Alignment
Beginner vs Advanced Approaches to Alignment
Compare simple setup checkpoints with refined alignment choices for shaping shots and handling course demands.

Beginners need clarity
A newer golfer should keep alignment simple: pick a target, set the clubface, and make the feet roughly parallel. Don’t worry about tiny shoulder angles or shaping shots yet. A consistent pre-shot routine is more valuable than a complicated checklist.
Beginner priorities:
- Use an intermediate target.
- Set the clubface before the feet.
- Practice with alignment sticks occasionally.
- Choose generous targets away from trouble.
- Notice start direction more than curve.
Advanced players need intention
Experienced golfers can adjust alignment to fit shot shape and strategy. A fade may require body lines slightly left of the face. A draw may feel more closed. A punch under wind might use a narrower stance and a different ball position. The key is making those choices on purpose.
The difference in practice
| Area | Beginner approach | Advanced approach |
|---|---|---|
| Target | Center of green or fairway | Specific window and safe miss |
| Setup | Square and repeatable | Matched to shot shape |
| Feedback | Did it start online? | Did start, curve, and finish match plan? |
| Tools | Alignment stick, gate drill | Random targets, uneven lies, pressure games |
Don’t skip the basics
Low-handicap golfers still drift. Feet get lazy, shoulders open, and favorite targets become vague. The best players revisit simple alignment often because it keeps their more advanced choices honest.
A useful progression
Start with square. Add intentional curves. Then practice those curves with different clubs, lies, and winds. Alignment grows from setup skill into course-management skill.