T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1008.1 | 7-iron I like!!! | LABC::MCCLUSKY | | Mon Jul 09 1990 20:40 | 20 |
| I hood a seven iron, aim right of the target and hit with a putting
stoke. Intent is to land on the green at the point nearest my
position and let the ball roll to the hole. If the distance to the pin
is very short from the first point on the green, I will use the same
procedure with an eight, nine or wedge. Most of the time I use the
seven, with just enough back swing to reach that previously described
point and a full follow-through as on a put (or more if I am some
distance from the green). Results are that even a missed shot
turns out pretty well, the ball is rolling.
Short pitches over hazards usually finds me using my wedge, with
my weight concentrated on my left side, aimed right of the target,
with a short back swing and full follow through. Again, hit the
closest point on the green and the ball will release and roll to
the pin. I want the ball on the green for as much of the time as
I can. Round before last, I sank one each way and yesterday I had
three puts of under six inches, all using my first approach with
the seven iron.
Big Mac
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1008.2 | it worked for me | DEMSUP::BLAISDELL | Sign up for Challenge Cup 90 | Mon Jul 09 1990 23:54 | 21 |
|
MH,
Early this year, I had severe problems with my chipping. Off-line
shots, chilis, you name it. After fiddling around with all sorts of
stances and all sorts of swings, I found something that ensured that
the ball stayed on-line with no stubs or chili-dips. The putting
stroke analogy is a good one. The technique to start off with, is
to drag the club back very low against the ground, then pull the
clubface through and towards your target. Exaggerate this technique
at first, then pretty soon you will feel confident enough to to make
a more normal swing.
The 7-iron is a good club from the fringe when you have a lot of
green to work with, but you still need to know how to hit the wedges
for those shots when you don't have a lot of green and you need the
ball to land softly and stop quickly. Use the above technique and
with lots of practice, your confidence in the chipping game will
return like mine did. Good luck!
-rick
|
1008.3 | Up and down... | USEM::VOUTSELAS | | Tue Jul 10 1990 15:39 | 57 |
|
MH,
this from memory cause it ain't as good as it use to be but I taught
my kid and he's excellent so it must be old age with me:
Size of green:
On small greens, you can use the "grandfather clock" swing with
a 9 , 8 , or 7 . The "grandfather clock" swing doesn't work that
well with S/W or W. That is slow take away, right shoulder back,
blade square away AT START and kept square, stance on narrow side,
hands ahead of ball, follow through WITH STIFF LEFT WRIST,
don't let the left wrist collapse at impact(much like the no wrist
break putt) and go through 6 inches past the hitting zone.
More green the rough, use 7 iron
Less green than rough, use 9 iron
You'll start to get the distance yourself, left shoulder slightly
left of target, kep right one back for inside take away.
For large greens: (medium fast)
Well you have 3 chipping and "pop up" swings:
1. Same as above
2. Same as above only with more green and more rough to
carry you need a second chipping swing and that is the slow breaking
of the left wrist(SLOW) come into the chipping area with left wrist
slightly back to give you more"air loft" follow through.
CAN play the ball A LITTLE up in the stance to promote
more "air time".
3 The pop up shot , that is almost all air and little run.
Most important is the right hand goes UNDER and not
rolls over at impact, other wise it's skull city!
FOR FAST GREENS:
I almost always use s/w , w , or nine iron. You start to
get used to your own distance.
Practise is important, and If I could only
practise with one club it would be a sand wedge, CAUSE YOU
CAN"T FOOL IT !! Any flaw in the swing will show in a sand wedge.
Good luck,
former good chipper,
AV
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1008.4 | Right hand rollover | RAYBOK::COOPER | MAD HACKER | Tue Jul 10 1990 18:54 | 8 |
| I may have started letting my right hand roll over the left on
my chip shots. They are much worse than pitching which is mainly
distance control right now and the occaisional pull. If I am within
10 feet of the green I feel like reaching for my putter no matter
what the lie or length of grass !! A real foolish situation ! YAHOO-
ride that Texas wedge !!!!!
Mad Hacker
|
1008.5 | PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE!! | NRADM::MCKINNON | grab a bag of bats, killer | Wed Jul 11 1990 08:35 | 26 |
| I've improved (in my opinion anyway) my short a great deal this year
and it's been because of only one thing - PRACTICE. Many weekends, I
head out to the practice green at my club (Amherst, NH) and chip & putt
for hours. I try chipping with the 7, 8, 9, PW & SW. This is a large
green with a lot of holes so I get to practice chipping to a pin with a
lot of green to work with or very little green.
Some things I have learned are:
Lot of green, little fringe - pitch and roll w/7 iron
Little green, little fringe - PW or SW try and land the ball in the
fringe
Uphill - Use less lofted club, 7 or 8
Downhill - Use more lofted club, 9, PW, or SW
Read the green before you hit your shot
Pick a spot to land the ball and aim for that spot
Get out those old copies of GD or Golf and browse through for pointers.
But the best remedy is:
PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE!!!!
Good Luck
Len
|
1008.6 | | CSOA1::KOBRIEN | Certifiable golfer | Wed Jul 11 1990 14:46 | 34 |
| MH,
Alot of people will tell you that I have an excellent short game.
Actually I'm a single digit handicapper on the strength of my short
game. The previous replies have some good advice and some suspect
advice. I guess you'll decide what's good and bad after you've tried
it. There are some important things to remember when trying to get up
and down. First is what I call soft hands. It's not so much holding
the club with a wimp grip as it is trying to feel the clubhead and the
stroke necessary to execute the shot. I almost always grip the club at
the bottom of the grip, I believe the closer your hands are to the
clubhead the easier it is to control. Next is to get the ball on the
ground as quickly as possible. The more roll you have/can afford the
more room for error. Always (well almost always) hit the ball crisply.
If you wimp out on the shot the results will be less than exciting. As
with putting, don't move your eyes. NEVER break your wrists, use a
shoulder swing. Lastly, how hard should you hit it? Well you can
probably throw the ball underhanded to the pin. (try it) That's how
hard to hit the shot.
These are the 'fundamentals' of chipping/pitching. I have basically 4
different types of shots with 3 different clubs. (With variations of a
theme maybe it's 10 shots with 5 clubs) Anyway the important thing to
remember is to look at the situation and figure out what you have to do
to get the ball ON THE GREEN. Then what to do to get it close to the
pin if possible. Then pick the club that will best execute the shot
that you've planned.
If you have questions on specific shots/situations maybe we can come up
with some interesting shots for you to try.
KO
|
1008.7 | Most noteable problem area | RAYBOK::COOPER | MAD HACKER | Wed Jul 11 1990 17:11 | 12 |
| My biggest problem lately has been (due to our drought) chipping
from hardpan knobs around the green. Usually they are 2-3 feet
higher than the green and there will be longer grass down in the
little valleys next to the fringe so it is almost immpossible to
putt from up there. Usually blade the ball 20-30 feet past the hole.
Always seems to happen when the pin is downhill from the mound. I
need to carry the ball about 8-10 feet then roll it down to the hole.
Guess if I kept the ball below the hole and on the green this wouldn't
be a problem !!! If I did this, I wouldn't be a 24 either !!!!!!!!!!!!!
Mad Hacker
|
1008.8 | Use your putter ;^)! | MSHRMS::GOGUEN | | Wed Jul 11 1990 21:45 | 15 |
| > Usually they are 2-3 feet
> higher than the green and there will be longer grass down in the
> little valleys next to the fringe so it is almost immpossible to
> putt from up there. Usually blade the ball 20-30 feet past the hole.
Hi MH,
Sounds like you would be better off putting the ball through the
valley and the longer grass, I'll bet 9 out of 10 times you could get it
closer than the 20-30 feet you have been averaging.
-Paul
|
1008.9 | I agree !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | RAYBOK::COOPER | MAD HACKER | Wed Jul 11 1990 22:17 | 5 |
| Hi paul, how ya doing ? Yea, last saturday evening as I walked away
from yet another blown par opportunity I had the same feeling. I
could have hit it closer with my putter !!!
Mad Hacker
|
1008.10 | | BLITZN::BERRY | U CAN'T TOUCH THIS | Thu Jul 12 1990 05:56 | 8 |
| re: .6 KOBRIEN
Hi KO. You say never break the wrist. I always did the same. But
after reviewing my tape by Jack Nicklaus, "Golf My Way," he uses a
"wristy" stroke while pitching, and a putting stroke while chipping.
Do you use a "wristy" stroke with your short pitches?
-dwight
|
1008.11 | Bear didn't need short game !! | RAYBOK::COOPER | MAD HACKER | Thu Jul 12 1990 15:44 | 4 |
| Just as an aside, Nicklaus has never been known for his short
game prowess.
Mad Hacker
|
1008.12 | Acceleration | SA1794::WELLSPEAK | Waiting for you to come along | Thu Jul 12 1990 15:50 | 6 |
| I only think about one thing, once I have chosen the club I'm going to use.
That is, no matter how easy and/or short the swing is, ALWAYS make sure the
clubhead is accelerating thru the ball. This has really helped my short game
a bunch.
Beak
|
1008.13 | Dice school of golf | WALTA::LENEHAN | Just Maui'd | Thu Jul 12 1990 16:09 | 12 |
|
Good point Beak, accelerating through the shot is one of those basic
things that tend to go away when you get closer to the hole. Along
with that is the tendency to "peak" ... which causes anything from
the Hormels to blading it. So now the last thing I say to
myself before taking the club back is, in Dice Clay Lingo
"Hit the Faughen thing" :)
Walta
|
1008.14 | | CSOA1::KOBRIEN | Certifiable golfer | Mon Jul 16 1990 14:09 | 19 |
| Dwight,
No I never use a wristy stroke (on the golf course) because I feel
that the club head speed can vary too much with relation to the arm
speed. Short pitches are from about 40 yard in (that's what I mean by
a short pitch short.)
I've never seen "Golf my way" so I'm not sure what a wristy
stroke means in this context. Does the right hand come over the left
through the swing (like a normal swing)?
RE: a couple back about comming off of hardpan. If the putter idea
doesn't pan out try using say a 4 or 5 iron and pitching it into the
fringe. The bounce on a sandwedge or even a pitching wedge can cause
you to 'belly' the ball. With the lower lofted iron there's more face
than sole.
KO
|
1008.15 | wristy pitching | DEC25::BERRY | U CAN'T TOUCH THIS | Mon Jul 16 1990 18:18 | 12 |
| KO,
The wristy stroke was snapping the wrist straight thru as he made
impact which got the ball up quick. Sort of the same kind of stroke
that a "wristy putter" uses. I've been playing with it and I sort of
like it, but it takes some getting use to, as anything strange. I had
been hitting into the balls, lately, on occasion, when just using the
arms, although that was the way I always pitched. I may go back to
that. But using the wrists does get the ball up nicely and sit it
down.
-dwight
|
1008.16 | Improved chipping !! | RAYBOK::COOPER | MAD HACKER | Tue Jul 17 1990 15:49 | 11 |
| Having spent the last week practicing off my carpet has
helped ! I have developed a chipping stroke to use with
my short irons that incorporates my putting grip and
stroke and my pitching stance and I seem to be hitting
the ball very straight and with good distance control.
It will take some time to get really precise with distance
but at least I can hit it at the hole now !!!! By using my
putting grip, my left wrist stays firm through the ball.
Thanks for all the tips.
Mad Hacker
|
1008.17 | What is peaking | 36577::MURPHY | | Wed Jul 18 1990 11:21 | 10 |
| > things that tend to go away when you get closer to the hole. Along
> with that is the tendency to "peak" ... which causes anything from
> the Hormels to blading it. So now the last thing I say to
Can you explain the term "peak"?
Thanks,
Dan
|
1008.18 | Save face with a good peak | WALTA::LENEHAN | Just Maui'd | Wed Jul 18 1990 11:55 | 34 |
| Reply -1
Hi Dan,
The term "peaking" means to lift the head up in an attempt to see
where the shot is going. If we were to turn our head, keeping it
pivoting around the upper spine, which will keep the nice underhand
toss type of swing... rather than trying to watch the shot by lifting and
turning the head so the eye's become horizontal, it would be OK to
peak.
Geee what a confusing statement !
If your head remains like this through the stroke;
: ) the eye's remain , one on top
of the other. Keeping the
underhand toss type of swing.
See how happy you'll be !!
If your head comes up so your eyes are ;
.. by trying to watch your ball you
just pulled your right shoulder
up. See, now you've lost face !
No more mouth !
This type of peaking will destroy a swing. All kinds of BAD things
will result.
Walta
|
1008.19 | good shot game helps scoring... | DINSCO::BURKE | Network Management | Wed Jul 18 1990 12:48 | 49 |
| MH,
re: .0
On the pulling the pitch shots left -- could be that the left hip
is open. The cause is sometimes a straight left knee at impact. According
to Toski, the knee should be slightly flexed at impact. If you try it in
slow motion you'll notice your hips will be square to the line at impact
with the knee slightly flexed. With the knee straight your hips can get
ahead of your swing resulting in a outside-in pull on easy swings (with a
SW, for example), and an outside-in pull/slice with the less lofted clubs.
Bill Breen asked that I write up my technique, so here goes...
For any shot from 30-100 yards I usually use my SW. My swing
thought is the back of the left hand is the clubface. I want the clubface
to be square at impact. I don't worry about wrist cock unless I know that I
have to hit a short, high shot over a bunker, at which time I will make a
conscious (unnatural...) wrist cock. The back of the hand feels
perpendicular to the target line when I reach the top on the backswing, and
then I move it to square at impact. That is how I get it to go straight.
In terms of distance, there are two different backswing methods
which I use -- either take the club back to the same position and vary the
swing speed, or take the club back to specific positions (9, 10, 11
o'clock) and use the same swing speed. To keep it simple for me I usually
take it back to the same spot on the backswing till I reach my own comfort
zone (i.e. I feel the back of my left hand in the correct position,
everything else feels good). For shorter shots I will mess a bit with wrist
cock and length of the backswing, but those are the tricky half-swing shots
which can lead to jerkiness because each swing is different.
Attitude is important. I try to avoid the thought of "just get it
on the green, two-putt, and get the heck out of here...", especially when a
two-putt will bring something worse than par. When I think like that, and
I'm sure others must as well, my scores balloon up.
For chip shots, Gary Wilson has absolutely the best game I've
every seen. He always uses his SW and is able to "hit" a spot and get the
appropriate roll to the hole. I always end up short and slightly off line
on short chips with a SW. Since I am unable to use Gary's technique I rely
on reading the line and using less lofted clubs to roll it to the hole.
Also, I found that with my Ping perimeter weighted clubs I could not easily
judge how to chip for distance (felt like I was using telephone poles).
This is my second summer using tour blades (first MacGregor and now
Titelist). My feel for all shots, especially my chipping, has improved
dramatically with the new clubs.
Jeff
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1008.20 | difference between peek (sneak a look) and peak (like the Matterhorn) | DEMSUP::BLAISDELL | Sign up for Challenge Cup 90 | Wed Jul 18 1990 13:47 | 8 |
|
re. .17 & .18
Ahem...I think what was meant was "peeking" not "peaking". Perhaps
.17's reply was tongue-in-cheek. ~ ~
-rick
|
1008.21 | You say potato I say pudada | WALTA::LENEHAN | Just Maui'd | Wed Jul 18 1990 14:08 | 9 |
|
Reply -1 > Rick
Well then;
As Gilda Radner would say "Never mind"
Walta
|