Why Your Driver
Feels Rushed —
And How to Fix It
What happened at last week’s Driver Confidence Day, and what it means for your game.
Most golfers blame their driver. But an easy driver swing isn’t about power or perfection — it’s about movement. And that’s exactly what was missing.
We started the day with a simple question to the group:
Who’s going to hit 40–50 balls every day to get better?
Nobody raised their hand. Of course they didn’t. And that’s fine — because that’s not the answer anyway.
Here’s the real question: what if you did 2 minutes a day… and actually improved the movement instead?
That’s where everything shifted. Because the problem isn’t practice time. It’s what you’re practising.
We then looked at why the driver feels so difficult for most golfers. A few of the lads put it straight away:
That feeling is real. But here’s what’s important to understand:
That’s not a timing issue.
That’s a movement issue.
When the swing gets narrow, tight, or disconnected — your body creates that panicked, rushed sensation. You’re not running out of time. You’re running out of space in the swing.
So we changed one thing: we made the swing wider and more coordinated.
Nothing forced. No complicated drill. Just better movement — and a completely different experience of the same swing.
Would you hammer a nail by holding your wrists completely stiff?
Of course not. The power comes from the release — the natural, free movement of the wrist through impact.
The golf swing is no different. And yet most golfers are unconsciously locking their wrists, trying to control the clubface by holding on — tension is the number one killer of an easy driver swing.
When the group started to let the club release properly — the results were immediate:
You could hear it. The strike changed — not because we talked about impact, but because we fixed what was happening before it.
We also kept seeing one pattern over and over: if the body doesn’t turn, the club can only come across the ball. That’s where slices, weak shots, and frustration come from.
The answer isn’t more swing thoughts. It isn’t gripping tighter or aiming further left. It’s simply getting the body turning and moving the way it was designed to — and that’s when golf starts to feel easy again.
Simple, when you see it.
By late afternoon, Ford summed up what a lot of golfers in the group were feeling:
And then this arrived from John the next morning:
“Good morning Jo, well what a lovely Friday I had last week — it was not what I was expecting. I warned my wife that I’d probably be laid up all weekend. On my previous one hour sessions with the pro at our local golf club I’m normally having to take painkillers the next day. It was a complete relaxing experience. I have taken to the course what he has taught me and I look forward to another day session or a tour with yourselves in the near future.”
That’s the point of all of this. Golf that feels better in your body. A swing that actually flows. Results that come from understanding — not from grinding.
That’s why we’re running this again.
Ready to feel the difference?
If any of this made sense to you, you’ll get a lot out of the day. No overload. No complicated theory. Just simple movements that actually work — and you’ll understand exactly why.
- Feel rushed or tense over the driver
- Don’t trust the strike
- Trying to control it instead of swing it
- Want it to feel easier on your body
