Finally a membership that pays for itself.

InsideGOLF Premium
Short Game

This wedge trick will help you hit crispier chip shots (and it’s 100% legal)

A sharpie, a wedge, a golf ball, is all you need for this simple drill.

Joe Hallett

Blading chip shots over the green can be a real scorecard-wrecker — not to mention a confidence killer. So let’s head over to the short game area — do you remember the last time you were there? — for a quick and easy practice session that’ll improve the quality of your chip shots.

And all you need is a sharpie and your wedge. A sharpie will be a little harder to get off your wedge, so if you’re worried about that, you can use a dry erase marker instead.

Here’s how it works

1. Fill-in the bottom groove

Take your wedge in your hand like I’m doing here, and color in the bottom groove of the wedge (or wedges) that you use the most around the green. Don’t worry, doing this won’t negatively affect the performance of your wedge.

2. Place it under your ball

Once you’ve done that, place a golf ball on the ground so the logo is parallel to the ground, and then slide the colored-in groove so it’s sitting beneath it. That’s where you’ll want to make contact with the golf ball.

Simple! That’s your swing thought the next time you’re chipping around the greens: Slide the bottom groove under the middle of the golf ball. And before you ask, yes, it’s legal to mark-up your wedge like this and play the golf course — as long as you do it before your round, and not during it.

Practice this on the chipping green between your rounds, and you’ll be hitting crispier chips on the course in no time.

Related Articles

Instruction
Insiders Only Why calibrating your chipping is key to shooting lower scores
By: Maddi MacClurg
Instruction
Never mis-hit a chip again with these 2 wedge keys
By: Maddi MacClurg
Short Game
A step-by-step guide to chip with your hybrid
By: Maddi MacClurg
Short Game
How to boost your consistency and control from greenside rough
By: Maddi MacClurg
Short Game
Is cross-handed chipping for you? Here's why it could improve your wedge control
By: Joey Wuertemberger, Top 100 Teacher, Nick Dimengo
Instruction
6 simple steps to master the bump and run shot
By: Maddi MacClurg
Instruction
Here's why you're skulling your chips — and how to stop
By: Jessica Marksbury
Short Game
2 simple chipping flaws are crushing your short game
By: Trent Wearner, Top 100 Teacher, Nick Dimengo
Short Game
Insiders Only Copy these 4 moves from Nelly Korda to chip it close every time
By: Brian Manzella
was:
Exit mobile version