How to improve your chipping in two minutes' time
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By Paul Ito, PGA, Illustration By Steve Karp
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If you want to control your shots more effectively around the greens, the best thing you can do is set up with a narrow stance and always remember to keep the shaft leaning toward the target. Since its a chip shot, you dont have to worry about releasing the club; instead, you want to hold the face square to ensure optimal directional control. This setup position also helps to avoid flubbed chipped shotsone of the most embarrassing and avoidable shots in golf. |
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Better pitching is a matter of perfecting your address positions
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By Jeff Yurkiewicz, PGA, With Ryan Noll; Photography By Warren Keating
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Playing well from within 100 yards is a must if you want to score well.
Just look at the best players in the world. They all miss the fairway
sometimes, but from within 100 yards, there isnt a player out there
who doesnt expect to knock it close from a hundie and in. This is
golfs scoring zone, where the difference between a long birdie putt
and a short tap-in can be made up by hitting the right kinds of shots.
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How To Resuscitate Your Short Game With Three Simple Tips
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By Derek Hooper, PGA, With Ryan M. Noll, Photography By Warren Keating, Illustrations By Steve Kar
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When someone refers to saving your score on a particular hole, it typically requires a chip, pitch or bunker shot to get the ball up and down. These three shots can have the biggest impact on your score when learned and executed properly, since you can only do so much to make up strokes from the
tee box or on the green. |
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By Barry Goldstein, Photo by Warren Keating
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How you make a practice swing when chipping from off the green is
especially critical. First of all, youre not just trying to calculate
how far you need to hit the ball, youre also trying to determine how
high the ball should fly and how much roll you want it to have. Also, a
practice stroke helps you to assess the lie, which can range from
having a ball thats sunken down in the rough to one sitting high on
the collar. All these variables come into play when making a practice
swing, which is why I think its critical that every golfer learn my
rehearsal technique before hitting a chip or pitch shot.
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Master golf's most difficult bunker shots
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By Jeff Ritter, PGA; with Charlie Schroeder
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If only we could tee up every golf shot. Wed always have perfect lies,
where no grass or trees or sand could get in the way of making clean
contact with the ball. Of course, that isnt the case. Between the tee
and green, we have to surrender to the course and play the ball as it
lies. That means adjusting to a number of challenging circumstances,
such as plugged bunker shots and awkward stances. For this story, Ive
concentrated my efforts on just those types of liesthe ones you get
where you look to your playing partners, throw your arms in the air and
say anybody have any suggestions? Take time to practice these shots,
and you wont wonder what to do the next time youre faced with an
awkward lie.
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By Tom Stickney II, G.S.E.D., PGA, Illustration by Phil Franke
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When you desire a softer type of explosion shot out of the bunker from
this normally hot lie, you need to employ an open clubface and
relaxed hands. Make your angle of attack steeper by leaning your weight
toward your front foot. This weight shift also accentuates the digging
action of the clubhead, making soft hands and an open clubface that
much more critical. Otherwise, the golf ball will come out with more
velocity than desired. |
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By T.J. Tomasi, Ph.D., PGA, Photography by D2 Productions
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They dont keep stats for it on the PGA Tour, but all pros excel at
hitting the mid-range lob. Its played with your highest-lofted club
(usually a lob wedge) from around 30 yards, and its one of those shots
that, if you pull it off to save par or make birdie, can energize the
rest of your round. |
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By Barry Goldstein, PGA, Illustration by Phil Franke
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Im sure youre familiar with the famous Sam Snead tip, Hear your
putts. To ensure that he didnt come out of his putts too early, the
Slammer held fast in his putting posture until he hopefully heard the
ball rattle the bottom of the cup. |
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By Debbie Steinbach, LPGA, Photography by Warren Keating
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The chipping and putting motions are linear in nature. By that, I mean
the face remains square to the target line throughout, never opening or
closing like it does with full swings from the fairway and the tee.
Moreover, the path of the stroke shouldnt deviate from the target
line. Realizing these facts can save a lot of amateur golfers a lot of
headaches around the green, where the majority of less-than-skilled
players chip the ball with a full-swing technique and leave themselves
with a lengthy putt. |
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By Scott Schneider, PGA; Illustration by Phil Franke
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Of course, only dedicated practice can help you become a better
short-game player, but if you master the key elements of pitching and
chipping, youll discover an immediate improvement in your scores. |
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