Saturday, September 1, 2012

Practice Chipping and Putting Together

I've been doing a lot of chipping and putting this year. Considering my recent history (two spine surgeries earlier this year), that's about all I've been able to do. I have learned a good bit about each stroke, and have gotten much better at each than I ever have been. What's important, I've found, is how you practice.

Of course, you have to learn the shots. That takes hitting lots of putts and lots of chips. Go ahead and do that. Remember, though, that applied chipping and putting comes as a package deal. The chip and the putt work together in a partnership. When you play, you hit the chip, then you go putt it out. That part needs to be practiced, too.

So after you've practiced putting for about fifteen minutes, and after you've practiced chipping for fifteen minutes, practice them together. Get four balls and chip them to the same hole, but from different locations around the practice green. Then go putt out the four balls. When you get up and down on all four, reverse the drill. Chip to four different holes from the same location.

After you have done that, narrow down the drill. With one ball, chip it and putt out. Pick a different location and a different hole. Chip and putt out. Keep doing this for dozen times or so, giving yourself a different shot every time.

Never hit a do-over chip. Learn to deal with the putts you leave yourself.

It's one thing to have good technique. It's another to know how to get the ball in the hole. If you don't have a lot of time to spend around the practice green, then do only that.


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2 comments:

  1. Good advice. Not too often that you chip it in so you might as well work on the combination to get to the point that you can get it up and down in two. Both are a putting type stroke and the sooner and better you get the ball rolling, the better.

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  2. I heard Judy Rankin say on TV last week that chipping is the easiest part of the game. If you get a good stroke and do your homework, it is.

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