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Changes you have made in your game that you have benefitted from most?


Note: This thread is 5997 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

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Posted
Last round I played I enjoyed chipping much more. I wasn't scared like I was in previous rounds, I nearly eagled a Par 5 with a chip. I think I'm getting the hang of it now. :)

Being honest with you I used to dread the wedge and chipping,always enjoyed putting because it seemed like pool or snooker.Anyway I bought some airflow balls and practiced for months on the carpet at home.It transformed my wedge game and now I look forward to using them.

I can chip in the back garden too so now high scores are a thing of the past.Even just 6 months ago I could shoot 110 upwards.Now I'm in low 100's regular.Confidence has grown and I'm pretty sure now that I can join the sub 100 club for good.I have limited time to play so I focus 90% of my time around short irons,wedges,and the putter.

"Repetition is the chariot of genius"

Driver: BENROSS VX PROTO 10.5
Woods: BENROSS QUAD SPEED FAIRWAY 15"
Hybrids:BENROSS 3G 17" BENROSSV5 Escape 20"
Irons: :wilson: DEEP RED Fluid Feel  4-SW
Putter: BENROSS PURE RED
Balls: :wilsonstaff:  Ti DNA


Posted
i took a 2 hr putting lesson from our local pga professional.

i went from a 6 to a 2.2 in 4 months.

we went from everything from stance, reading routine and grip.

it was my first putting lesson.
Driver: Callaway Diablo Edge Tour 10.5* (UST Proforce v2 77g X Flex) 3 Wood: Callaway Diablo 15* (UST Proforce v2 86g S Flex). 2 Hybrid: Adams A4 Tech 17* (UST Proforce v2 105g S Flex). 3 and 4 Hybrid: Adams Idea Pro 20* and 23* (UST Proforce v2 105g S Flex)
Irons: Tour Edge Exotics...

Posted
I think the one change that has really benefitted me the most is finally learning to hit down on the ball (taking divot after the ball). For the last few years I have been pretty consistent scorewise, but as a longtime 'sweeper' of the ball when I was a little off or had non perfect lie I struggled with my irons, hitting lots of fat and thin shots. Last winter something just 'clicked' and I figured out how to correctly do it (somehow I figured this out on a simulator at Golf Galaxy while testing out new irons). Now I almost always make good contact with my irons and have been hitting more greens and closer to the pin.

A close second would be learning to control my chips and short pitches. I went from being a bad short game player a few years ago to now being recognized by my players partners as the best among our group and I now expect to get up and down a good percentage of the time.
Driver: SQ DYMO STR8-Fit
4 Wood: SQ DYMO
2H (17*), 4H (23*) & 5H (26*): Fli-Hi CLK
Irons (5-6): MX-900; (7-PW): MP-60
Wedges (51/6*): MP-T Chrome; (56/13): MP-R ChromePutter: White Hot XG 2-Ball CSPreferred Ball: e5+/e7+/B330-RXGPS Unit: NEOPush Cart: 2.0

Posted
I would say short game as well, but lately I have neglected it and the results have been predictable...it's gotten worse.

As far as ball striking goes, getting my left wrist flat at impact seems to have helped a bunch. I was scooping (cupped left wrist) it before which causes all sorts of issues, not the least of which is loss of power and ridiculously high ball flight.

In my bag:

Driver: SQ 9.5, Graphite Stiff Shaft
3 Wood: Diablo 13 degree, Stiff Shaft
2 Hybrid: SQ 18 degree, Steel Stiff ShaftIrons: MP-30, 3-PWSW: 56* Vokey Copper spin-milledFW 52* VokeyFlat Stick Zing 2Ball: Pro V1x


Posted
Being a good chipper/pitcher of the ball and making everything inside 6 feet. Many years ago I got a putting mat, spent the entire winter, every night, making 10 6 foot putts in a row before quiting, that was one big step.

We also moved to a house that is right across the street from a golf course. I will go to the practice green and chip and putt regularly.

Craig 

Yeah, wanna make 14 dollars the hard way?


Posted
I never thought the type of ball you use would make such a difference.

I think your statement is correct. However, the balls I used to play were a mixed variety from bags of recycled balls you buy at your sports stores. For the most part, every ball was a different brand, model, compression, etc. What I am now doing is playing the same brand and style (Nike PD Soft) of ball all the time. I think that is helping me with consistency. Does that make sense?

John Hanley
Sugar Land, TX
Driver: Pinemeadow ZR-1 460cc 10.5 degree; senior flex graphite shaft;
6-PW: ProStaff Oversize; graphite (about 13 years old);
Adams Tight Lies fairway woods.

Cleveland CG14 56° sand wedge

Zebra 395gm Mallet putter


Posted
shortened my swing to 3/4...and focused consciously on firing my hips first......i am prone to overswinging with my arms so this helps eliminate that totally.

TaylorMade R11S TP Blur 60 X
TayloreMade R11S TP Blur 70 X

Titleist 910H 21&24
Miura Tournament Blades 5-PW DGX100 Tour Issue
Cleveland CG16 52

Miura Black Wedge 56, 60
Newport 2 Teryllium Ten

Titleist ProV1x


Posted
As far as a mental->physical thought, BALL FIRST. Except for explosion bunker shots, you're basically always trying to hit ball first. Doing so eliminates a lot of potential mistakes, and a lot of potential worry.

Physical thought: when I realized that lag is not from your arms trailing the body. I was trying to get my shoulders ahead and then whip my arms through. I was a horrible ball striker. Now, I just aim to keep my lag in my wrists, but try to always keep my hands moving with my shoulders/chest. That synchronization leads to much better ball contact, which is worth more distance than lag. Lag + contact = WIN.

Mentally: I work backwards from the green. First, you have to realize that EVERY putt is makeable (with very, very few exceptions). When you believe that, two things will happen: 1) you will make more putts and leave closer tap-ins, but 2) you will take stress off other parts of your game. You won't feel the need to hit irons to 2' when you feel good making 10-footers. But, strangely, when you are more relaxed, you'll find you probably DO hit irons closer.

A related thought is, realize that simple greenside chips are makeable. Don't settle for 'just up there.' Be confident, relaxed and realize a bump and run is: point the club, make contact. Don't overthink them. Again, not only will you save shots, but you'll feel relaxed on the shot BEFORE, the approach shot. I don't feel the need to fire at pins, risk bunkers, etc... I can aim for the safe half if I need to, b/c I can make the putt or get the chip close.

And all that started the day I decided I could make putts.

Nothing in the swing is done at the expense of balance.


Note: This thread is 5997 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

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