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This is a pitch, but shows that even pros, the best of pros, catch that leading edge fat.

 

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Steve

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16 minutes ago, dennyjones said:

Link isn't available right now?

It is if you’re my friend on FB in my “Golf” group.

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Man I agree with this so much. I have seen my short game consistency and accuracy increase dramatically by properly learning how to pitch and chip the golf ball. I’m by no means Phil Mickelson, but I have seen my ability to control the landing area of my ball and the spin (on pitches) by playing the ball farther forward in my stance than I had previously. 

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(edited)

IDK, I will agree not to play the ball "too" far back in a stance, as long as too far back, is not at the right in step in a narrow stance. (RH golfer)

Just the "never say never" part of my personality coming out. :-D

Edited by Patch

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1 minute ago, Patch said:

Just the "never say never" part of my personality coming out. :-D

I didn't say that word.

Erik J. Barzeski —  I knock a ball. It goes in a gopher hole. 🏌🏼‍♂️
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  • Moderator

Amazing some of the weird responses the post received.

Here are the examples I posted.

This one of Noren is probably closer to a pitch but same idea.

And I'll add this one of Kuchar and Donald.

 

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I have a question, @iacas.  The tweet says do not play the ball back in your stance. My question is: Is this an approximation?  It seems like when I chip, the ball is a little back in my stance, but not as extreme as the picture.

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2 hours ago, onthehunt526 said:

My question is: Is this an approximation?  It seems like when I chip, the ball is a little back in my stance, but not as extreme as the picture.

Play the ball closer to the right pic (and Luke Donald in my last post), more room for error.

ball_position.thumb.png.76d2a3f42530a8fb4a6b3ca21e59e06a.png

Also this.

 

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7 hours ago, mvmac said:

Play the ball closer to the right pic (and Luke Donald in my last post), more room for error.

ball_position.thumb.png.76d2a3f42530a8fb4a6b3ca21e59e06a.png

Note that the camera is a little back of the ball, so the ball appears more forward in both of these positions.

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  • 1 month later...

Tight lies are the worst, and I've finally figured out, after many years, to NOT play the ball back in my stance from there! I'll play off a narrow stance with the ball a bit forward and the clubface slightly open. This allows the sole of the club to "slide" along the grass rather than dig. If I don't make a pure pass at it, I still have the chance of a decent outcome.

As iacas said, there are times to play it back in your stance. This is from fluffier or heavier lies, where you need to "chop" down to get at the back of the ball. This is when there is too much grass for a more shallow clubhead approach. You couldn't get the clubhead to the ball. Both shots are fraught with danger, but what golf shots aren't?

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  • 1 month later...
(edited)

I read this a couple of weeks ago and was thinking about while practicing and at least anecdotally this has never been the case for me. I find that for "chipping" playing the ball further back results in more consistent contact and I'm not sure your point of simple geometry is accurate here. Sure if you move your hands backward to achieve the rear ball position you will steepen the angle of attack, but if you achieve it with a more extreme shaft lean where your hands remain in a similar position then your angle of attack shouldn't change all that much? It could be that a life time of chipping that way is the reason I chip better that way, but my thinking is that with slow club head speed of a chip, bounce is not your friend as it is in a pitch and reducing bounce creates better contact.

What do you think?

Edited by jshots

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42 minutes ago, jshots said:

I read this a couple of weeks ago and was thinking about while practicing and at least anecdotally this has never been the case for me. I find that for "chipping" playing the ball further back results in more consistent contact and I'm not sure your point of simple geometry is accurate here. Sure if you move your hands backward to achieve the rear ball position you will steepen the angle of attack, but if you achieve it with a more extreme shaft lean where your hands remain in a similar position then your angle of attack shouldn't change all that much? It could be that a life time of chipping that way is the reason I chip better that way, but my thinking is that with slow club head speed of a chip, bounce is not your friend as it is in a pitch and reducing bounce creates better contact.

What do you think?

I have this opinion that what ever consistantly works for the individual is an ok way to do things. Key words being "consistantly works".

I myself chip with the ball a little back of center, maybe a ball width, or two. It was how I was taught, and I never seen a reason to change. 

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