Just last week, one student told me he “can’t understand why my wedges are so volatile.” A look at his configuration told the whole story – he had the ball positioned as if it were Hit a driverWith his hands hanging behind the ball, trying to help him in the air.
The wind was blowing about 15 km an hour that day and its high shootings of the floating wedge were jumping around like beach balls.
Most amateurs think wedges should fly up. Sometimes, that’s true. Sometimes, yes, but if you can’t hit them low when you need it, you are giving strokes in every single round.
Why High Pyrrhus Shots can kill your results
Everyone Golf player I learn makes the same assumption: more attic means the ball has to grow. They placed in their wedges in the same way as they would be one of 7 iron and then wondering why their wedge distance control is all over the map.
Recently, I had a son to come to me who was shooting in the lowest years. Although he was a strong ball striker, his short game cost him at least five blows to the round. He said that when the wind would get, he would have no idea where his wedges would come. He could not hit him near the strong greens because his shooting entered very steep.
After learning how to fly his wedges, he fell four strokes from his handicap in two months.

When you need absolutely to low wedge shots
Wind conditions? High shots are like hitting a madness on a scratch lottery ticket. A low, penetrating wedge stroke shortens through the wind and the soils predictably. You can actually aim at the pins instead of thinking where the wind will get your ball.
Firm rickery? That high, soft landing works only on the host surface. When the greens are functioning quickly, the low shots with natural rotation give you much better control in the distance.
Narrow pin positions? The front pins, back pins, stuck corners – everyone requires accuracy. Low wedge flights allow you to lower the ball exactly where you are aiming and let it be released into the hole.
Difficult lie? Hardpan, narrow roads, divotoes – high shots from these lies are almost impossible. A low flight removes the lie and gives you a chance of fighting.
The configuration that makes it automatic
prostitute It’s everything. Most players play wedge from their front leg as they are trying to get maximum height. Wrong movement.
Ball position: The middle until the center behind the center. This creates the descending blow you need for a penetrating flight.
Weight Distribution: 60-70 percent on your front leg in configuration. Stay there through influence. This prevents the noisy movement that sends balls to the sky.
Hands: Very in front of the ball in configuration and even ahead of the impact. If your hands are behind the ball, you are adding the attic and creating heights you don’t want.
The axis shaft: The front axle in the influence is non -negotiable. This delofts the club and creates the trajectory you are behind.

The shake that gives control
Forget the long and fluent oscillation you use with longer handcuffs. Low wedge shots require a compact, controlled movement.
Backswing: Length of three quarter, maximum. Fewer moving parts mean better control and more sustainable contact.
Tempo: Quiet and deliberate, not fast. Let the club do the job instead of trying to muscle it.
Impact: Hit down and through the ball. You want to get a divotine after the ball, not in front of it. So you know you are making the right contact.
Tracking: Low and shortened. Your hands should end up around your chest height, not up from your ear.
What actually creates rotation and control
Most players think they should hit more wedge shots to rotate. While it is true that you need speed while switching to influence, the idea of ​​hitting it ‘harder’ is completely behind.
Clean contact with the right technique creates all the rotation you need. A descending blow with the advanced shaft shaft naturally creates the ball to control the landing.
The low flight route actually helps with rotation. The ball lands at a shallow angle and grabs the green better than the shooting that comes on the slope from above.

The mistake that destroys everything
Trying to help the ball in the air. Once you start scratching or sliding the wrists through the impact, you have lost all the control over the trajectory and distance.
Believe in the attic This is built on your wedges. Your task is to make strong contact with a descending blow. The club will create the right way to flight if you let it do its job.
Start first with short shots
Do not jump straight into the full shots of 100 yards. Work on technique with 30-borre shots about the first green practice first.
Make comfortable with the ball position, weight distribution and descending contact. Once you can hit low -distance stable flights, gradually work at longer distances.
Most players try to learn this technique under pressure on the course. Bad idea. Groove it first in the rank.
Stop guessing in distance control
Low wedge shots relate to accurately, not power. Once you master the technique, you will know exactly how far each wedge with different swing lengths carries.
This consistency is what separates the good players of short games from everyone else. They are not hoping that their wedge shots will work. They know exactly what the ball will do BEFORE They swing.
Master of low wedge flights and you will never be at the mercy of wind or strong conditions again. Most importantly, you will finally have control over the greens that transforms into good rounds into excellent ones.
office How to Fly Your Low Pyckets for Maximum Control first appeared in MygolfSSS.

