As the Equipment Editor for The Daily Duffer, I’ve seen countless gadgets, techniques, and swing “hacks” come and go. My fitting bay, armed with a TrackMan and a GCQuad, has been the ultimate arbiter of truth. So, when I stumbled upon Joe Hallett’s tip about using a split-hand grip for driver accuracy, my immediate thought was, “Is this another band-aid solution, or does it actually address the core mechanics of clubface control?”
The premise is simple enough: distance without accuracy is a recipe for high scores and lost balls. This is perhaps the most fundamental truth in golf, yet one that countless golfers ignore in their quest for bragging rights off the tee.
“Distance is important for your tee shots, but all those yards are worthless if you can’t keep the ball in play. That’s why spurning accuracy in the pursuit of distance is such a dangerous game.”
My fitting experience confirms this unequivocally. I’ve had golfers come in boasting 115 mph clubhead speeds, only for their dispersion pattern to look like a shotgun blast. Their average driving distance might be 290 yards, but their average *fairway hit* distance is closer to 200, once you factor in recovery shots. The data doesn’t lie: accuracy directly correlates to lower scores for the vast majority of amateur golfers.
Hallett’s observation that active hands and wrists, while potentially boosting clubhead speed, can severely compromise clubface control, hits home. I frequently see this on the launch monitor. When a golfer gets “flippy” or overly reliant on their hands, their dynamic loft and face-to-path numbers go haywire. We’re talking face angles at impact that are 3, 4, or even 5 degrees open or closed. On a driver, at 100+ mph clubhead speed, that translates to a ball starting 20-30 yards offline, often with excessive side spin (think 3000+ RPM of slice or hook spin), which only exacerbates the problem.
The split-hand grip, as Hallett describes it for a practice swing, is designed to curb this overactive wrist action.
“It’ll be really hard to overly flip your wrists and hand through impact.”
This statement resonates with what I’ve observed when I’ve had golfers try similar drills. By separating the hands, the golfer loses a direct lever for manipulation. The feeling of “releasing” the club with just the wrists becomes awkward and inefficient. Instead, it forces the body — the bigger, more stable muscle groups — to drive the rotation and deliver the clubface. This promotes a more unified body turn and release, which is a cornerstone of consistent clubface control.
What does this mean from a technical standpoint? For golfers who “flip” or “cast” excessively, the split grip can lead to:
- Reduced Dynamic Loft at Impact: An overly active wrist release often adds excessive dynamic loft, leading to higher launch angles but less efficient energy transfer. A more body-driven release tends to deliver the club with a more consistent, and often slightly lower, dynamic loft, optimizing launch conditions.
- More Neutral Face Angle: This is the holy grail. By minimizing wrist manipulation, the clubface is more likely to return to a square or slightly open/closed position relative to path, drastically reducing slice or hook spin. I’ve seen face-to-path numbers improve from -4 degrees (causing a slice) to -1 degree or even 0.5 degrees (much straighter flight) with drills that promote body rotation over hand action.
- Improved Angle of Attack (AoA): While not directly addressing AoA, synchronizing the body and club often leads to a more consistent and even improved positive AoA for many drivers. This means hitting up on the ball more effectively, which is critical for maximizing distance with a driver.
The beauty of this tip is that it’s a *practice* drill. It’s not suggesting you actually swing with a split grip on the course (though some tour pros, like Bryson DeChambeau for putting, use split grips for specific reasons). The muscle memory and feel it instills during the practice swing are what’s valuable. It helps golfers understand what a more stable, body-driven release feels like, which they can then try to replicate with a conventional grip.

Who is this for? Primarily, golfers who struggle with consistency off the tee due to excessive hand and wrist action. If you regularly see big slices or hooks, if your bad shots are truly awful, or if your launch monitor data shows significant discrepancies between clubhead speed and ball speed (indicating a poor smash factor and inefficient strike), this drill is worth its weight in gold. It’s not about adding 10 mph to your swing, it’s about making your existing speed more effective.
“Split the grip, and you’ll split the fairway.”
While that’s a catchy tagline, the reality is that no single drill is a magic bullet. But as a corrective exercise, Hallett’s split-hand grip suggestion targets a fundamental flaw in many amateur swings. It’s a free, zero-cost way to fundamentally change your swing mechanics for the better. Based on my years of experience breaking down swings on the launch monitor, anything that encourages a more stable clubface through impact and prioritizes the big muscles for power and control is a step in the right direction. Give it a try on the range – you might just surprise yourself with how much more control you gain.

