Pitching and Chipping | Golf Box Usa | Page 7

These 3 common chipping mistakes can plague any golfer, especially when it comes to the amateur golfer. From leaning the club forward too far, playing the golf ball back in the stance too far, or stabbing down at the ball to hopefully make good contact, these are the 3 most common chipping mistakes we see from amateur golfers on a regular basis.

 

 

Source

3 Great tips on how to land a pitch shot on the required distance. In this video Mark Heinemann PGA AA Golf Professional shows you the proper set up to nail those 30-90 yard pitch shots.

 

source

3 Big Chipping Mistakes Amateur Golfers Make

These 3 common chipping mistakes can plague any golfer, especially when it comes to the amateur golfers. From leaning the club forward too far, playing the golf ball back in the stance too far, or stabbing down at the ball to hopefully make good contact, these are the 3 most common chipping mistakes we see from amateur golfers on a regular basis.

 

source

David Collins gives his favorite secret on how to increase your distance, accuracy, and consistency in your chip shot. You will never believe him until you do the drill on a regular basis and it will increase your distance.

 

source

Are you still struggling with Chipping? We cover the 3 most important areas of chipping to help you achieve your Tour Precision!

There are 3 main categories when talking about chipping more consistently:

1. Club Selection

Unless you are able to practice regularly, stick with 1 or 2 main clubs on all chip shots, typically a pitching wedge and a lob or sand wedge. Getting a feel for 1 or 2 clubs is going to be easier than trying to master 3 or 4 for each specific situation or lie.
Pitching Wedge – use when you want to get the ball on the ground sooner and rolling out more (more of a bump and run technique)
Lob or Sand Wedge – for shots that travel farther in the air with less roll out (more of a high soft shot or flop shot)

2. Setup

Feet closer together, pressure slightly forward, hands basically in line with the ball. A common mistake is to have the hands way too far in front, which de-lofts the club, resulting in a lot of golfers hitting down too much on the ball and chunking the shot.
Ball position should be pretty center of the stance, back a little bit if you’re in a bad lie or thick rough.

3. Motion

When you take the club back, make sure the club head stays outside the hands. Swinging around the body or dragging the club inside tends to make golfers hit behind the ball and chunk the shot.
Swing more high to low, rather than low to high. Low to high motion results in a flipping motion, which can cause a bladed shot.

 

source