Stop the Madness! The 4 Pillars of a Great Golf Swing
Description
Welcome back, everyone, to the Imagen Golf Podcast! I am Daniel Guest, and I am so fired up for today’s episode.
If you are listening to this right now, I need you to do me a favor. I need you to take a deep breath. Exhale. And I need you to mentally delete the last five YouTube videos you watched about "supinating the wrist" or "hitting Position 6."
Because today, we are going to stop the craziness.
(Music fades to a subtle background rhythm)
I see it every day on the lesson tee. A student walks up, and they look exhausted before they’ve even hit a ball. Their brain is spinning. They’re thinking about ten different positions. "Daniel, is my elbow at 45 degrees?" "Daniel, am I shallowing the shaft enough?" "Daniel, what about P4?"
Stop. Just stop.
Golf is a hard game, yes. But it is not as complicated as the industry wants you to believe. We have turned a stick-and-ball game into advanced calculus, and it is killing your scores.
Today, we are going back to basics. Not "boring" basics—essential basics. I want you to forget the 10-step diagrams and focus on the 4 Pillars of a Great Golf Swing.
If you nail these four things, you can play this game forever, and you can play it well.
Pillar 1: Proper Setup
Pillar Number One. This is non-negotiable. Proper Setup.
You wouldn't build a house on a swamp, right? So why are you trying to hit a golf ball with your feet touching and your back hunched over like you’re reading a text message?
The setup is the only part of the swing you have 100% control over. The ball isn't moving. No one is tackling you.
- Grip: Get your hands on the club comfortably so the face is square.
- Alignment: Aim where you want to go.
- Posture: Get athletic. Bend from the hips, not the waist.
If your setup is bad, your swing becomes a recovery mission the second you take the club back. But if your setup is solid, you’ve done 50% of the work before the club even moves. That’s free money!
Pillar 2: Logical Backswing
Notice I didn’t say "Perfect Backswing." I didn’t say "Adam Scott’s Backswing." I said a Logical Backswing.
What is the logic? The logic is simply to get the club up and around your body so you have room to hit the ball with force. That’s it!
People get obsessed with "hitting positions." They freeze-frame their video and say, "Oh no, my clubface is 2 degrees shut." Who cares?! Does your backswing put you in a position to deliver the club to the ball?
- Did you turn your shoulders?
- Did you shift your weight?
- Is the club behind you?
Great. That’s logical. You are loaded. You are ready to fire. Stop trying to paint a Picasso in the air and just load the catapult.
Pillar 3: Solid Contact
This is the Holy Grail. Solid Contact.
The golf ball does not know what your swing looks like. It doesn't know if you’re wearing the latest gear. It only knows one thing: Impact.
You can have the ugliest swing in the world—look at Jim Furyk or Matthew Wolff—but if you hit the back of the ball first, flush on the face, the ball goes straight and far.
We spend so much time worrying about how we look getting to the ball that we forget the job is to hit the ball.
- Are you hitting the center of the face?
- Are you brushing the grass after the ball?
If the answer is yes, you are a golfer. I don’t care if your left arm is bent. I don’t care if you lift your heel. If the contact is solid, the swing works. Period.
Pillar 4: A Natural Follow-Through
And finally, the pillar that holds it all together: A Natural Follow-Through.
I see so many amateurs who hit the ball and then... stop. They chop at it. They flinch. Or they try to force themselves into this perfect PGA Tour finish where their back is twisted like a pretzel and they’re in pain.
Your follow-through is a reaction to what happened before it. It’s the braking system. If you swung with speed (which we want), your body has to rotate through to slow the club down safely.
- Let the momentum pull you around.
- Finish balanced on that lead leg.
- Let the club wrap around you.
If you are "steering" the club, you have no follow-through. If you are "swinging" the club, the follow-through happens naturally. It’s the signature on the check you just wrote.
Setup. Backswing. Contact. Follow-through.
That is the cycle. That is the rhythm.
When you go to the range this week, I want you to strip away the rest.
- Check your Setup.
- Make a Logical turn.
- Focus on Solid Contact.
- Allow a Natural finish.
If you do a bad shot, don't ask, "Was my wrist bowed?" Ask, "Did I have a bad setup? Or did I just miss the contact?"
Keep it simple. Golf is meant to be played, not analyzed to death.
Get out of your head, get into your body, and trust these four pillars.
That’s it for this week. If you want to simplify your game even more, head over to imagengolf.com. We are here to help you see the game clearly.
Stop the craziness. Start playing golf.
I’m Daniel Guest. See you on the fairway.
📄 The Imagen Golf "4 Pillars" Cheat Sheet
From Daniel Guest: “Keep it simple. Stop overthinking. Master these four things, and the rest of the game gets easy. Use this guide to check yourself before you wreck yourself on the range.”
Pillar 1: Proper Setup
The foundation of your house. Get this right, and you’re 50% there before you even swing.
✅ Checkpoint 1: Athletic Posture Bend from your hips, not your waist. Your back should be relatively straight, and your arms should hang down naturally, free of tension. You should feel ready to move, like a shortstop in baseball.
✅ Checkpoint 2: Parallel Tracks Imagine railroad tracks aimed at your target. Your feet, hips, and shoulders should all be on the "inside track," parallel to your target line. Don't aim your body at the target; aim parallel to it.
Pillar 2: A Logical Backswing
Don't paint a Picasso. Just load the catapult so you can fire.
✅ Checkpoint 1: Turn Your Back to the Target Forget arm positions. Focus on rotating your upper body so your lead shoulder moves under your chin and your back is facing the target. This ensures you are "loaded."
✅ Checkpoint 2: Feel the Trail Heel As you turn, you should feel pressure build into the heel of your trail foot (right foot for righties). You are coiling into your right side, not swaying away from the ball.
Pillar 3: Solid Contact
The only thing the ball cares about. Center face, crispy strike.
✅ Checkpoint 1: Eyes "In Front" To ensure you hit the ball then the turf, focus your eyes on a blade of grass an inch in front of the golf ball (towards the target). Try to hit that blade of grass.
✅ Checkpoint 2: The "Thwack" Test Close your eyes and take a few practice swings, listening to the sound of the club brushing the grass. Then hit a ball. Does it make a sharp, solid "thwack" sound, or a dull, clunky sound? Chase the good sound.
Pillar 4: A Natural Follow-Through
The braking system. If you swung with speed, your body must finish the job.
✅ Checkpoint 1: Belt Buckle to Target Don't quit on the shot. Rotate your hips all the way through so your belt buckle is pointing directly at your target (or even slightly left of it) when you finish.
✅ Checkpoint 2: Hold Your Pose Finish completely balanced on your lead leg, with your trail foot up on its toe. Hold that finish for a count of three. If you fall over, you didn't swing in balance.



