Generally This means you have some throw away. If you find the clubhead moving fast even when you are swinging slowly then you are probably throwing the club, or quitting in the case of this shot.
Chances are if you are used to practicing chipping with a wedge you are used to hitting short shots with much more speed and much more lag pressure. With a wedge you get much more spin and the ball comes out much higher making it stop much faster when it lands.The spot you natrually look to fly the ball is much farther towards the target with a wedge, but with a less lofted club you must land it much much shorter.
When using a less lofted club you need a much shorter stroke so you can sustain the lag through the ball and still strike the shot.
Try hitting shots with much less lag pressure and sustaining the pressure through untill follow through. The less lag pressure the softer the shot will come out.
Originally Posted by O.B.Left
Exactly what I was thinking. Running chips with a mid iron being like a putt. Maybe jabbing..................with throwaway....... "Over acceleration the menace that stocks all Lag and Drag". Happens to the best.
Check out Chapter 12, the Basic Motion Curriculum. This is key. The components are dependent on whether you are swinging or hitting. No wrist cock or pivot etc. Check the book.
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If the right wrist flattens at or around impact, you will suffer from trajectile disfunction.
Just got off the putting/chipping green. Thanks to all and to GPStyles for the visual. That action, with and 8 or 9 iron is soft and controllable now. I did zero out #3, but kept my normal grip. Thanks again to all, what a great place.
de nada
The thanks should be directed to Chuck really!
Have to admit that at first I didn't think it would work but jeez it is great.
__________________ The student senses his teacher’s steadfast belief and quiet resolve: “This is doable. It is doable by you. The pathway is there. All you need is determination and time.” And together, they make it happen.
I try to teach my players to land the ball on the green ASAP etc. The general tendency is that they make a motion that is a good deal longer than basic motion resulting in a little heavier compression...leading to a "scooter" So my recommendation is to make sure it is indeed a basic motion.
For those with longer than needed motions, I often get them to make a putt from the same place, then ask them 'how far did you have to move the putter to get the ball to go that far?" Now you have their attention to shorten up that chipping stroke with solid basic motion.
There is some room for personal preference in regard to the grip but I think Homer suggested we run the grip through the life line of the left hand to zero out #3 in Basic. The flattened out angle at the left wrist regulates distance control by deadening the send. Also some simplification too in that you are using only one Accumulator instead of a bunch of slightly turned on and hard to co-ordinate Power Accumulators for such a short shot.
A traditional putting grip type deal and now we know why. Weird isnt it how TGM can provide insight into things we already do? I personally still have the club under the heal when in Basic for whatever that is worth. Maybe, Free admission to the LBG Gallery (which is free already).
I took the zeroed #3 accumulator (for basic motion) to the course yesterday. Worked great! I don't know why I didn't try it sooner. I have been putting with a zeroed #3 for a while now. Great stuff O.B.