
You put together a spreadsheet of your yardages with your clubs at different length swings. Basically you practice 3 partial swings you feel you execute best, and practice that swing with all your short clubs to your 8 or even 7 iron. Swing checkpoints using various clubs - seems to work well from 100-50yds better than 50yds to the green for me. The typical execution of the shot is to control the length of the backswing and follow through equal amounts, and use a smooth motion that is a simple gravity acceleration that doesn't flip the club nor decelerate.Ģ. 6 is the address position, 7 is slightly back, 8 is about 1/4 swing, 9 is left arm parallel to the ground and so on. One club Clock system - popular with Dave Pelz, is to pick a club you like to use around the greens and learn how far it goes with varying lengths of backswing as if your lead arm is the hour hand on a clock.

The answer is what you feel more confident to get you closer to the hole more often.ġ. Two or three, maybe 4, swings and use the club for a distance with one of those swings - like putt stroke, 1/4 stroke, 1/2 swing = interval system One club with different length swings to control distance - like the clock system

There are a couple, or a thousand, schools of thought on chipping. In most cases I always default to the 52 since it should be the easiest club to chip with but I've been wondering if there are clear cut instances in which I should be switching to a different given wedge? Hello everyone! Just a green recruit over here wondering what everyone's thoughts are on this.Įvery time I am near or around the green in scenario's in which I need to chip the ball, I am always wondering what the best wedge in each case would be? I currently have a 52, 56, and 60 degree in the bag.
