The Missing Piece: How Emphasis and Proof Transform Your Golf Swing
I’ve been teaching golf for over 15 years, and I’ve noticed something interesting about golfers who make real breakthroughs. They’re not necessarily the ones with the most natural talent or the fanciest equipment. They’re the ones who understand the “why” behind what they’re doing.
One of my students, Shammah, came to me frustrated after years of inconsistency. His swing had parts that worked beautifully—his takeaway was smooth, his tempo was reasonable—but something was missing. When we finally identified the specific piece he needed, his entire game shifted. That’s the power of targeted instruction: finding that one crucial element that changes everything.
Here’s what I want you to understand: your golf swing isn’t broken in some catastrophic way that requires a complete overhaul. More often, you’re missing one or two key concepts that, once understood and practiced, will transform how you play. The question is: how do you find those pieces?
Understanding How Concepts Stick
When instruction emphasizes concepts and proves them to you—not just tells you about them—something powerful happens in your mind. You move from blind faith in a technique to genuine understanding. This matters because understanding is what allows you to apply improvement consistently, even under pressure on the course.
“The way you emphasize and prove things really helps for the concept to stick with the listener.”
Think about this: if someone tells you to “keep your left arm straight,” you can do it mechanically. But if they show you *why*—how arm bend changes your club path and swing plane, how it affects your ability to generate distance—suddenly you’re not just following orders. You’re making an informed choice. You understand the mechanism.
In my teaching experience, this is the difference between improvement that lasts two weeks and improvement that becomes permanent. When you understand the principle, you maintain it instinctively.
The Power of Rapid Application
One encouraging truth I share with every golfer I work with: meaningful improvement doesn’t require months of grinding at the range. One of my students, Brian, experienced significant swing improvements in just one week of focused study. This tells me something important—your body is ready to improve. You’re likely just missing the right instruction.
“In one week of watching the videos in your system, my swing is better than ever!”
This doesn’t mean your swing will transform overnight—everyone’s timeline is different. But it does mean that quality instruction accelerates your progress dramatically. You’re not fighting against your body’s natural mechanics; you’re aligning with them.
Finding the Best Instruction Available
With so much golf instruction available—YouTube, apps, coaching videos—how do you know what actually works? I tell my students to look for instructors who do three things consistently:
First, they prove their concepts through demonstration. They don’t just say something works; they show you the cause and effect. Second, they keep instruction simple enough to understand but sophisticated enough to create real change. Third, they teach across the full spectrum of the game—not just full swing, but short game, putting, and the mental side of competition.
“Really growing to be the best golf instruction anyway, and trust me I’ve listened to them all…”
When you find instruction that meets these standards, your improvement accelerates. You’re learning from someone who understands both the mechanics and the psychology of golf.
Actionable Steps to Find Your Missing Piece
Try this drill first: Record your swing from down-the-line and face-on angles. Watch it three times without judgment. The third time, ask yourself: where does my body position break down? Where do I see inefficiency? Often, you’ll spot the issue yourself once you’re looking objectively.
Next, seek instruction on that specific element. Don’t try to fix your entire swing. Find teaching that breaks down that one problematic area and explains *why* it matters. Understand the principle, not just the mechanics.
Practice with purpose. Spend 15 minutes daily on this specific element. The quality of practice matters far more than quantity. Five quality repetitions with complete understanding beat fifty mindless swings.
Trusting the Process
I want to be clear about something: you can improve significantly. Your swing isn’t permanently flawed. You’re likely just missing one or two key concepts that, once integrated, will elevate your game.
The golfers I’ve worked with who made the biggest breakthroughs didn’t necessarily have more natural talent than others. They had the willingness to seek quality instruction, the humility to understand what they didn’t know, and the patience to focus on one thing at a time.
Your missing piece is out there. It might be a swing mechanic, a course management principle, or a mental technique. When you find it and understand it deeply—not just mechanically, but conceptually—your golf game will shift. That’s not hope; that’s what I’ve seen happen consistently over 15 years of teaching golfers just like you.


