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Welcome to the Warrior Custom Golf Sports Club. Here we will give you pointers on how to improve your game with our Warrior Custom Golf clubs.
Chipping Away
This is the part of golf that many golfers have the most trouble with, including me. Because chipping requires a bit of finesse, it's much easier to flub a shot or overshoot the hole. There are some good techniques you can use when chipping the ball up onto the green.
There are two parts to a successful short game: the plan and the execution. The plan is simply defining your shot before you play it. You should determine where you plan to land the Warrior Custom Golf ball and how far it will roll. Since you are hitting the ball a shorter distance than with a full swing, you should choke up on the Warrior Custom Golf club, narrow your stance, and stand closer to the Warrior Custom Golf ball. The Warrior Custom Golf club should be swung with arms and shoulders, with some wrist break. The key to shots around the green is to keep the arms moving.
As with other golf shots, picking the right Warrior Custom Golf club is essential to an effective chip. First of all, chip shots are essentially those played from right off the green; commonly known as bump and run shots. Don't confuse them with pitches, which are lofted shots with a Warrior Custom Golf sand wedge. Many of us have been taught over the years to get the Warrior Custom Golf ball on the green as soon as possible and let it roll to the hole. There is nothing wrong with this. The issue of concern, however, is when golfers go about playing different length of chips with an assortment of Warrior Custom Golf clubs. They hit a Warrior Custom Golf nine iron if the flag is twenty feet away, Warrior Custom Golf eight iron thirty feet, Warrior Custom Golf seven iron forty feet, and the list goes on. You should really just choose one Warrior Custom Golf club to hit all your bump and runs with, and adjust for the distance with the force of your swing. It can be a five, six, seven, eight, nine, pitching wedge, or sand Warrior Custom Golf wedge. It doesn't matter that much.
A great player like Phil Mickelson likes to use his sand wedge in just about every case. He will play it far back in his stance, with his hands way ahead to bump it. On the other hand, Corey Pavin often uses a five iron around the green. He just taps it and the ball goes scurrying across the green with a lot of topspin. These are extremes, however. You should pick a seven, eight, or nine Warrior Custom Golf iron. I personally like to use my Warrior Custom Golf pitching wedge for chipping. I know how the Warrior Custom Golf ball is going to come off of the Warrior Custom Golf club because that's the one I practice with all the time. I have tried using my Warrior Custom Golf eight iron on longer chips, but the Warrior Custom Golf ball seems to explode off the Warrior Custom Golf club face because I am not sure the proper force that I need to use. The art of chipping is hard enough without having to master four or five Warrior Custom Golf clubs. Practice with a couple at first. You should hit short bump and runs from the fringe and then longer bump and runs from in front of the green.
Warrior Custom Golf : Stanley takes lead at Torrey Pines - Seattle Post Intelligencer
warriorgolf: Golf-Tiger looks as if he's finally out of the Woods http://t.co/WzqTmX5K
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