Golf Digest Middle East

Gimme One Thing

Treat it more like a 7-iron than a driver

- by sean hogan

Stop hooking your 3-wood.

“First mistake: trying to launch it off the tee.”

It’s a tight par 4, and I see that you reached for the 3-wood. Good for you. The 3-wood is a prudent choice because it produces more backspin than a driver, making it easier to control ball flight. But I also see that you’re shaking your head in disgust. Let me guess: You just hooked it into the woods. One of the worst feelings on a golf course comes when you try to do the right thing, the smart thing, and the result turns out worse than if you opted for a riskier play.

Hooking a 3-wood is a common miss, and it happens for a common reason: Players who struggle with this club tend to set up as if they’re hitting a driver. The ball is positioned off their front foot, and the upper body is well behind the ball at address. This is ideal for launching a ball off the tee with a driver, but it encourages the upper body to hang back through impact with a 3-wood, making it easy to over-rotate the clubface into a shut position at impact. That ball is going to pull or hook.

To keep a 3-wood in play, make sure you’re striking down on the ball with the centre of your chest rotating over and past it through impact. If you set up to your 3-wood as if it were your 7-iron, you’ll immediatel­y feel more centred relative to your ball position, which should be toward the middle of your stance. Maintain this centred feel as you complete your backswing, and commit to making a strong unwinding of your chest through impact.

The combinatio­n of a more centred ball position and active chest will encourage you to strike down from the inside, producing a nice, tight, piercing draw that finds the narrowest of fairways. Your swing thought: centred and go.

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