
One of the fastest ways to remove your results is from Improving your cut. The goal is to constantly approach the ball near the hole, placing light tap. While solid technique is essential, real improvement comes from developing a system to control distance.
Here you have a five -step approach to sharpen your chipping and reduce your results.
1 The piece is like setting
Chipping uses a shock movement similar to setting, with just a few configuration adjustments. Because the movement is small and compact – never goes above the hip height – is low and very effective maintenance. Even if the contact is not perfect, a sound shock often produces a good result.
This placement similar to the placement also reduces the moving parts. There is minimal weight displacement, which simplifies consistency and control.
2 Hit the ball, then the ground
Your top priority is Contact – hitting the ball in front of the ground. This produces continuous flying ratios on the roll and better distance control.
Exercise: Put a 3-4 inches stretch behind the ball. Practice avoiding sticks during your stroke. This discourages to dig and promote proper falling contact.
3. Check your configuration
Chipping is about simplicity, and it starts with a configuration:
- This: this Simmer in the club.
- Attitude: Tight and quiet.
- Ball position: Centered or slightly back.
- The axis and the upper body: Lean both a little forward toward the target, keeping them there throughout the blow. This helps lower the attic, keeps your sternum forward and promotes the first ball contact.
4. Practice with the purpose
The fastest way to reduce your results through cutting is to practice distance control. Focus on lowering the ball near your target and observe the result. If the ball rotates too far, adjust with a small smaller stroke or a more tired club.
Learn by responding to feedback. Over time, you will get a better feeling, and your chips will constantly end up close enough for a tap-even the occasional chip.
5. Calibrate and keep notes
If you have played the Golf most of your life or practice often, you can rely on feeling. But for most players, calibration is essential.
Follow how far away from any size and the shock size sends the ball (bart + roll). Create a table with:
- Total
- Favorite club
- The size of the stroke
Once you determine your system, write it down. Use your notes during rounds to make safe, informed decisions.
I have created a course to help you only do it – a “fraud code” to reduce your results by building your own short game system. Control here.

