Swing Tip: How to Improve Your Short Game

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Articles keep coming out with tips on how to improve your short game, but for some reason, no one ever seems to mention that alignment and set up for each shot, pitching and chipping, is slightly different. The length of the shot and how high or low you want the ball to fly will be determined by your setup and alignment.

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While ball position and lower body alignment may vary, the one constant is shoulder alignment. Your shoulders should always be parallel to your target line on any shot whether you are hitting a driver or a putter. NOT pointed at the target, but parallel to it.

The lower body – meaning the feet, legs, and hips – will be open or pointing left of the target in order to get yourself out of your own way. The club needs to travel down the target line as long as possible and a square stance makes it much more difficult to accomplish that.

The single most important factor in developing a good short game is that you absolutely must learn to contact the ground in the same spot in your swing every time. To accomplish this you simply need to stabilize your weight. The low point in your swing arc is where ever your weight (or center of gravity) is. If you shift your weight the bottom of your arc moves constantly with your weight. The odds of winning the lottery are better than the odds of getting your weight in the same spot every time if it is shifting.

One point that needs to be made at this time is watching and reading about how tour players do it is a waste of time. Tour players have extraordinary hand-eye coordination, touch, and feel so they can do things in their swings that would be problematic for the average golfer.

It is easier to just place the weight on the left side or left foot and keep it there throughout the swing.

Keep the club low to the ground as long as possible on the back swing and the follow through. Never make any attempt to lift the club or cock the wrists unless hitting out of deep grass. Keep the hands quiet. Over active hands will result in fat and thin or skulled shots.

Another very important factor is to be able to have your hands in the same position at impact that you did at address. The club head must never pass the hands until well after impact.

The chipping or pitching swing is made primarily with the arms and shoulders – not the hands.

How long the shot is determines how wide or narrow the stance and how open your body is. For a chip shot your right foot is very close to your left foot and your lower body is very open.

For a pitch shot it is less pronounced. The hands will generally be more forward on a chip, but the height of the ball flight will be determined by the loft of the club and the forward lean of the shaft.

One final point that needs to be addressed is gripping down or “choking up” on the club. The shorter the shot the more you choke up. It is perfectly fine to grip all the way down to the bottom of the grip. This enables you to be firmer and more aggressive because the shorter you make the club the shorter distance you will hit the ball.

Hubert Green who had 19 PGA Tour wins including 2 majors used to choke the sand wedge all the way down onto the steel and open the face so he could be firm and aggressive. Never let the golf club slow down prior to impact. Taking it back too far and slowing down prior to impact will cause the club head to pass the hands with the absolute certainty of a bad shot.

Practice with slightly different alignments until you find what is most comfortable for you. I suggest practicing extensively with a sand wedge which is about 56 degrees. By adjusting the shaft lean forward and backward you can learn to hit a variety of shots. I am not a fan of using the lob wedge to chip or pitch with. I agree with Barney Adams, the founder of Adams Golf, when his club designer told him they were going to design a 60 degree lob wedge he told them to stamp a skull and cross bone on it.

As you go from a full swing to a less than full swing to a chip the right foot gets closer and closer to the left and the hips open more and more. Shoulders stay parallel to the line.

This is a swing tip that has the potential to help your entire golf game.  Once you have learned to develop a solid short game simply start taking a bigger and faster swing and gradually square your body alignment and you will have an excellent full swing as demonstrated by the video below.

Next: A Simple Alignment Tip