Instant success using THE CHIP FIX. Golf's newest short game training aid.
As you can see and hear this gentlemen went from knifing the golf ball over the green to nipping a high softy next to the pin by utilizing THE CHIP FIX short game training aid and establishing the optimal angle of attack around the greens. He began with an extremely shallow angle of attack setting up with the ball forward in his stance, a square club face, and more shaft lean in degrees than bounce on his wedge.
At 53 seconds into the video he has established the ideal angle of attack by hitting the ground in front of the bottom guard. He hits this shot with a square face and more shaft lean than bounce in degrees thus making the leading edge dig and hitting the shot slightly fat. We then had him make the adjustment of opening the face slightly which exposed more bounce and having a little shaft lean but not more than the bounce was exposed and the end result is a nipped pitch over the bunker as you can here in the audio.
Watch this gentlemen hit a beautiful pitch over the bunker while using The Chip Fix short game training aid.
Use THE CHIP FIX short game training aid to master the into the grain lie
Turn the volume up and listen to this contact on an into the grain lie as I establish the optimal angle of attack for the short game using THE CHIP FIX short game trianing aid
Watch how establishing the optimal angle of attack makes this delicate lie a piece of cake
Establish the optimal angle of attack out of the sand and become a consistent bunker player
See how hitting the flop shot is a piece of cake when you have the optimal angle of attack
How to assemble THE CHIP FIX short game training aid
Watch how far behind the ball the wedge hits the ground and still nips the ball off of this tight sandy lie
This wedge is entering the zone with an optimal angle of attack.
The wedge is hitting the ground roughly 2" behind the ball.
The wedge is working along the turf line as the bounce keeps the leading edge from digging.
Post impact the wedge is still working along the ground.
The sand coming up marks where the wedge first entered the turf. Look how far behind the first picture ball position it is.
Establishing the optimal angle of attack while utilizing the bounce allows for a greater margin of error and consistent solid contact around the greens.