Finesse Wedge - Chipping and Pitching
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The three danger moves of wedge play are:
- Too much wrist loading (lag or dragging) in transition.
- Too much axis tilt
- The upper body getting closer to the ground
If you find that you have ALL THREE, I recommend working on the wrst lag and upper body pivot first, then working on the upper body lunging forward.
Tags: Poor Contact, Standing Up, Cast, Pitch, Chip, Concept, Intermediate
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The drill is the three danger moves of wedge play.
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Now whether we're talking finesse wedges or distance wedges,
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if you struggle with your wedge play,
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I get almost guaranteed that you have one
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or all three of these movements.
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And these three movements tend to work really well for the driver,
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but they tend to cause a lot of contact problems with the wedges.
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And if you have contact problems with the wedges,
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it's next to impossible to build any kind of feel.
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So the three movements that are going to really kill your wedge play,
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are number one, the upper body getting closer to the ball
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during the downswing.
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Number two, the upper body moving away from the target,
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or away from the golf ball during the backswing,
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or during the downswing.
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Sorry.
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And then the third one is dragging the handle forward,
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or creating a lot of leg and shaft length.
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Usually, those three go hand in hand,
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because I would get closer to the golf ball,
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go back to help shallow it out,
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and then drag forward so that I don't hit behind the golf ball.
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In fact, many of us were encouraged by well-meaning instructors
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when we were taught more that block and hold-sile chip shot,
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where you would basically play it kind of like that.
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And you can see that you can hit OK shots that way,
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but you're going to tend to hit them higher up on the face.
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They're going to launch a higher with lower spin.
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That's great for the driver.
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That's great for your three would, not so good for wedges.
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And it takes away all bounce, so you get very little margin of error,
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especially on those thinner grass or tight lies.
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If you find that you're struggling with your wedge play,
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and you look and you see that you have all three of them,
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here's the normal progression that I would use
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with most of my students.
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And I will say it's changed a little bit over the years.
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In fact, early in my career, I was really unaware
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of the up movement during the downswing,
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but after looking at three days of some really good wedge players,
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the Stanutley's Brian Gay, Luke Donald,
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many of the best wedge players that I've seen,
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definitely at about halfway down in their downswing,
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their upper body starts elevating or standing up,
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where what I noticed was a lot of the golfers who kind of had
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the yips, their upper body would continue to go down
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and by continuing to go down, they had no chance
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but to sacrifice their release or drag the handle,
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they had no opportunity to really use bounce
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in an effective way.
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So I now tend to start by teaching the up movement
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in the cast pattern, because the cast pattern with the arm
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of unhinging without letting the face really rotate
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should be triggered a bit by working vertically
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with the upper body.
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So you've got that pattern like this.
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And what you'll see is if you hang back and you do that pattern,
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you'll still use some bounce,
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so your misses won't be terrible,
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but they'll just be high, you may hit them thin,
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you may hit them a little fat, but you will still use some bounce.
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So it'll almost come off more like a flop shot,
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and you'll start to ask, well, how do I flight it down?
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That's where the second piece of adding that third,
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or taking away the third dangerous moves of going backward,
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and adding the third move of going forward
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really helps tie it together.
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So you've got your upper body shifting a little bit forward
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especially during the backswing,
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and then the big two movements that clean up most wedge play
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is working on that cast sequence with the arms,
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and working on the upper body standing up
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during, especially the second half of the downswing,
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but the majority of the downswing to help with that cast pattern.
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If you struggle with wedge play,
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we've got lots of videos to help with,
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specifically the arms,
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especially the body staying forward,
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a little bit with the upper body moving away,
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because that one's relatively simple once you've identified it,
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but if you're struggling, take a look on video
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and see which one of those three, or if all of the three,
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see which ones you're struggling with,
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by working on that, it will hopefully improve
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your turf contact by getting you to use the bounce,
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help you work on solidness of contact,
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and that way you can search and develop feel
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and turn your weakness of wedge play into a strength.