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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.
Allow the club to naturally follow an outside-and-up backswing path.
Dont try to make this happen; just relax your hands and let it go. As
is the case with most shots, youd naturally assume that in order to
get out of a fried egg lie, youd need to follow through to your
normal finish positionbut not here! You want to
leave the clubhead in the sand, buried an inch or so behind the ball.
All your effort and momentum should transfer into the sand, not through
it. This type of action will make a huge hole in the bunker and
will not transmit much energy to the golf ball. If your club follows
through at all, itll only add to the velocity of the shot and decrease
the height at which the ball leaves the trap. But if you stop the club
immediately at impact, and maintain soft hands and an open clubface,
the ball will come out with more height and less speed. When executing
this shot, remember to accelerate down, not through, and fried eggs
will become your specialty.
PGA professional Tom Stickney is the director of instruction at the Club at Cordillera in Vail, Colo.
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