By Kellie
Stenzel, PGA Special Contributor |
The greenside bunker can often be one of the most feared shots in golf. And I
understand because in most cases you need to take quite a large swing for a
relatively small distance. And we all know, the larger the swing, the greater
the chance for error.
With a proper set-up and a commitment to a proper, full finish, however, you
can impress yourself and maybe even your friends.
In a greenside bunker, you want to have your sand wedge contact the sand
before your golf ball and continue to slide through the sand for quite a long
distance.
I like to see a divot path in the sand of 10-12 inches. Your club should
never make direct contact with your golf ball. The momentum of throwing the sand
out of the bunker will propel your golf ball as well.
In order to ensure contacting the sand before your golf ball, your ball
position must be left or forward in your stance.
And try to see if you can get this to make sense so you can remember. If I
want to contact the sand first, I would place the golf ball later in my swing,
or farther left. I like the see a golf ball position just inside the left heel
for most greenside bunker shots.
As I make my relatively full golf swing in a greenside bunker, it is
imperative that you swing all the way through to a full finish on your left, so
that your weight finishes on your left foot as you allow your right foot to
rotate up to the toes as your right heel comes off the ground.
This commitment to a full finish on your left side will allow you to keep the
sand wedge gliding through the sand and produce the longer sand divot necessary
to propel your sand out of the bunker and your golf ball onto the green.
Start with these two fundamentals:
1. Ball position left
2. Full finish on your left side
2. Full finish on your left side
These will allow you to learn to properly contact the sand and make your
bunker game more successful and maybe even fun.
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