kick points??? Also may your drives be long and straight

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      5 months ago

      “The other culprit is an over-the-top swing path. When the club approaches from outside the target line, it creates a glancing blow that adds sidespin and backspin. You’re essentially cutting across the ball…” ~ yes. THIS IS ME. The white tee streak marks on the bottom of my driver head make this abundantly clear, as does the zero roll (or just as often, my tee ball jumping back a foot from where it first hits the ground).

      So what drills or whatever do I need to do to learn to stop cutting across the ball? (My ball position and tee height are generally correct, so that’s not the issue.)

      My index is 10.4 and it’s 3 points lower than my BIL’s index who outdrives me by 20+ yards every time. I want his distance. I want to erase my white tee streak marks. How do I train my body and my swing to (I assume) come from the inside rather than the outside at impact?

      Reply

      HikingMike

      5 months ago

      I’m just a guy on the internet, and there is probably more advice about curing slices out there than anything else… but you can try a couple things. One, sounds like you “cutting across the ball” means slice impact. You just have to force yourself to make a club path that is inside-to-out. Exaggerate it to get the feel down, and try on the range with slow short swings. Experiment like you’re a 10 year old kid hacking things around in the back yard. On the downswing keep your trail arm/elbow tight to the body and when the club is at the bottom act like you are throwing your hands outward. It feels like pushing out rather than pulling. Feedback isn’t easy with this since you’re not leaving a divot with driver to see your club path. But you could try one of those divot boards or divot mats with either carpet-like material or sequins that show your path at club low point. Something that goes hand-in-hand with this is that your body shift needs to happen juuuust before your downswing – lead with your body and “pushing out” at impact is natural. If you still slice but now with a push, then you have to correct to make sure your wrists turnover enough. Another thing is to be aware of your takeaway and position at the top. If you’ve heard of shallowing – it means your swing plane on the downswing is shallower than the backswing. Of course shallower is better for reducing backspin than steep. But I’ve found it’s easier to shallow if I start with a higher backswing takeaway. If your backswing is high, it’s naturally easier to drop it down for a shallower downswing. This may be more mental than physical for me.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      5 months ago

      The thing is, I don’t slice my drives even though the tee markings on the bottom of my driver indicate an outside/in impact. I average 10 FIRs per round and when I miss a fairway, it could be a slight pull or a push but almost never a slice.

      Thanks for the advice, I’ve bookmarked this and will refer back to it before my next trip to the range.

      Andrew the Great!

      5 months ago

      The thing is, I don’t slice my drives. I average 10 FIRs per round, and when I miss, it’s almost always either a slight pull of push, almost never a banana. But the tee markings on the bottom of my driver show that my path is out-to-in at impact.

      Thanks for the advice. I’ve bookmarked this and will refer back to it before my next trip to the range.

      Andrew the Great!

      5 months ago

      The thing is, I don’t slice my drives. I average 10 FIRs per round, and when I miss, it’s almost always either a slight pull of push, almost never a banana.

      Thanks for the advice, Mike. I’ve bookmarked this and will refer back to it before my next trip to the range. (I tried posting this comment as a reply to your comment, twice, but the MGS website never posted it.)

      Reply

      HikingMike

      5 months ago

      Ok if you are not slicing then there is your real evidence. Sorry, forget that advice, haha! Perhaps your only problem is backspin then (straight backspin). As for the tee markings – those have also confused me. I definitely swing inside-to-out. I think the tee markings may be deceiving because I have never understood them myself. It would be cool to see a very slow motion video from a couple angles to figure out why a tee made the mark it did. You have to keep in mind that your club is rotating around as your wrists rotate. You might just disregard that.

      Actually now that you mention it, I did a little test. I grabbed a post-it note cube and a pen. The pen is the tee and the post-it note cube is the clubhead. I held the pen on my desk with the point upward. Then I simulated a driver hit – with my other hand I moved the “clubhead” note cube across the tee while rotating it at the same time. The result when I turned it over was still not intuitive, hah. But I saw a mark that started roughly square with the path and perpendicular with the club face, and then as the line travels back under the clubhead it curves actually toward inside (heel side rather than toe side of the back of the clubhead). It’s a little tricky to wrap your head around, particularly since you’re looking at it upside down so be careful on that. But that line indicates your club rotation AND path. Inside-to-out path will make the tee mark travel toward the heel half of the clubhead (linearly). But the club rotation will make the tee mark curve that same way. Now I have to check my work next time I see this on my driver.

      For backspin reduction – try using a lower spinning ball (softer compression generally spins less, check MGS ball test data), a lower lofted driver clubhead, perhaps try an LS/LST/Triple Diamond model, and try to get your angle of attack numbers if you ever visit a sim because swinging upward on the ball reduces backspin. I’ve done or considered all of those myself and it has helped me. The shaft can have a big effect too.

      itsteetime

      5 months ago

      I like these swing thoughts and information … Please keep them coming!

      Reply

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