View Single Post
  #5  
Old 08-17-2009, 09:18 PM
Matt Matt is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Rochester, MN
Posts: 376
Another thought regarding these delicate shots around the green...

I try to keep it simple. Keep the face relatively square, bend my right arm, straighten my right arm. A soft punch basic stroke. Angled hinging all the time. Back when I played more competitively I felt much more comfortable opening up the face and hitting big flops, but not so much anymore.

I think it was Homer himself who wasn't a big fan of vertical hinging, since it always requires deliberate manual manipulation. Stick with me for a moment. Remember, Kevin, how we discussed at the PGA that there are theoretically an infinite number of hinge actions? That is, everything between pure horizontal and pure vertical?

With a driver -- where the inclined plane is the flattest -- an angled hinge is closer to a horizontal hinge. And vice versa with a short pitch shot -- you're swinging on a steeper inclined plane, therefore your angled hinge is closer to a vertical hinge. So, they're both angled hinges, but they are not identical.

Which brings me to this: with short shots, the cost/benefit analysis might not shake out in your favor when using vertical hinging. More risk, minimal reward? And certainly a need for well-practiced manual manipulation. An angled hinge with a sand or lob wedge is getting pretty close to a vertical hinge -- due to the rather steep clubshaft angle at address -- and it can be readily achieved without a deliberate "reverse roll" feel.

Last edited by Matt : 12-27-2009 at 10:41 PM.
Reply With Quote