Bryson DeChambeau’s Indoor Drill to Fix Your Swing Fast
© Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Bryson DeChambeau, the ever-meticulous mind of modern golf, has once again taken the spotlight — but this time, it’s not for bombing 400-yard drives or dissecting Augusta like a mad scientist. No, DeChambeau is reaching out to amateurs — weekend warriors and mid-handicappers alike — with a surprisingly simple, profoundly useful winter drill that you can do right in your living room.

A Drill Built for the Off-Season Grind

A Drill Built for the Off-Season Grind
© Bill Streicher Imagn Images

In a recent feature by The Golfing Gazette, DeChambeau reveals a swing drill that strips away the noise and gets to the heart of consistency: balance, tempo, and controlled movement. It’s the kind of practice he leans into when the weather turns hostile and the range is buried in frost. And if Bryson — who turned his own body into a biomechanical marvel — is dialing back to focus on fundamentals, amateurs should pay close attention.

The drill? A slow-motion swing, done indoors, with intense focus on sequencing and muscle engagement. No ball needed. No net. Just your body, your club, and enough space to swing without shattering a lamp. DeChambeau recommends taking the club back deliberately, pausing at the top, and completing the downswing in a smooth, slow arc. The objective is not power, but awareness — feeling each part of the swing connect like gears in a finely-tuned machine.

Training Like a Tour Pro (Without the Price Tag)

What makes this stand out is its accessibility. There’s no simulator, no launch monitor, no training aid costing three figures. Just discipline and patience. Bryson stresses that amateurs often rush the swing, lose their posture, and forget that the golf swing is, at its best, a chain reaction of properly timed movements. Practicing slowly, indoors, with complete control, rewires muscle memory and reinforces swing mechanics in a way that range sessions — often hurried and reactive — rarely do.

The Pro Secret Hidden in Plain Sight

And here’s the twist: Bryson uses this exact drill himself. Not a variation. Not a simplified version. The same thing. It’s a quiet reminder that even the most technical minds in golf find value in simplicity.

So, if winter’s closing in and the clubs are gathering dust, take a page from DeChambeau’s playbook. Master the slow swing. Build your awareness. And come spring, you might just find your tempo — and your scores — in a whole new place.