Tommy Fleetwood’s secret practice station that transformed him into one of the most consistent golf players – learn this game-changing drill in just one minute! https://skillest.com/@golfwithmags
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⛳ 0:00 – Tommy Fleetwood’s winning ball striking secret revealed
🎯 0:25 – Why Tommy’s miss is an overdraw and how he fixes it
🏌️ 1:29 – Setting up the practice station with alignment sticks
📦 2:34 – The box obstacle technique for neutral club path
⚡ 4:18 – Start slow: mastering the feedback system
🎯 7:22 – Progressive difficulty: sets of five approach
💪 8:15 – Advanced level setup for maximum improvement
✅ 10:38 – Results you’ll see from this practice method

Discover the exact practice station that helped Tommy Fleetwood become a FedEx Cup champion and one of the world’s most consistent ball strikers. This simple drill uses alignment sticks and a box to create the perfect feedback system for hitting irons consistently, whether you struggle with draws, fades, or inconsistent contact.

What You’ll Learn:
-Tommy Fleetwood’s complete practice station setup with alignment sticks
-How to fix overdraw misses and create a more neutral golf swing
-Progressive drill system from beginner to advanced levels
-The secret to hitting irons consistently with better contact
-Why shorter follow-through improves ball striking accuracy
-How this practice method works for both over-the-top and inside-out swing paths
-Step-by-step progression system using sets of five shots
-Contact fundamentals that apply to every skill level

#TommyFleetwoodGolfSwing #HowToHitIronsConsistently #GolfDrills #GolfSwing #BallStriking

Hey golfers, Tommy Fleetwood may have just won his first PGA Tour event, but he’s been one of the best ball strikers on tour for a really long time. Today, I’m going to show you his practice station that he uses with his irons religiously and has helped not only make him the FedEx Cup champion, but also one of the best ball strikers and most consistent ball strikers in the world. So, make sure you stay tuned to learn how this drill can help you with your game. So, Tommy Fleetwood admits that he’s always played a draw. That’s his ball flight. But his miss tends to be an overdraw. You know, a ball that starts a little too far to the right, over curves to the left. You know, for him, he, you know, tends to get the club, you know, a little outside, and then he comes down and gets stuck underneath and that causes him to be flippy, which causes an overdraw. So, he and his coach came up with this practice station. Now, I think a lot of us know Tommy for his kind of saw off shorter finish, and that helps him be able to do this drill successfully because when he gets super stuck underneath, right, he finishes up here, the club is really high. So, he needs more torso rotation coming through to get that club from being stuck behind him and getting that pass shooting too far inside out, which causes that overdraw. So, the abbreviated followthrough started off as just a drill, but he ended up hitting the ball so well that way that it has turned into his standard stock iron swing. So, for this drill, the way that we want to set it up is you’re going to have an alignment stick on your target line. And then you need uh this is just an empty box of golf balls. And depending on your skill level, you can make this as hard or as easy as you need to. Maybe kind of start with level. So level one will make it a little bit easier and if you’re successful then we’ll tighten the gate a little bit to make it a little bit uh more challenging. So let’s start off with alignment stick down your target line. We’ll have one two club head widths away we’ll put the box. And then you needed another alignment stick here at the end of your target line stick. And depending on what club you’re hitting, you’ll want to set that up with the lie angle of whatever club that you are hitting. So it might be different if it’s a longer or shorter iron. So you just want to get that on the same angle as whatever iron that you are hitting for this drill. So when I put the ball there, it’s going to be right here in between the target line stick and the box. And you can see I’ve, you know, this is a little bit forgiving here to start off, which is fine. as we get better at it, we can start to challenge um ourselves a little bit more. Now, the goal is to obviously miss all of these objects, right? We got a little obstacle course here. So, the box for Tommy, it helped him, you know, he he’ll have it a little bit closer, right? He’s has his challenge points a little bit tougher, but if he takes it outside, he’s going to feel like he’s hitting that box. So, it’s going to force him to circle the club around him. But also, the stick is great for those of us that tend to get the club too far inside. So, we want to keep the club in front of this alignment stick going back. And for Tommy, he tends to get too far stuck underneath. So, he would come in, maybe hit this stick, probably hit this stick and not get through our little obstacle course. So, for Tommy, he’s feeling gradual circle so he doesn’t hit the box, but staying in front of this alignment stick back here. And then for him, he’s making sure that he’s rotating that chest through, now that club gets a little bit more back in front of him instead of so far stuck behind him. And now as he rotates through, that club path is going to be a lot more neutral coming through. So for Tommy, not so far inside out. But it’s also great for those of us that tend to have more of an over the top swing, swing outside in, because if we do that, we’re going to hit this box right here. So, it’s a great feedback tool no matter what side of the spectrum you are on as far as your club path being off in a certain direction. Okay. So, what I would start off doing, again, making sure we have this set up correctly. If it’s not set set up correctly, you’re going to get weird feedback that is not going to help you. So, kind of be a stickler about making sure this is set up correctly. So again, I’m going to start off giving myself, you know, some forgiveness here with the distance of the box. And I’m going to just do some really slow swings, right? Not looking to hit the ball very far, but just getting the sensation of missing everything that I have in front of me. Let that club drop. Now, I’m going to start to rotate, come down, and I’m going to have a little shorter finish here, too, just like Tommy. So, I’m going to go hit the ball here, but super slow speed. Okay, didn’t quite brush the ground, but I missed all the objects in my obstacle course. So again, I would do that a few times just slowly. One just so you’re confident that you can miss these objects. And if we do, it’ll be at a slow speed, right? So again, if you tend to come over the top, you will probably come down and hit this box on the outside. Okay, so that was better there. Missed the target stick, missed the box, missed the stick back behind me. And if you watch Tommy at all this weekend, yes, he hit some draws and his misses, he definitely had some misses that overcurve to the left, but when he’s striking it well, he has a very, very tight draw. And I even heard some of the commentators say like it’s just very very straight. In order for the ball to go very very straight with very minimal curve, our path has to be pretty neutral, right? It doesn’t have to be exactly straight down the target line, which is because that’s very hard to do since we’re swinging on an arc, but he’s not going to have an excessive path swinging way out to the right. He’s not going to have excessive path swinging way to the left. If our path is excessively in one direction, our golf ball is going to curve quite a bit. So, he’s really has a pretty neutralized path, not a lot of curve when he’s hitting it really well. That was really solid there. You know, again, that was probably 50 60% speed. And that’s what we want to do, right? Contact is number one priority always. Doesn’t matter your skill level because we can hit a lot of straight shots that are really crappy, right? They we tap it, we chunk it, the ball goes straight. So contact is number one priority always, no matter your skill level. So this is going to really help us start to make more consistent ball than ground contact. Get that club bottoming out after the golf ball. Okay. All right. So, I would say do these in sets of five. So, again, start off a little bit easier, kind of level one where we’re giving ourselves a little bit more space between the target line stick and the box. A little bit more space heel to toe with our golf club. Then if you hit five in a row where you don’t hit our objects, then let’s tighten it up a little bit. Okay. So, I’m going to bring this box in a little bit closer. And if you watch Tommy do this, it’s pretty crazy. He has very, very little wiggle room from heel to toe. So, I moved it in a little bit, made my challenge point a little bit harder. Same goal, trying to miss all of my objects. I’m going to go just slower speed here. Okay, missed my object. So, this drill is great. And again, if you’re the opposite and you tend to slice it, this is still a great drill because you’re going to have this box that is going to be getting in your way for feedback. So, if you’re coming over the top, you’re you’re not going to struggle with hitting the stick underneath. you’re going to struggle coming down and hitting this box because your path is swinging excessively left. So, if I can’t hit it solid from just waist high to waist high, it’s silly to think by adding extra motion and speed that it’s going to be any better. So, if you’re struggling, go smaller, go slower, okay? And do that where you have to do it five times. So it feels like extra slow, extra short and then build up from there. So, okay, that was kind of slow and short, so maybe I go short but a little bit faster. Awesome. Hit the sweet spot and then build up from there. Okay. Don’t keep taking full swing shots and hitting the objects over and over again because one, you’re just going to get frustrated and two, um, we’re not making any sort of good changes. So, go as short as you need to initially, build up your length and speed from there. And I promise you, if you do this, you’re going to see a great improvement in your ball striking. You’re see some really straight shots, not a lot of curve. And again, if you are able to do these first couple of versions really well, make it a little harder, right? Obviously, there’s a point where it’s too hard and not beneficial. But, you know, move it closer to where you don’t have a ton of wiggle room from heel to toe. That’ll help guarantee a centered strike point as well as a more neutral path. Okay, y’all. Give this Tommy Fleetwood practice station a try and I guarantee you it will help you hit more solid and straighter iron shots. And who doesn’t want that, right? Thank you all so much for watching. If you found this video helpful or if you give this drill a try, let me know down in the comments and let me know how it went. If you’d like to work with me oneon-one, a little bit more individually, we can do so through the Skillst app and I’ll have that link down in the description below. Thank you so much for watching and we’ll see you later.

9 Comments

  1. I need to do this drill. I’ve been struggling with my irons for a few weeks. Thank you for showing this drill. I will be working on it tomorrow.

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