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Golf Fitness

Fitness & Flexibility

Golf fitness exercises are not just for tour players. The rotational demands of the golf swing mean that targeted flexibility and strength work has a direct, measurable effect on distance, consistency, and how your body feels on the back nine.

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Golf fitness is a legitimate performance category, not a supplement to instruction. The golf swing requires hip and thoracic mobility, core stability, and the kind of single-leg strength that most golfers never train specifically. Golf fitness exercises that address these areas (hip flexor flexibility, anti-rotation core strength, glute activation) translate directly into a more powerful and repeatable swing. Golf strength training for the sport is not bodybuilding. It is movement-based work that matches the physical demands of what you are trying to do on the course.

StackingBirdies has gathered fitness and flexibility instruction from coaches and trainers who work specifically with golfers. If you are working on adding distance and want to address the physical side alongside the technical, the Add Distance section covers both mechanical and athletic approaches.

What muscles are most important for golf?

The glutes and hip rotators are the primary power generators in the golf swing. They initiate the downswing sequence and drive the rotation that produces clubhead speed. Thoracic spine mobility is what allows the shoulders to turn fully on the backswing without the lower back compensating. Core stability, particularly in the obliques and deep abdominals, transfers the power generated by the lower body into the arms and club rather than losing it through a collapsing mid-section.

How do I improve my hip rotation for golf?

Hip rotation is limited by hip flexor tightness (which prevents full hip turn on the backswing) and glute and piriformis tightness (which restricts through-rotation on the downswing). A daily routine of hip flexor stretches, 90/90 hip mobility work, and glute activation exercises before a round addresses both. Meaningful improvement in hip mobility requires consistent work over weeks, but the payoff in swing freedom and power is real.

Can stretching really improve my golf swing?

Yes, with one qualification: static stretching alone before you play does not reliably improve performance and may temporarily reduce power output. What does improve the swing is regular mobility work done away from the course, combined with a dynamic warm-up (leg swings, hip circles, arm rotations) immediately before play. Golfers who build genuine hip and thoracic mobility over time consistently report a fuller backswing, less strain on the lower back, and better contact through the ball.

Golf Fitness

Fitness & Flexibility

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