The Downswing Simplification We’ve Been Waiting For
After 35 years covering professional golf—and yes, carrying Tom Lehman’s bag through some of the most pressure-packed moments of the ’90s—I’ve watched instruction evolve from something mystical into something, frankly, unnecessarily complicated. Every year brings a new swing theory, a fresh biomechanical breakdown, another YouTube rabbit hole promising the secret your game has been missing. It’s exhausting, and it’s made the average golfer’s life harder, not easier.
That’s why Brian Manzella’s three-step downswing sequence feels like a breath of fresh air, even if it’s wrapped in the familiar packaging of swing instruction.
The Internet’s Instruction Problem
Here’s what struck me first about the source material: the acknowledgment that
"The internet is flooded with swing tips, and for every great coach offering thoughtful guidance, there’s an armchair expert doling out bad advice to chase clicks, making it harder to tell what’s actually correct and what just sounds convincing."
That’s not just true—it’s the defining challenge of modern golf instruction. I’ve watched this unfold in real time. Twenty years ago, a golfer struggled? They’d call their local pro. Today, they’ve got 47 conflicting videos in their search results before they even hit the range. The signal-to-noise ratio has become almost impossible to navigate.
What separates Manzella’s approach from the noise is his willingness to strip things down rather than build them up. Anyone can make golf more complicated. It takes genuine expertise to make it simpler without losing accuracy.
The Three-Move Framework: Why It Works
Let me break down what makes Manzella’s sequence different, because I think there’s something important here that goes beyond the mechanics themselves.
Step One: The Drop
The first move—dropping your arms from the top while keeping the club in position—addresses what I’d call the "spinning sin." In three and a half decades on tour, I’ve watched more amateur golfers ruin their sequences at the exact moment it matters most: the transition. They finish their backswing and immediately start rotating their body to lower the club, which puts them behind the eight ball immediately.
"The drop of your arms down to a normal hitting position — arms relative to the torso — early in the downswing is your first step."
What Manzella’s emphasizing here is something the best players—from Nicklaus to Rory—have always done instinctively: let gravity and arm motion do the heavy lifting before your body accelerates. It’s elegant because it works with physics, not against it.
Step Two: The Twist or Tumble
Here’s where Manzella shows real sophistication. He’s not prescribing one move for everyone. He recognizes that different swing geometries require different solutions. Some players need a "twist" to square the face; others need a more pronounced "tumble."
Having caddied in an era before we obsessed over every swing plane measurement, I can tell you this adaptive thinking is actually how the best pros have always operated. They felt their way through problems rather than forcing themselves into a template. Manzella’s giving golfers permission to do the same—within a structured framework.
Step Three: The Throw
The final move is refreshingly simple: throw it into impact while controlling your clubface.
"When you’re throwing the club into the ball, you need to line it up for the shot you’re trying to hit. That means avoiding any twisting or turning of the hands as you deliver the clubhead into the back of the ball."
This is where amateur golfers often self-destruct. They’ve gotten the sequence right, they’ve managed the face angle, and then—at the moment of truth—they tinker. They manipulate. They try to steer the shot instead of trusting the motion they’ve built. Manzella’s simplification here is valuable: once you’re in position, the job is execution, not adjustment.
What This Means for Your Game
I think what strikes me most about this three-step approach is that it respects the amateur golfer’s intelligence while acknowledging their reality. You don’t have a swing coach on call. You can’t afford to spend six months rebuilding your motion with a GOLF Top 100 Teacher watching your every move. You need something you can work on at your local range, understand intuitively, and build muscle memory around.
Manzella’s sequence delivers that. It’s specific enough to be actionable but simple enough to actually internalize.
The instruction also wisely recommends working on these moves "both individually and together." That’s important. Too many golfers try to implement three complex changes simultaneously, then wonder why they’re more confused than before. Breaking it into components—then reassembling—is how you actually learn.
The Training Aid Question
The source material also references The Compression Ball training aid, designed to promote arm-body connection throughout the swing. I’ll be honest: I’ve always been skeptical of training aids that claim to solve fundamental problems. But connection drills between your forearms? That’s addressing something real. A disconnected swing kills tour professionals and weekend warriors equally. If a training aid helps you feel what proper connection actually feels like, that’s value.
Where We Stand
After a season or two of watching some tour players experiment with extreme swing concepts, we’re due for a return to fundamentals. That’s not exciting to Instagram, and it won’t generate 10 million views, but it works.
Manzella’s three-step downswing isn’t revolutionary. It’s evolutionary—distilled wisdom from decades of teaching. And sometimes, that’s exactly what the game needs.
