The next thing I had to figure out was why. Why were these better positions happening? If my lefty swing felt normal to me, just like my righty swing felt normal, how did they look so different, and why was my lefty swing so much better?
I pondered this for a long time, then one day it hit me. The only major difference was that my back arm, when I switched to lefty, was suddenly my non-dominant arm, and my dominant arm was in front - obviously a reversal from my right-handed swing. I decided to do some research to see if there was evidence out there that would corroborate this idea.
Sure enough, there was a plethora of evidence. Some of the best ball- strikers of all time, it turns out, were “front-arm dominant.” Ben Hogan, who many regard as the number one ball-striker of all time was one of them. He couldn’t find left-handed clubs as a kid, and ended up switching to righty because of it. In Hogan’s book, Five Lessons, he says, “I was born left-handed - that was the normal way for me to do things...The boys in my hometown, Fort Worth, used to buy their golf clubs at a five and dime store, and there simply never was any left-handed equipment in the barrel where the clubs were stacked.”
Nick Price, who is considered among the best ball-strikers of all time, was also a natural lefty. He said on the Fore the Love of the Game podcast, “I switched over from left-handed to right-handed when I was about nine or ten, because I could’t find any left-handed clubs.”
There are eight other natural lefties, other than Hogan and Price, who won Majors swinging from the right side - Byron Nelson, David Graham, Johnny Miller, Greg Norman, Curtis Strange, Sergio Garcia (ambidextrous - throws lefty, writes righty), Henrik Stenson, and Jordan Spieth. Furthermore, Nelson, Miller, Norman, Garcia, and Stenson, in addition to Hogan and Price, are also often considered among the best ball-strikers of their era.