Why am I chunking my wedges?

All it takes is playing your golf ball a fraction of an inch too far forward for you to chunk the ball. I often say to my students: “you hit the ground where the golf ball should have been.” You can easily check this by taking a practice swing and seeing where, relative to your feet, your club hits the ground.

Why am I chunking wedge shots?

Two of the main problems are that you are attacking the ball too steep, and you are moving your weight backwards through the swing. When you sway through the ball it will make strike really inconsistent and with wedges you always want to have a really stable base.

What causes chunking?

Chunked or fat shots are often the result of having a “low point,” the vertically lowest point of the swing's arc, too far behind the ball. What we see with many golfers that chunk their irons is the upper body bends too far forward in the downswing and then stays there during the follow-through.

How do I stop chunking my irons?

Another insurance policy you can take out against chunked shots is to keep your sternum and head target side of the golf ball. By getting into good posture and placing your upper body and club shaft evenly forward of your ball, this will produce a bottom of your arc that happens after your golf ball.

What causes fat iron shots?

Fat and thin shots are caused by the same problem: The club bottoms out before the ball. The cause often is that the swing is out of sequence. When I get out of sync--say, an overactive lower body--I feel I'm late with my hands, so I release the club to catch up. And I hit it fat.

39 related questions found

How do you stop scooping wedge shots?

Keep Your Hands In Front of the Ball

Indeed, whereas scooping the ball will see your hands on top of the clubhead at impact (or even behind) hitting down on the ball will see your hands leading the way of the clubhead, which will be lagging, hence the advice to 'keep the lag'.

Why am I scooping my irons?

Scooping occurs when the clubhead passes your hands before or through impact. When this happens you add loft and the ball simply rolls up the face of the club. It's not uncommon for a tour player who is keeping the club behind their hands to deloft their club up to two clubs (basically turning a 6 iron into a 4 iron).

How do you correct a fat golf shot?

If you are hitting fat golf shots, the lowest point of the arc will be before the ball causing the club to strike the ground first. When hitting irons, your divots should start after the ball. For the best possible iron contact, you should aim to strike the ball and then the ground.

Why do I hit behind the golf ball with my irons?

Improper Weight Transfer

During the backswing, the player's weight is on the back foot. Failure to naturally transfer the weight through the ball and onto the left commonly causes the club to drop behind the ball. The body and the club must work together in a proper weight transfer.

Why do I hit the ground before my golf ball?

When a player hits the ground before the ball it is generally because their club is attacking the ball from too shallow an angle. Golf coaches refer to this as the "Angle of Approach".

What is a fat golf shot?

The opposite of a thin shot, a fat shot is a shot in which the club (typically an iron) makes contact with and digs into the ground before it reaches the golf ball. This normally does two things: it slows the club down immensely and it throws up a layer of sod/turf between the clubface and the ball.

What happens if you stand too far from golf ball?

Standing too far from the golf ball will result in poor posture, which could result in inconsistent shots and no control over the ball. Standing too far can result in less distance, heel shots, and can cause you to lose balance easily. Standing too far from the ball is pretty common for beginner players.

How do you hit the ball then turf with your irons?

Move your right foot back as you start a short backswing. Move your left foot back and touch the right finishing your short backswing. Move your left forward towards the target. As your left foot moves forward, commence your downswing and try to hit the ground right where your iron was at set up just in front of the ...

Do you look at the front or back of the golf ball?

THINK AHEAD: KEEP YOUR FOCUS IN FRONT OF THE BALL

Telling golfers to keep their heads down and watch the ball has been a staple of bad advice since the game was played with wooden clubs and goose-feather balls. Trying to keep your eye on the ball pretty much ensures that your club will bottom out too soon.

Should you take a divot with a 5 iron?

So, what's the answer? You should take a divot when striking a golf shot, but not with every club. Wedges and short irons when hit correctly will create a clear divot, imparting backspin on the ball, yet longer clubs like 5-irons and hybrids should 'brush' the turf, rather than take a deep chunk out of the ground.

Is it legal to scoop the ball in golf?

So 14.1, fairly struck, a ball must be fairly struck. We're not allowed to push it, scrape it or scoop it.

How do you release a club without flipping it?

To release the golf club without flipping, it is crucial to have some shaft lean through impact so that your hands stay ahead of the clubhead. This will stop you feeling the need to catch the clubhead back up to the hands, which triggers the flipping motion with the wrists.

What causes flipping in golf swing?

As the swing develops, some players feel like they need to hurry all the way through to the end. When that feeling sets in, it's likely that your hands will get involved and force the club to move quickly down toward impact. This hand action is what creates a flip, and you end up dragging the club through the ball.

Should you roll your wrists golf swing?

Roll the Wrist

During the swing, the left wrist rolls over as the golfer transfers from the takeaway to contact and then the follow-through. If the wrist rolls too forcefully, the shot likely will hook to the left. If the wrist does not roll enough, the shot likely will slice to the right.

How do I stop my face from closing at impact?

How to Square the Clubface Consistently

  1. Check the club face on the way back to make sure it's hasn't moved much. You want the club slightly inside your hands and slightly shut.
  2. Try to swing out toward the target with very little face rotation. Repeat this drill 10-15 times to engrain the feeling.

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