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Shot Savers: The Chip Putt

The first in a new instruction series this year, we help you lower you scores with valuable hints and tips


Posted: 10 February 2001
by Martin Park with Darren Hodgson

The key to scoring well is the short game, we know that already, but for scoring to your potential around the greens at this time of the year, the easier the type of shot you elect to play, the better the score.

One of the easiest shots to master in our new series is the “Chip Putt”.
Basically, it ‘does what it says on the tin’ and if you miss a green with your approach and you are just off the edge of the green, no matter how bad your lie is (with the exception of being plugged!), this shot can save you plenty of strokes and avoid the dreaded “duff”.

The Chip Putt, deadly out of this lie!

The technique is simple. You know how to putt right? I hope so! So why not use a putting stroke and add a little loft to the club?

All you have to do is repeat the same firm-wristed technique with a 9-iron or a pitching wedge and as long as the hands are ahead of the ball at impact, and you strike the ball with a slight downward stroke, you cannot fail to master this simple shot saver in a matter of minutes.

The idea is to get the ball onto the putting surface as soon as possible and let the ball run to the hole instead of risking everything by playing a shot only Phil Mickelson or Tiger Woods can manage. From this range, far too many amateurs try the “flop” shot and end up writing down a massive score on their cards.

Putting grip...hands forward...firm left wrist

The Chip Putt is a shot that the pro’s expect to hole every now and again and if you pay attention to the basics here, you too can drop your scores and win a bit more money off of your mates!

Set up is the key
Set up in exactly the same way as you would if you were putting, then lean just ahead of the ball with you weight favouring 60-40 on the left side (left-handers…other way around!). Make sure you have a firm grasp of the club with your putting grip and don’t let the left wrist melt at impact...that is very important!

With a few practice strokes, get the feel of the lie of the grass at a point nearby the ball, (without interfering with the lie). Once you can “feel” how tough the grass is around that area, you get an idea of how hard to strike the ball to make it pop up and out of the lie letting the ball release to the hole.

That is the key to this shot, if you can rock your shoulders like a putt and keep the wrist solid at impact, the ball will jump out of the lie with no spin, land on the green and run to the hole, it won’t ‘check’ like a normal chip.

Perfect for 'just off the green' shots

It is a “dead” kind of shot where nothing spectacular happens, it just gets the ball out of most bad lies and on to the green, somewhere close to the hole. All you are doing is putting…but with lots more loft on the clubface…it works a treat and is a shot used by many of the world’s top professionals.

Practice this
The best way to practice this kind of shot is give yourself plenty of different lies around the practice green and try and play the same shot. Watch how the ball reacts…all very similarly…that way, you can judge where you should land the ball on the green. Try to land the ball just on the putting surface, about two feet on the green, then you can adapt the shot by using different clubs and experimenting on how far the ball runs so you can attack other pin positions.

Take a club and lay it across the green and try and chip the ball just over that club and watch how far it runs. Obviously, the lesser the loft on the club, the more it will roll.

Chip over a club and watch the ball run to the hole!

Once you have mastered the feel of this shot, you can adapt it to use many clubs. I can go as far down as a 6-iron and play the same kind of shot and it saves me heaps of shots through the year. I find this shot works well up to about 25-feet with a 6-iron. If you have more than 25-feet, may I recommend an orthodox chip with a normal grip and a bit of lag in the hands…another lesson coming soon!

The “Chip Putt”, it’s simple, effective and saves loads of shots…trouble is, it’s not flash.
But who needs it to be when you return a ‘flash’ score at the end of your round…remember, it’s not how, it’s how many!


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Is there a shot that is giving you particular problems? If there is, write in this forum and we will endeavour to bring you the cure!
Posted: 05/02/2001 14:53

Long irons. 5 and longer. Help needed to cure the whole range of cock-ups. No single fault, so no single cure. What's the underlying priciple for long irons?
Posted: 05/02/2001 14:59

Me too. Four and three iron rarely make it out of the bag. When they do, afterwards I often feel like I wished I hadn't bothered. My 5 wood and 3 wood I find much better off the fairway.
Posted: 05/02/2001 15:14

And another thing... following on from that chip-putt article: Particularly in summer, when the ball ends up close to the green (maybe 30 yds short (after my second shot on a really long par 5)) and the lie is rock hard ground with no grass. Maybe a dried up mud patch, or a path - if I try a chip or chip-putt off such a lie, it's so easy to either thin the shot, or stubb the club into the ground just in front of the ball. Either way its bl**dy annoying to have hit the first two shots miles, only to see the third one go about two feet. HELP - needless to say I snapped all my clubs last time this happened.
Posted: 05/02/2001 15:19

Alex... glad to hear that you have really weak shafts...but if you can't putt from such a thin lie, try something aggresive. When you go into the shot, you can't think that you might flub-it or thin-it: you have to think that you will hit it onto the green... If you're not comfortable with picking the ball (like you would on mats), then do a punch chip. The ground will undoubtedly give resistence, but practice it a couple times and you'll be used to the outcome. As for long-irons, what are your problems Adam and Alex...list them just a bit more specifically. I find that range of irons, 1-5, the trustiest in the bag...so hopefully I can help!
Posted: 05/02/2001 15:55

Help needed for... "what to do if the sand in the greenside bunker is wet and totally compacted after a rainfall". How do you get it out without thinning it miles?
Posted: 05/02/2001 17:34

Suzanne- I just played on Saturday, and my game was definitely rusty. Needless to say, I visited the traps on multiple shots: they were all as hard as cement from the rain. With big lips in the way, you really can't try to pick-it-out with a low-lofted club. In fairway bunkers, that may work. Yet, greenside bunkers are a different story. You have to make sure to swing through the wet sand with an open clubface. Your club will bounce off the sand quite severely, but hit down-into the sand. If you're aiming for the ball or the back of the ball, you risk blading it. Instead, really focus on hitting the sand and power through the 'cement.' It's not a fun shot though is it!?
Posted: 06/02/2001 10:52

responding to Ted F .re: wet,hard traps--it is usually useful to choke down a couple of inches,as well as to hit the shot with alignment well open,lower body quiet...these are not fun shots,you just want to get out and avoid disaster!!!
Posted: 21/02/2001 19:39

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