I am having trouble hitting my green side bunker shots. When ever I do hit the shot lately they seem to come out thin. HELP ME!!
Ten answers:
Ms. Can't Be Wrong
2008-03-22 09:58:57 UTC
Here is what i do (and i normally get up and down)
Put the ball is the FRONT OF YOUR STANCE
open the club face
lean forward
look and hit 2-3 in. BEHIND THE BALL
FOLLOW THROUGH
PRACTICE!!!
Earl of Sandwitch
2008-03-22 17:54:14 UTC
Hey Jason has it right here. The thump sound will comfirm the correct swing plane. True you want to be entering the sand in front of the ball but if you enter too steeply ( as most who have bucker issues) the ball will stay in the bunker. Shallow out your swing listen for that thump and follow through. It feels as if you are skipping a stone on water. Or you are hitting a flop shot.
If you continue to have issues try a 60* wedge instead of a traditional sand wedge.
Another help is I think of putting a saucer full of sand up on the green. The ball just goes for the ride.
This thought process has made "sand my friend". I actualy will aim at traps with long approach shots when trouble is surrounding the green. A good lie and I'm looking for at minimum a up and down or a make.
Walter M
2008-03-22 17:52:23 UTC
Try this: prop a ball up in the grass so that you can slide your wedge under the ball and hit it up in the air. You'll have to open the face up a bit to do this. I use a 60 degree for close bunker shots and the swing is exactly the same as a flop shot when the ball is sitting up in the grass. The issue with thinking about hitting two inches behind the ball is the thought that you have to dig it out of the sand. While this is technically correct, until you learn how to hit it out of the sand you want to be thinking about sliding the clud underneath the ball, not about entering the sand.
kwshannon1
2008-03-22 09:07:14 UTC
Assuming you are right-handed, line up you feet left of the target, with the ball in the middle or one ball forward toward your left foot. Open up the clobu face of you sand wedge. You are going to take a full swing, and pound the sand 1 or 2 inches behind the ball. Make a complete follow through, and the sand will move the ball out.
A thin hit to me says you are not hitting hard behind the ball. You are trying to use the club on the ball. The sand moves the ball, not a direct club hit.
Solomon Grundy
2008-03-22 14:37:19 UTC
You want to push the sand to get the ball out not hit the ball. You should hear a "THUMP!" and not a "CLICK!." Open the face of your wedge so the leading edge goes through the sand underneath the ball. I do fairly decent out of bunkers for not practicing the shot. I use to practice it and I sucked at it while practicing, but did well when I was on the course. So I stopped practicing it. It's weird how different things work for different people.
golfer2
2008-03-22 19:20:56 UTC
Don't look at the ball. Pick out a spot in sand behind the ball where you want your sand wedge to enter. Trust the club to do it's job. Take some time when no one else is around and practice until you do trust the club.
M V
2008-03-22 09:40:40 UTC
The ball needs to be forward in your stance so you hit 2" behind the ball. Use more wrist for short, checkup shots, and follow thru long for longer shots.
Wingnut
2008-03-22 20:24:52 UTC
Ball forward in stance open your stance and imagine a fried egg and you want too hit the white of the egg and leave the yolk. good luck
Mel O
2008-03-23 05:28:33 UTC
open your club, hit about 2 inches behind the ball and dont try to lift it.
piazza
2016-10-22 10:27:00 UTC
It relies upon on how a lot eco-friendly you need to artwork with. undergo in concepts the more beneficial open the face the a lot less airtime it ought to have, you want to hearken to that thump contained in the sand. also be confident to open the face previously you grip the club. reliable success.
ⓘ
This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.