Chipping: Simple Yet Tricky

Think about it:  chipping is such a simple action.  The only stroke that you can make that is more simple at its core is a putting stroke, and chipping can certainly be done in a nearly identical fashion to putting. At the same time, so many players have trouble chipping effectively.  Put some players just off the green with a perfect lie in the short grass and the results will be somewhere between inconsistent and disastrous. It almost goes without saying at this point, but I have completely modeled my short game using the techniques outlined in Dave Pelz’s Short Game Bible.  This certainly goes for chipping too.  To summarize his chipping technique: Stand relatively tall, close to the ball, feet close together, turned about 20 degrees toward the target, with the ball positioned off the back ankle. Around 65% of your weight should be on the front foot. Grip down a bit with “dead hands”.  Keep the wrists firm and quiet throughout the stroke, but not tense. Use a finesse swing with the upper

Practice Gotchas That Can Hurt Your Game

Practice Green

Many weekend players aren’t big on practice and like to show up on the weekends, knock the ball around, and have fun with friends.  I think that’s great.  The game is what we make of it, and hopefully we concentrate on keeping it fun. But there are many of us that put in work to improve.  In many cases, it’s a significant amount of work.  That’s great, as well, but it’s painful to see people working so hard, all the while setting themselves back by not practicing effectively.  I’ve been guilty of it myself. Dave Pelz is a big proponent of (and as far as I know, coined the phrase) “practice doesn’t make perfect, practice makes permanent”.  Bad practice will groove bad habits which can take years to erase. Here are some areas where bad practice habits could hurt your game. I’ve done some of these in the past, so if any seem familiar, you’re not alone. The Problem of Putt-Putt-Putt I bet a lot of you are guilty of this one.  Tell me if

The Importance of Proper Putting Setup

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Over the years, I have always been a pretty decent putter.  I typically have a lot of confidence and putts out in the 6-10 foot range are very makeable for me.  At least I always believe they are, even though I don’t make them all. Around seven years ago, I read Dave Pelz’s Putting Bible for the first time, and that kind of revolutionized my putting game.  I adopted the pure in-line square (PILS) putting stroke, and I learned a lot of things about why we miss putts, why we make putts, and how to learn how to make more putts.  I saw immediate improvement in my putting, even though I had never really struggled to begin with. I learned the value of simplicity and the importance of  a repeatable putting stroke. Fast forward to this season, and as my ball striking began to improve from the last few years and I began to hit more greens in regulation, I started to notice that I was three-putting a lot more than I had in previous

Keeping a Quiet Lower Body in the Sand

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Sand play has been one of those things I haven’t been working on much this season because honestly, despite my struggles earlier, I just don’t hit in the sand that much.  It seems counter-intuitive until you realize that I was hitting the ball so poorly that I wasn’t even close enough to the greens to get in green-side bunkers. Now, things are coming together and my misses are putting me in a lot more green-side and fairway bunkers. I used to be a fairly decent sand player, but I noticed as I began to hit from more sand this year, that I had lost my way.  Suddenly, I was facing routine bunker shots that I was blasting way over the green because I was catching them almost cleanly.  I’d “adjust” and hit another one for practice and would skull it over the green. Something was very wrong. I like to use Dave Pelz’s recommended bunker shot technique from his Short Game Bible.  I’ve had a lot of success with that over the years and discussed

Develop Creativity Around the Practice Green

Practice is not something we golfers seem to like much.  Of course, most of us would rather be out on the course than at the driving range or practice green.  That’s only natural.  But we put in the time anyway, so that we can play better golf.  Unfortunately, we don’t tend to have the best practice habits. We often approach it like a chore, instead of looking at it like critical preparation for what we really love to do.  You can see it clearly at the driving range.  Watch as people aimlessly beat balls down range with no target, no desired shot, and no purpose. We tend to fall into the same trap around the practice green. Watching the U.S. Open last week, there was one shot that set all this off in my mind. I want to say it was Sunday.  Maybe, maybe not.  Ricky Barnes hit an approach shot and missed the green to the right.  He wasn’t on the collar.  He was in that nasty, horrible, U.S. Open rough that we hope