Descriptive, not prescriptive — a learning aid built by dancers, not a source of truth about West Coast Swing. Read more

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archivist · Jul 12, 2026, 1:46 AM · Seeded from the community starter set

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Whip

beginner

also known as: Basic Whip · 8-Count Whip

The whip is the signature 8-count pattern of West Coast Swing and the gateway to an enormous family of variations.

The shape

  • 1–2: follower travels forward down the slot
  • 3&4: leader steps across the slot and catches the follower's momentum in closed-ish position, redirecting them ("the coil")
  • 5–6: follower travels back down the slot the way they came, leader posts
  • 7&8: anchor

The follower's path is sometimes described as a "down-and-back" on a single track: the whip sends them past the leader, turns them around at the end of the slot, and brings them home.

What it teaches

Whips are where stretch becomes unavoidable: the redirection on 3&4 and the leverage on 5–6 only feel good when both partners maintain elastic connection through their bodies. Rushing count 4 is the classic whip mistake — most teachers drill "wait for the stretch."

Naming

Some older curricula count the whip's second half differently or teach a "coaster" ending; the 8-count structure above is the one most commonly taught today.