Orikoru
Tour Winner
Bored in the office and my thoughts are being consumed with short game at the moment, so I thought I'd make a long, rambling thread about it.
Here's an interesting video I watched the other day:
Alex Elliott getting a chipping lesson from Justin Rose's coach.
The interesting part is early on when he says he's been trying to use the bounce more and thinks that has killed his chipping. The coach agrees and says the best players all chip with hands a little bit forward, and essentially that 'using the bounce' consciously is a myth. A lot of you would have watched Dan Grieve's videos, where he says differently and teaches a 'release 2' where the hands aren't forward and you don't even strike ball first in some cases. If you haven't seen his stuff, here's the latest example:
Dan Grieve 'release 2' common mistakes.
I think maybe I'm in the same boat as Elliott here and trying to use bounce has messed me up a little bit. When I had my chipping lesson three months ago, he taught it like the coach in this video, he me open my stance a fair bit in order to leave room for me to keep my hands in front of the ball - there was no talk of 'using bounce' that I can recall. My chipping has been up and down since the lesson I'd say, some days it's decent, other days I have a mare and cannot get the low point correct. I've also lost the ability to hit little chip and runs with a PW or other less-lofted type clubs - I keep getting this weird yip that knifes the ball when I try that. But chipping with 50 & 54 has been ok - perhaps more loft lets me swing a bit longer and looser without fear it's going to go miles, whereas with less loft I'm very stabby. However, when I do want use a low bump and run I use my hybrid with a putting stroke and that has worked very well for me.
It's obviously a confidence/pressure related activity as well, because on my lunch-time practice knock yesterday I hit a couple of superb chips - nothing riding on it, so arms are relaxed and hands are softer. The whole strike / bounce thing has even more prevalence now we're in winter as well, as surely actively using bounce runs the risk of just hitting wet mud and causing a duff.
So what sort of chipping method are you most akin to? Are you hands forward at all times or using the bounce a bit more? Can you chip with all different clubs or do you stick to the higher lofted wedges or one club in particular?
I think I'm going to stick with the hands forward technique (unless I'm having to flop it over something of course) - using 50 mostly if I want it to release a bit, or 54 if I need a bit of height and less release. I chipped quite well in my last round but everything was stopping a good 10 or 12 feet short as I haven't got used to my landing spots yet on the softer greens - need to start flying it a bit further. Another thing I think might help me is to stop focusing on my technique while I'm chipping and just focus on a precise landing spot - I've not really tried this before, but I usually play better when I'm focused on target rather than what I'm doing.
Here's an interesting video I watched the other day:
Alex Elliott getting a chipping lesson from Justin Rose's coach.
The interesting part is early on when he says he's been trying to use the bounce more and thinks that has killed his chipping. The coach agrees and says the best players all chip with hands a little bit forward, and essentially that 'using the bounce' consciously is a myth. A lot of you would have watched Dan Grieve's videos, where he says differently and teaches a 'release 2' where the hands aren't forward and you don't even strike ball first in some cases. If you haven't seen his stuff, here's the latest example:
Dan Grieve 'release 2' common mistakes.
I think maybe I'm in the same boat as Elliott here and trying to use bounce has messed me up a little bit. When I had my chipping lesson three months ago, he taught it like the coach in this video, he me open my stance a fair bit in order to leave room for me to keep my hands in front of the ball - there was no talk of 'using bounce' that I can recall. My chipping has been up and down since the lesson I'd say, some days it's decent, other days I have a mare and cannot get the low point correct. I've also lost the ability to hit little chip and runs with a PW or other less-lofted type clubs - I keep getting this weird yip that knifes the ball when I try that. But chipping with 50 & 54 has been ok - perhaps more loft lets me swing a bit longer and looser without fear it's going to go miles, whereas with less loft I'm very stabby. However, when I do want use a low bump and run I use my hybrid with a putting stroke and that has worked very well for me.
It's obviously a confidence/pressure related activity as well, because on my lunch-time practice knock yesterday I hit a couple of superb chips - nothing riding on it, so arms are relaxed and hands are softer. The whole strike / bounce thing has even more prevalence now we're in winter as well, as surely actively using bounce runs the risk of just hitting wet mud and causing a duff.
So what sort of chipping method are you most akin to? Are you hands forward at all times or using the bounce a bit more? Can you chip with all different clubs or do you stick to the higher lofted wedges or one club in particular?
I think I'm going to stick with the hands forward technique (unless I'm having to flop it over something of course) - using 50 mostly if I want it to release a bit, or 54 if I need a bit of height and less release. I chipped quite well in my last round but everything was stopping a good 10 or 12 feet short as I haven't got used to my landing spots yet on the softer greens - need to start flying it a bit further. Another thing I think might help me is to stop focusing on my technique while I'm chipping and just focus on a precise landing spot - I've not really tried this before, but I usually play better when I'm focused on target rather than what I'm doing.