Finally a membership that pays for itself.

InsideGOLF Premium
Driving

How to hit the perfect low stinger, according to a pro

min woo lee swings

The stinger is a shot that many can admire, but there are few who can hit it effectively.

Getty Images

With a low, penetrating ball flight, there are few shots that inspire awe like the stinger. Tiger Woods made the shot popular in the 2000s, and Gary Woodland has since taken the torch, putting on a show with his low trajectory.

But while the shot is one that many can admire, there are few who can hit it effectively. High-level players have the shot in their bag, but for most recreational players, it remains a shot of their dreams. But the shot is not as difficult as you might think.

Min Woo Lee, a former U.S. Junior Amateur champion who is making his PGA Tour debut this week at Pebble Beach, is among the pros who can hit the shot with ease. And during his preparation for his week at Pebble, he showed the folks with the Tour’s social team how to pull off the stinger.

As a kid from Perth, Australia, Lee knows a thing or two about playing in the wind. Growing up and battling those conditions forced him to learn the low-trajectory shot, and he has since become quite proficient at keeping the ball out of the wind.

The first key for a stinger, Lee says, is to put the ball in the back of your stance. This will help you bottom out on your swing sooner and punch the ball beneath the wind. The next step is to focus on hitting down on the ball.

Apparel
We designed a 'stinger' t-shirt in honor of golf's coolest shot
By: Emily Haas

“Swing it short on the way back and short on the way through,” Lee says. “You want to kind of saw off that follow through. You don’t want to get the club going up to the sky.”

And while it might seem intuitive to tee the ball as low as possible to hit the ball low, Lee recommends doing the opposite. Tee the ball up a touch higher than normal and you’ll have an easier time making a descending blow and hitting down on it.

“It sounds weird, but I tee it up higher than usual,” he says. “If you want a very low one, you tee it up just a little bit just to hit down on it a bit more.”

If you follow these tips, you will be hitting stingers in no time.

Related Articles

Instruction
Nelly Korda's risky grip change paid off — but she wouldn't recommend it
By: Zephyr Melton
Instruction
Improve putting alignment by changing how you look at the hole
By: Maddi MacClurg
Short Game
Insiders Only 5 mistakes with wedges that cost golfers the most shots
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Instruction
Why you aren't compressing your irons and how to fix it
By: Maddi MacClurg
Instruction
This high-tech app exposes the biggest flaws in your golf swing
By: Zephyr Melton
Instruction
What amateurs can learn from Brooke Henderson's warm-up routine
By: Maddi MacClurg
Driving
Insiders Only Greg Norman's 3 best power tips for golfers who hit it short and straight
By: Zephyr Melton
Instruction
Tour coach reveals putting non-negotiable every golfer should know
By: Maddi MacClurg
Instruction
The key to better ball striking? Fix this part of your swing
By: Mark Durland, with Zephyr Melton
was:
Exit mobile version