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The T-finish Mistake
The T-finish Mistake
Authored by: Brady
Posted on: 13 June 2026

A lot of golfers grew up hearing the same advice: keep the head down, stay down through impact, and extend the arms as far as possible toward the target. The idea was that more extension meant a longer, lower path through the ball and more power.

Here's the catch. Reaching the arms all the way out pulls the upper body — torso, spine, head — forward with them. Once that much forward lean has happened, getting the club back up into a tall finish becomes a fight. Instead of folding naturally and rising up over the shoulder, the arms get yanked back around and in low, leaving the finish wide and deep.

Two long-time students ran into this not long ago. Both had worked for years on getting up into a clean finish, and both kept ending up a little too wide despite all that work. When the swings were broken down side by side, the cause was identical for both: over-extension through the ball.

One image that'... Read More

Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 19 October 2012
Comments: 18
Cheryl Cassidy has been using the Peak Performance Golf Swing for nearly two years and has expressed her excitement in the progress she's been making. But, she wrote in a question that I think a lot... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 8 October 2012
Comments: 29
Doug Pinner asked me for some advice a while back that I think many of you could benefit from. It relates to getting the right swing weight for your clubs so that you can maximize your ability to hit... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 3 October 2012
Comments: 55
A reverse weight shift--where you end up with your weight on your back leg as you finish your swing--is one of the biggest robbers of both distance and accuracy. That's the problem that Jerry Shulman... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 30 September 2012
Comments: 35
I received this great email a few weeks ago from Ron Kriete, a Surgite from Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. I like it because it proves how dangerous advice can be from people who know nothing about the... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 29 September 2012
Comments: 7
I recently had the pleasure of giving a lesson to a first-time student named Rick Baldwin, a lefty who has been been playing golf for 20 years but has only been with the Surge Swing for about six... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 24 September 2012
Comments: 25
A few weeks ago, I spent four days in Colorado teaching a series of our one-day Performance Schools. I really like this format for a number of reasons, but perhaps the best, from a teacher's... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 22 September 2012
Comments: 16
Earlier this summer, Russ Bamber, wrote to me asking for help with a problem that I don't hear of all that often. "Don, all of a sudden every one of my iron shots pulls left? My drives go straight,... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 18 September 2012
Comments: 42
Barry Sinclair, of Western Australia, sent me this question asking for an explanation of why many golfers have difficulty hitting their longer clubs well. "Seem to hit my irons well ( just a beginner... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 17 September 2012
Comments: 37
Today's tip is the natural follow-on from the one we covered yesterday on how to grasp your club correctly to set the proper amount of forward shaft lean at address. The question is from a Surgite... Read More
Authored by: Don Trahan
Posted on: 16 September 2012
Comments: 38
Today's question from Paul Myers of Franklin, Indiana is a really good one because it foucses on a key difference between the Peak Performance Golf Swing and almost every other golf swing theory out... Read More