If you’ve been told to “hit up on the driver,” you’re not alone. Launch angle and spin rate dominate modern distance conversations, and most amateurs know — at least conceptually — that a positive angle of attack can help them hit the ball farther. The problem? Most golfers try to manufacture an upward strike with swing thoughts. And that usually makes things worse.
The best drivers of the ball don’t actively try to “hit up” on the ball. Rather, they organize their setup and pressure in a way that the club naturally bottoms out behind the ball. The upward strike is a byproduct, not a manipulation.
Below are three things golfers get wring about hitting up on the ball, and how to fix them.
When golfers hear “hit up,” many instinctively add loft with their hands (scooping) or lean their upper body away from the target during the downswing. And while this does help them hit up on the ball, it can also lead to adding too much dynamic loft, higher spin rates and inconsistent face contact.
An upward angle of attack can improve launch conditions — but only if it’s paired with center-face contact and controlled spin. Trying to lift the ball often does the opposite. Hitting up on the ball is more about where the club bottoms out and should not be achieved via flipping or scooping the clubhead.
Shoulder tilt matters, but how you create it matters more. Many amateurs add tilt by leaning their upper body back or arching their lower spine. That often hurts rotation and leads to common driver misses like large blocks and big hooks. Effective tilt comes from pressure and posture, not from leaning away from the target. When tilt is organized correctly, the club can travel upward through the ball while the body continues to rotate.
Having a ball position in the front of your stance can give the club more time to bottom out and hit the ball on the upswing, but it can also inadvertently shift your path to the left, which spells trouble for golfers already fighting a big slice. Instead of trying to move the ball position forward for these golfers you may find more luck in dropping the trail foot slightly back at address instead.
Most amateurs who attempt to hit up on the driver see one (or more) of these patterns:
The common issue isn’t that they’re hitting up on the ball too much, it’s that they’re trying to hit up on it from the wrong place. Instead of fixing the swing, start with the setup. You don’t need a launch monitor to improve your angle of attack. You need a better starting position.
This combination moves the low point of the swing behind the ball and allows the club to travel upward through impact naturally.
Focus on these keys and you’ll feel like you’re “staying behind it” while the body is still rotating forward. That’s the difference between effective tilt and fake tilt.
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