Finally a membership that pays for itself.

InsideGOLF Premium
Driving

Hitting pop-ups with your driver? Why you don’t necessarily need to tee the ball lower

man hits golf ball

Changing your setup can rid you of pop-ups for good.

Getty Images

Hitting a pop-up is embarrassing — and it’s happened to everyone. Beginners are the most prone to this mis-hit, but even for low-handicappers, a pop-up isn’t outside the realm of possibility.

After playing (and working) in golf for many years, I’ve experienced a fair share of pop-ups myself. And usually, it happens because I tee the ball too high … or so I thought. But after a recent breakthrough during a lesson, I learned what actually causes a pop fly off the tee.

For me, a pop-up always happened when I got a little too aggressive on the tee box and tried to tee the ball up and smash it. This would normally end with me sheepishly watching as the ball rocketed straight into the sky. To fix this, I’ve always teed the ball up quite low and played with a penetrating ball flight.

But then, I had a breakthrough moment.

While I was getting fitted for a driver recently at GOLFTEC, my instructor kept encouraging me to tee the ball up higher to increase my distance. I explained that teeing the ball higher was a struggle for me and that I didn’t want to pop the ball up, when he told me the real reason I was popping it up.

“Pop-ups only happen when you have a negative angle of attack,” he said. “Just try hitting up on it more.”

It seemed counterintuitive. Why would I want to hit up more on the ball when I was already hitting it too high? The answer was simple. Because I was getting too steep (the root of many problems when it comes to the golf swing). With a steep angle of attack, the crown of the driver was what was making contact with the ball, and this made the ball pop straight into the air, not just because I was swinging underneath the ball. I needed to get shallower as the clubhead approached the ball in order to make the low point closer to the ball.

But how can you do that? The fix is rather simple, and it all starts in the setup.

When setting up to the ball, move the ball a touch forward in your stance. Then, you want to tilt your spine slightly away from the target into what’s called a “reverse K” position. After that, it’s as easy as making your normal swing and hitting up on the ball.

Check out an example of the fix below from instructor Nathalie Filler.

Related Articles

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
Instruction
Do these 3 exercises to cure your early extension for good
By: Zephyr Melton
Instruction
To shoot lower scores, you need to understand these 2 types of practice
By: Jim Murphy, with Zephyr Melton
Instruction
How Bryson DeChambeau used AI to fix his swing
By: Maddi MacClurg
Instruction
How this golfer went from struggling to break 90 to shooting in the 70s
By: Tony Ruggiero, with Zephyr Melton
Instruction
Lower your handicap fast by practicing these 3 key skills
By: Jason Baile, Top 100 Teacher
Approach Shots
Keep your club on plane and hit better irons with this simple trick
By: Dr. Alison Curdt, with Zephyr Melton
Instruction
This overlooked swing mistake can kill your ball striking — here's how to fix it
By: Zephyr Melton
was:
Exit mobile version