Picture the scene… after reading the best golf tips and practicing your long game for weeks on the range, you’ve smashed your drive down the middle of the fairway at the long par-5. You then boldly step up and hit a well-struck second shot to within fifty yards of the green, and walk up to your golf ball feeling great.
As you pull out your wedge and play your pitch shot, with the prospect of a priceless birdie presenting itself, you duff it five feet in front of you and walk off the hole with a seven!
This scenario is unfortunately all too familiar for many amateur golfers, with pitching problems costing shots and crushing confidence. In the interest of improving this picture for all golfers, we sought the advice of short game specialist and PGA Tour coach James Ridyard, who shared three common pitching mistakes and how to avoid them…
Pitching Mistake No.1 – Ball Flight
Typically, amateur golfers think they need to hit the golf ball much higher than they actually do. If you were trying to throw a ball from A to B you probably wouldn’t launch it as high as you could to cover the distance. If anything, you would actually launch it fairly flat.
The golf ball you use will affect your decision on ball flight, as height will help if you are playing with a rock solid ball. Ideally, you should be looking for a golf ball that you can have some spin control over, which will allow you to bring the ball flight down. This will give you the best of both worlds, as spinning the golf ball will give you stopping power and the right carry distance.
When players counter-productively try to hit the ball high with a pitch shot, they tend to try and add loft through impact – which results in a loss of shaft lean too quickly. Therefore, the most simplistic way to bring your ball flight down is to add more shaft lean at impact.
One other way you can achieve this is by putting the ball position fractionally further back in your stance. If you prefer to play the ball from the centre of your stance, you will need to pivot a little bit better and hold a little more angle in your trail wrist (as you can see in the video above).
This will lean the…
..
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Golf Monthly…