Alright, buckle up, because I’m gonna walk you through my weekend project – trying to mimic the legendary swing of Fred Couples. Yeah, I know, ambitious, right? But hey, gotta aim high!

It all started with me watching some old tournament footage. Freddie’s tempo, that effortless power… I was mesmerized. So, I decided, “I’m gonna try that!” Not to become a pro or anything, just to see if I could capture a little bit of that magic.
First thing I did was hit the range. I started slow, real slow. Forget about distance, I focused entirely on my rhythm. Watched a bunch of slow-motion videos of Couples online, noticed how smooth his takeaway is, how deliberate his transition is. I tried to feel that. Like I was pulling the club away with my core, not my hands.
The initial results? Hilarious. I sliced everything. Felt like I was swinging in slow motion while everyone else was blasting it past me. Humbling, to say the least. But I stuck with it.
I concentrated on the transition next. Couples has this incredible pause at the top of his swing. It’s not really a pause, more like a brief gathering of energy. I tried to replicate that. Focused on feeling my weight shift and my hips starting to turn before my hands started down. That was tricky. Really tricky. I felt like I was gonna fall over half the time.
After a couple of hours, something started to click. I started to feel that effortless power he has. The ball was still going all over the place, but the feeling was there. More importantly, I stopped trying to kill the ball. Started letting the club do the work.

Then, I took it to the course. Now, the range is one thing, the course is another. The pressure of actually having to hit a good shot definitely messed with my tempo. I found myself rushing things, getting tense. So, I went back to the basics. Slow takeaway, deliberate transition, smooth follow-through. I reminded myself, “Just like Freddie.”
I didn’t suddenly start striping every shot, not even close. But I hit some really nice ones. Shots that felt effortless, that went further than I expected. And even the bad shots were… less bad. More playable. It was progress.
The biggest takeaway? It’s not about copying Freddie’s swing exactly. It’s about understanding the principles behind it: tempo, rhythm, effortless power. It’s about finding your own version of that. I’m still a long way from playing like Freddie, but I definitely learned a lot this weekend. And had a blast trying.
- Focus on Tempo: Slow everything down.
- Deliberate Transition: Feel that weight shift.
- Effortless Power: Let the club do the work.
Would I recommend trying this? Absolutely. Even if you don’t end up swinging like Freddie, you’ll probably learn something about your own swing. And that’s always a good thing.