Well, first of all, sometimes the pin is in a situation where you have to go over an uneven lie, or you have to go over the edge of a bunker, or you have to go over a little tree and you need it to stop a little quicker.
So, you take out your loftier golf club, your lob wedge or your sand wedge. Put the ball in the middle of your stance, a little weight left and swing your arms up and down. And after it hits the green, it will slow down and stop because it has so much loft on it.
Now, for a chip shot, or a bump and run shot, it's the same golf shot, but it's done with a pitching wedge, or you could even use a 9 iron.
In this situation, the pin is in the back of the green and there is no trouble in front of you. So, you put the ball in the middle of your stance, put a little weight on your left leg, and swing your arms up and down. But because you did it with a pitching wedge, the shot takes off flatter and runs more.
Now, some of you get confused because the pin is in the back of the green and you want it to run, but if you use your sand wedge or your lob wedge. That won't happen. That won't run.
So, make sure in the future when you need a running chip shot, use a pitching wedge and put the ball in the middle of your stance. And if you really want it to run a lot, put it in the back of your stance. Try to change the golf club. Control the distance you want the chip shots to go by your club selection, not by the length of your swing.
A chip shot or a bump and run shot is also useful from the fairway or any place around the green that you don't have any obstructions. Sometimes you can be much more accurate by simply bumping an 8 iron up the fairway and letting it roll onto the green instead of trying to pitch it with accuracy. Usually your alignment will be a lot better using this tactic because much more of the shot occurs on the ground.
Thanks and have a great day.
Copyright 2006 David Nevogt
Free Golf Instruction Video
The first mistake is, if your shoulder doesn't move and doesn't turn backwards, then your arms will run into it and the shoulder will tilt up in the air. And if you do that, the golf swing will look too vertical, and you'll hit the ground and you'll hit a lot of shots off to the right.
On the other hand, some of you think so much of turning that you turn your right shoulder and your hips together, and the golf club gets way around inside.
So, for those of you that do this, you'll wind up hitting a lot of tops because the club won't swing back down.
So, let me give you some golf backswing advice. This is the correct way. After you've addressed the golf ball, the right shoulder starts turning backwards. And that way, this enables the golf club to swing up on the correct plane.
So, if you can move your shoulder out of the way and don't turn your bottom much, the golf club will move up on plane as you turn away from the golf ball.
Now, I'm going to tell you the role that the knees play during the entire golf swing. The correct posture in golf, in order to improve your golf swing, is that you bend at your hips, over the bones that are on both sides of your hips.
We don't sit in this sport. We have our knees slightly flexed, and then we bend from the hips.
In the golf swing, the knees never ever get straight in the backswing. They stay flexed the entire way.
The game of golf starts and ends right here. Good players play the sport from inside the right knee as they turn. It doesn't go out and it doesn't go straight. But it stays where it was at the beginning of the backswing, so as we start back the knees don't move.
Now, the downswing: As the arms start to unwind the knees don't move at all. The centrifugal force, the speed of the golf club swings into the ground.
As the club passes you and your left hip starts to move out of the way, then, and only then, does the right knee start to get straighter in the downswing after impact.
And the entire time, make sure that you don't lock your left knee in the downswing. Keep it slightly flexed as you swing through. You don't have to come all the way up and straighten it up.
I think that that might help you improve your golf swing. Think about this tip a couple of times and make sure that this is what you're thinking of when you swing the golf club, in relation to your knees.
David Nevogt has sinced written about articles on various topics from Recreation and Sports, Golf Guide and Golf Guide. Bobby Eldridge is the Head Instructor for the PurePoint Golf Academy where he teaches "The Simple Golf Swing" theory. You can check out PurePoint Golf instructional DVDs at. David Nevogt's top article generates over 9900 views. to your Favourites.
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