Golf Digest Middle East

Don’t Baby Your Wedge Shots

How to stay aggressive from short distances

- butch harmon is a Golf Digest Teaching Profession­al.

“Here’s a great downswing trigger: Kick in your back knee.”

The best thing you can do for your swing is to let it be an athletic motion. What I mean is, let your body and the club flow back and through so the swing is smooth and natural. One area I see a lot of golfers losing this flow is on short wedge shots, say, 40 to 60 yards. Because it’s not a full swing, the instinct is to overcontro­l the motion. Trust me, that doesn’t work.

The key on those short wedges is to get into a good setup and make a backswing that allows you to accelerate through the ball. Play the ball in the middle of your stance, and set extra weight on your front foot. From there, swing the club back nice and wide, keeping your hands stretched away from your body ( above, left). The backswing should be short enough— no more than chest high—so you don’t have to ease off the shot coming down. You always want your swing to be accelerati­ng through impact.

A good downswing trigger is to kick your back knee toward the target. That’ll shift your weight to your front side and get your body turning forward. A lot of amateurs freeze the lower body and try to steer the club into the ball with their arms. But it’s critical to get your lower body and weight moving toward the target so the low point of the swing comes in front of the ball. That’s how you make ball-thenturf contact, which is super important on wedge shots that don’t require a full swing.

Last thing: Keep up your speed all the way to the finish ( above, right). Avoid the instinct to baby the shot. With a short enough backswing, you can make a firm strike on the ball and not worry about it going too far.

Commit to this great swing thought: Wide back, accelerate

through. You’ll maintain an athletic flow and have a lot more success on those half-wedges.

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