| Home | Forum | Tips | Gallery | Blog | Reviews | Lessons | Gym | Staff | Podcast |
| Register | FAQ | Links | Events | Arcade | Mark Forums Read |
| Our golf forum has 71,012 discussions | 32,360 members | 39 online now | Rhwqfsnb has just joined the GTO golf forum |
| ||||||||
| Welcome to golftuitiononline.com | the global golf forum You are currently viewing our golf forum as a guest which gives you limited access to the many features available here at the GTO golf forum. We are one of the largest golf forums online with 32,360 members worlwide and we pride ourselves on being the friendliest golf forum online. JOIN NOW (It's FREE) and you will gain immediate access to all these great features:
|
Register Now for FREE! |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| ||||
| Re: bunker blues Like Ian said ... practice is key. One drill that I like is: -Draw a line in the sand about 1-2 inches behind the ball - perpendicular to target path. -The part of the line behind the ball is now your impact spot. -With a long line you can tell if you have hit it thin or fat and adjust your stance accordingly. |
| ||||
| Re: bunker blues hi i went to my pro for lessons out of the bunker and it was the best 2 hour of lessons i have ever had. even with my strange swing he did not try to change my swing but more he tried to get me to understand the right way to control a ball out a bunker, we have very deep bunkers on the links here so it almost always costs you shots if in them and he has helps so much at judging what i can and cant go for saving me shots. if you have a good pro near you then ask him about bunker lessons, should only take an hour or two at most so not that expensive. cheers bill
__________________ ping zing2 metal driver ping zing2 metal 3 wood ping eye2 1 iron ping zing2 3/9 irons ping ist 47% wedge ping zing2 52% s/wedge ping mb 56% wedge ping c10 G2I broom handled putter top flight "T" golf balls white ping bag |
| ||||
| Re: bunker blues The one thing no-one has touched on yet is that all the technique in the world won't necessarily help you if you've got the wrong wedge for the sand you're playing in. I spent some time in Florida, playing out of soft, fluffy bunkers with my gamer wedges (Wishon PCF Tours). Hitting these wonderful sand shots with the face laid wide open, a nice 'thump' and a high, soft shot. I bring this technique home where my bunkers are more like dirt than sand... blade, blade, blade. OK. Move the ball up (thinking I'm playing it too far back). Blade, blade, blade. Now I'm really frustrated. So I can either change my wedges to low-bounce butterknives (narrow sole) and use the same technique, or I can employ the 'chunk and run'. So for my home course, gamer wedges, I only open the faice a little, and employ the same technique. I don't get high, soft shots (they run about as far as they fly) but it seems to be the answer for heavy, dense sand if you're not going to buy new wedges.
__________________ True Length Technology Fitter - www.truelengthtechnology.com It's live! - www.ShipShapeClubs.com PCS Class 'A' Clubfitter A new highlight: Golfing the home course on Christmas Day. I say it too often: If it's golf club shaped, you can play with it. For the record, I'm a club doctor, not a swing doctor. |
| ||||
| Re: bunker blues hi lowpost i agree with what you say and i was shown by the pro that using a sand wedge with a good bounce was great for getting out the fluffy lies you get on links courses but for gritty sand like we have in some of the inland courses the bounce makes the club ski into the middle of the ball and using my 56 degree wedge is much better for getting out gritty sand but digs in to deep on fluffy links sand so using the right club for the jobs the key. cheers bill |
| ||||
| Re: bunker blues I agree with all the advice given here. If you want a band aid until you have learned the correct method then try this, it is not a fix all though. Rotate the clubface so that it is very closed in your grip (turn the club anticlockwise, not your wrists) the face of the club should be pointing down towards the ground. Stand fairly square or even a little right of target, ball a little forward of centre. Take the club back with an early wrist cock then bring the club back down hard into the sand behind the ball and follow through fairly high. This will get the ball out fairly well but be careful as it will roll further than normal, use a range of clubs for different distances. This works well with buried (fried egg) lies. Again, get a lesson from a good pro though.
__________________ Best Regards Brian ________________________________ Funny o'l game! |