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How To Become A Great Shotmaker (Part II) By Jack Moorehouse This is the second of two articles on shotmaking—the key to dramatically cutting strokes from your golf handicap. The first article explained how to hit four key shots—a high draw, 100-yard knockdown, semi-buried bunker blast, and a chip with a hybrid. This article explains four more key shots—the thick rough pitch, 3-wood punch, mid-iron fade, and bump-and-run. These shots help trim strokes from your golf handicap. All golfers want to become great shotmakers. That's because it takes your game to the next level. Good shotmakers magically turn three shots (or more) into two. But becoming a great shotmaker isn't easy. The secret is learning to hit certain key shots and practicing them until you've mastered them. These common but critical shots save you when in trouble. They're the kind that golfers often ask me for golf tips on. Master them and you can play with anybody.
Thick Rough Pitch To hit this shot, use a low-bounce iron or wedge. Play the ball back in your stance, open your feet slightly, and place your hands above the ball. Also, increase grip pressure slightly, which helps drive the clubface through the thick grass, and aim the clubface square to the target. Now, accelerate and hit down. Plan for an abbreviated finish and expect a lower ball flight with extra roll. 3-Wood Punch Two key golf tips here are (1) take the club back inside the target line and (2) start hinging your wrists when the club gets about knee high. These moves steepen your swing significantly, helping you hit a low, punch shot. Mid-iron Fade The key to this shot is making sure the left arm (right for lefties) leads the right side of the body through impact, as I tell students in my golf lessons. So take the club back slightly on an outside-to-in path and hinge your wrists earlier than normal. This primes your swing to hit the fade. Bump-And-Run To hit this shot, take a slightly closed stance, play the ball back, lean the shaft forward slightly, and hinge your wrists. Maintain the wrist set to the finish. Pivot your chest toward the target as your arms swing through. Make a descending blow and swing in a shallow U-shaped arc, taking a small divot in front of the hole. At the finish, the club's toe points skyward The eight shots described in these two articles are lifesavers. If you're serious about shaving strokes of your golf handicap, you'll learn them. Study golf tips on them. Take golf lessons on them. And practice them. Do whatever it takes to master them. Once mastered, they'll help take your game to the next level. Jack Moorehouse is the author of the best-selling book "How To Break 80 And Shoot Like The Pros." He is NOT a golf pro, rather a working man that has helped thousands of golfers from all seven continents lower their handicap immediately. He has a free weekly newsletter with the latest golf tips, golf lessons and golf instruction. |
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