Jordan Spieth is back, officially and unequivocally. After a series of good showings to start 2021, he captured a long-awaited victory at the Valero Texas Open on Sunday. And because that event precedes the Masters, as a golf writer I’m required by law to assume that a second green jacket is on its way to Spieth’s closet, too.
What’s behind Spieth’s transformation? You’d be foolish to dismiss the mental shift that Spieth has undergone in recent months, which is obviously playing a role. He’s spoken about it himself: He’s more confident in his ability, trusting in his swing, and hungry to bring it all to fruition.
All that stuff plays nicely into the way fans and journalists like to talk about the pro game, except the truth is that most times, confidence shifts are more of an effect, and less of a cause. You can’t choose to be confident overnight; it’s the result of something. In Spieth’s case, it was a technical shift that has proved a revelation.
“It’s reversing how I was steepening the club [in transition] to shallowing the club, transitionally,” Spieth said.
The way Spieth has been integrating this change has been a pretty simple swing feeling. You can spot him doing it all over the place. Try it yourself — it’ll probably help you, too.
Spieth’s feeling: swing more around, less up-and-down
Spieth has explained what he’s trying to do in multiple press conferences, but the actual feeling of it manifests itself most in his practice swing, as you can see below. Here’s how to copy the same move for yourself:
Take your backswing
Pause when your lead arm (left arm for right-handed golfer) is parallel to the ground.
Throw your arms around your body, so it resembles a baseball swing.
That’s what it looks like to feel less steep; the club “shallows” at the top of the backswing and slings more around his body. If you struggle with slices (where the ball starts to the left of your target and curves to the right of it), pull-hooks (where the ball starts to the left of your target and goes farther left), there’s a good chance a practice swing like this will help you. It’ll shallow your angle of attack and help your golf swing move more in-to-out, rather than from out-to-in.
It’s a simple move that proved a masterstroke for Spieth, and maybe it’ll lead to a breakthrough in your own game.
Luke Kerr-Dineen is the Game Improvement Editor at GOLF Magazine and GOLF.com. In his role he oversees the brand’s game improvement content spanning instruction, equipment, health and fitness, across all of GOLF’s multimedia platforms.
An alumni of the International Junior Golf Academy and the University of South Carolina–Beaufort golf team, where he helped them to No. 1 in the national NAIA rankings, Luke moved to New York in 2012 to pursue his Masters degree in Journalism from Columbia University. His work has also appeared in USA Today, Golf Digest, Newsweek and The Daily Beast.