How To Maintain Your Golf Posture In The Backswing For Better Ball Striking
If your ball striking feels inconsistent, the problem may start before impact. Learn how losing posture in the…
If your irons fly low, cut across the ball, or take too much turf, the problem may have started before the club ever got close to impact.
It is easy to blame the strike itself. You see a big divot, a weak fade, or a shot that never gets high enough, and the first instinct is to try to save it at the bottom of the swing. But if the setup is rounded and the backswing is mostly arms, the downswing often has very little chance.
The better fix is to set the body up to move well, then turn earlier in the backswing so your arms can follow your body instead of pulling the club into trouble.
To hit better iron shots, start with a more athletic setup: a slightly wider base, a cleaner hip hinge, pressure through the middle of your feet, and soft but active legs. Then start the backswing with your body, not just your arms. Feel your right shoulder, shirt buttons, and belt buckle turn earlier so the club can deliver on a better plane.

Low iron shots can be confusing because they do not always feel terrible. You might strike one that starts on line, then watch it fly too low, fade too much, or come out with a heavy divot.
The strike is the symptom. The movement that created it often happened earlier.
In the source lesson, Matt’s early shots gave a clear pattern: low flight, too much turf, and a delivery that wanted to work left. One early shot reached 58 feet of peak height, which was much lower than the coaching benchmark being discussed. That number is not a promise or a target for every golfer. It is simply useful context: the ball was not getting up in the air the way a well-delivered iron should.
If your irons look similar, do not just try to help the ball up. Check whether your setup and backswing are making the club arrive too steep.

A steep iron delivery usually shows up in a few ways:
You can try to change the downswing from there, but it helps to ask a better question first: why did the club get steep?
If the body has not turned enough going back, it often has to turn hard and late coming down. That late movement can push the club out in front of you and across the ball. The club is then reacting to the backswing, not just making a random mistake on the way down.

The common backswing fault is simple: the arms move, the right arm folds, and the body stays too quiet for too long.
From there, the club can look as though it has moved back plenty. But the shoulders, hips, and torso have not created enough turn. When the downswing starts, the body finally tries to catch up, and that can throw the club steep and left.
This is why “keep your head still” can be risky advice for some golfers. If it makes you freeze your body, restrict your trail knee, or stop your torso turning, the backswing becomes more arms-led. You do not need to sway all over the place, but you do need permission to rotate.

Before you chase the club, get the setup in a position where the body can actually move.
Use this sequence:
The setup should feel more athletic than comfortable. If someone gently pushed you from the front, you should feel as though your legs are ready enough to resist it.
That better starting position matters because a rounded, heel-heavy setup makes rotation harder. When the body cannot turn, the arms take over.

Once the setup is stronger, the next job is to start the backswing with the body.
A useful rehearsal is to cross your arms over your chest, get into your golf posture, and turn while your eyes stay down where the ball would be. Feel your right shoulder move back. Let your chest and hips turn earlier. By the top, your back should feel much closer to facing the target.
The important word is allow.
You are not trying to lock your head, freeze your knees, or keep everything perfectly still. A good backswing has movement. The trail knee can move in a little. The head can rotate slightly. The body can wind up. The key is that the movement is rotation around a better setup, not a loose sway or an arms-only lift.

If you need a simple feel, use the belt buckle and buttons cue.
As the club starts back, feel the belt buckle and the buttons on your shirt move earlier. The arms still move, but they follow the body instead of running away on their own.
That feel helps with two common problems:
You do not have to make a huge turn all at once. Start by making the body part of the takeaway earlier, then keep the turn going to the top.

Do not expect this to transfer by standing over the ball and hoping.
Make the rehearsal first:
Then look for feedback.
You can check the direction of your divot, the height of the shot, the starting direction, and whether the ball is still cutting across too much. If you use Swing Coach or launch data, track whether the path is moving closer to neutral and whether the ball is launching with more useful height.

Better movement is not just about making the swing look prettier. It should change the delivery.
In Matt’s case, the lesson moved from a steep, leftward delivery and lower average flight to shots that climbed into the 90-foot range, with one example reaching 96 feet and a path 2.5 degrees to the right. Those are lesson-specific numbers, but they show the right idea: when the setup and backswing improve, the club has a better chance to arrive less steep and more on plane.
The visual change is usually clear:
That is the real goal. You are not trying to copy a number. You are trying to give the downswing a better job.
Use this as a range plan:
If the old pattern comes back, go back to the rehearsal. The ball has a way of pulling golfers into familiar movement. Your job is to make the new move feel repeatable before you ask for full speed.
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Poor iron shots can come from many causes, but one common pattern is a setup and backswing that make the club arrive too steep. If your arms run the backswing and your body turns late, you may see low flight, heavy turf, or a fade/slice pattern.
Yes. If the body does not turn enough going back, the downswing often has to recover. That late body action can push the club out and across the ball, which makes the delivery steeper.
Start by checking your setup and backswing turn. Build a more athletic posture, then feel your body start the backswing earlier. If the arms move first and the body waits, the over-the-top move can be a reaction.
Low iron flight can come from a steep delivery, too much leftward path, poor strike, or a face/path matchup that reduces useful launch. In this lesson source, improving posture and body turn helped the club deliver less steeply and produced higher iron shots.
If your backswing is mostly arms, yes. Feel the right shoulder, shirt buttons, and belt buckle move earlier so the arms follow the body. You still need balance and control, but you do not want the body frozen.
Look at what the divot is telling you. A deep divot that points left can be a sign of steep delivery. Work on the setup first, then use body-led backswing rehearsals so the club has a better chance to return on a shallower, more neutral path.
If your irons feel inconsistent, do not only chase impact. Check the setup, then check who is leading the backswing.
When the body is ready to move and turns earlier, the arms can follow. That gives the club a better chance to work down on plane, strike the ball cleaner, and send the ball up with a stronger flight.