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Owned by Trenton

The Consistent Golfer

4 members • $25/month

The Consistent Golfer is a community built on fundamentals, clarity, and ease. This is about learning the core ideas.

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Trentonchase

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5 contributions to The Consistent Golfer
Alignment
Alignment is one of the most overlooked fundamentals in golf, yet it quietly controls everything that follows. You can have a great swing, good tempo, and solid contact, but if your alignment is off, you’re fighting yourself before the club ever moves. Alignment sets your intention. It tells your body where to move, where to swing, and where the ball is meant to go. When your feet, hips, shoulders, and clubface aren’t working together, the body will compensate. Those compensations are what create pulls, blocks, over-the-top moves, and inconsistency. Good alignment simplifies the swing. When you’re aimed correctly, the body doesn’t need to manipulate the club to “save” the shot. You can rotate freely, trust your motion, and let the club return naturally to the ball. Less effort. Less thinking. More repeatability. Most golfers don’t struggle because they lack talent—they struggle because they’re misaligned and then try to fix the result instead of the cause. Alignment gives you a true baseline. It allows you to diagnose your swing honestly instead of guessing.
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The Takeaway
The takeaway sets the tone for the entire swing. One of the most common mistakes I see is an early hand flip. The club gets rolled inside, the toe points straight up, and the wrists are fully hinged before the club even reaches waist height. When this happens, the swing becomes hand-driven instead of body-driven. Timing becomes fragile, and consistency disappears. A clean takeaway keeps the hands quiet and the club connected to the body. The chest, arms, and club move together. The clubhead stays outside the hands early, the face remains stable, and wrist hinge happens naturally as a result of the turn—not as a forced move. If you rush the hinge, you’ll chase positions.If you let the body move the club, the swing organizes itself. Slow down the first move.Let the takeaway be simple.Everything after it gets easier.
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Swing Plane
Every golf swing lives on a spectrum: flat, neutral, or steep. A flat swing travels too much around the body. It can feel powerful, but timing becomes fragile and misses tend to go left. A steep swing moves too much down and across the ball, often creating pulls, slices, and inconsistent contact. Neutral lives in the middle. A neutral swing plane allows the club to match your body’s rotation instead of fighting it. The club works up and down naturally, pressure stays balanced, and the ball flight becomes predictable. We don’t chase extremes.We return to neutral. Because consistency isn’t built by forcing positions—it’s built by removing excess and letting the swing organize itself.
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Trail Side Thoughts
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Trail Side Thoughts
Golf Mentorship
Trying to get a soft feel for who's looking to improve their golf game in 2026 - Simplify the game and get away from swing tips. The fundamentals are crucial, and it's easy to deviate; I did. Most things in golf derive from a few core principals - Set up, mechanics, sequencing, and of course the mental aspect. Drop a comment
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Trenton Leany
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3points to level up
@trenton-leany-4589
My name is Trenton, I specialize in golf and have a small personal brand

Active 17d ago
Joined Jan 13, 2026
Grand Junction, Colorado