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The Wedge Guy: Taming the wind

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The recent Players Championship fully illustrated the effect the wind can have on scoring, and even the tour professionals found ways to shoot in the high 70s or even 80s when the wind hit its peak on Saturday. On those rare occasions when these elite players have to negotiate strong and gusty winds, you just don’t see scores in the mid-to-low-60s like you do when greens are soft and flags are drooping.

I grew up down here close to the Texas Coast, so I learned to play the wind at an early age. My dad’s guidance was always “when it’s breezy, swing it easy.” And one of my favorite Scottish sayings is “if there be naye wind laddie, there be naye golf”.

A lot of The Players’ TV coverage was focused on No. 17, where so many of these players found the water. Understand that 17 green is one of the largest on the course, so what amazed me is how many of these tour professionals did not know how (apparently) to flight the ball down and control spin in those conditions. As I watched the carnage, I was amazed at how many of these players would apparently just club up and hit their normal towering short iron, with trajectory peaking at 90, 100 feet or more. I read that something like 80 percent of the balls in the water were on shots hit more than 70 feet high.

Puzzling, to say the least.

Today, I want to share the basics of wind play, as I was taught from early in my golf life. The first rule on a windy day is that you have to relax your expectations. As the PGA Tour players showed us, there is no tougher condition than wind in which to play this game.

Besides relaxing your expectations, however, there are some other basics you should understand in order to score better when it’s breezy. And the first is that the wind doesn’t affect a solidly hit ball nearly as much as one that is hit off center. Regardless of the shot you face, if you will throttle back your swing to 75-85 percent when playing the wind, your results will be much better.

Another tip for playing in the wind is to understand that it exaggerates everything. A gentle breeze to light crosswind will hardly affect a straight shot that is hit well. But if that ball flight has curvature to it, the wind will do crazy things. Curve it into the wind, and it will get “knocked down”, probably a club or more short. Curve it with the wind, and the curve will be exaggerated by a factor of 2-3 or more. A gentle draw becomes a sweeping hook, a slight fade a runaway slice.

With it blowing in your face, the goal is to keep the shot “under the wind.” To hit that shot, I play the ball a bit further back in my stance, typically take two more clubs than normal and grip down an extra half inch or so. My single swing thought it to keep is slow and make sure I lead with my body core and arms, so that the clubhead is the last thing through the impact zone.

Also, with this shot into the wind, I want to make a more sweeping motion, rather than a severe downward strike. The key is to minimize spin and height on the shot and these fundamentals help insure that.

Conversely, hitting downwind, Ben Hogan said you always want to over-club as well. A shot hit with less spin is less likely to get up and ride the wind clean over the green or get “knocked down” by the tailwind and come up short. In my opinion, gauging distance of iron shots downwind is always tougher than into the wind.

So, there are my wind-play basics. I hope all of you have the good fortune to put these into play this season. Golf become a very different game when you add a nice 15-20 mph breeze to the equation!

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Terry Koehler is a fourth generation Texan and a graduate of Texas A&M University. Over his 40-year career in the golf industry, he has created over 100 putter designs, sets of irons and drivers, and in 2014, he put together the team that reintroduced the Ben Hogan brand to the golf equipment industry. Since the early 2000s, Terry has been a prolific writer, sharing his knowledge as “The Wedge Guy”.   But his most compelling work is in the wedge category. Since he first patented his “Koehler Sole” in the early 1990s, he has been challenging “conventional wisdom” reflected in ‘tour design’ wedges. The performance of his wedge designs have stimulated other companies to move slightly more mass toward the top of the blade in their wedges, but none approach the dramatic design of his Edison Forged wedges, which have been robotically proven to significantly raise the bar for wedge performance. Terry serves as Chairman and Director of Innovation for Edison Golf – check it out at www.EdisonWedges.com.

2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. ChipNRun

    Apr 1, 2022 at 10:05 am

    This discussion reminds me of the 350-yard 18th hole at a course I visit frequently.

    It’s a dogleg-right cape hole: A lake guards the right side of the fairway, and then bends around in front of the green. AND, longer hitters can pull one OB to the left.

    AND-AND, a prevailing wind comes over the top of the clubhouse which sets 10 feet up behind the green.

    Players who take driver end up near the edge of the lake, with maybe a GW left to the green. But, the normally prevailing headwind can knock down the shot into the lake.

    Solution: Play a 4W to the center of the fairway, leaving the ball about 140 yards out. Take a 7i, choke down, and hit a smooth shot that stays under of the wind, which licks the clubhouse roof.

    It’s trading a sure par for excitement, either the good – or more likely – the bad kind.

  2. geohogan

    Mar 30, 2022 at 11:56 am

    To play a lower shot, with a given club, what it is we are trying to accomplish it to impact higher grooves on the clubface. The higher the groove the lower the flight.Its all about intent… nothing else.
    Simple: intend to impact the ball on the top groove..try it.

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Clement: “Infallible” release drill to add 30 yards to your drives

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Yes, you heard it here: INFALLIBLE! This drill will end all drills as “the” go to drill when your golf swing is hangin’ on or being too forceful! None of my students in the last month either online or in person, French or English, male or female, have messed this up. Pure Wisdom! And we share it with you here.

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Kelley: How a change in awareness can influence your body turn

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A simple change of awareness can help you understand how the body can naturally turn in the swing. An important concept to understand: the direction the body moves is the engine to the swing. Research also shows the direction the body turns can be just as important as the amount of turn.

Golf is hard because the ball is on the ground, yet we are trying to hit it forward towards a target. With our head looking down at the ball, it’s easy to place our attention (what we are mindful of) on the ground, losing awareness to where we are going. This can make the body move in all sorts of directions, making hitting the ball towards a target difficult.

But imagine if we looked out over our lead shoulder with our attention to the target and made a backswing. Being mindful of the body, the body would naturally turn in a direction and amount that would be geared to move towards the target in the swing. (Imagine the position of your body and arm when throwing a ball). After proper set-up angles, this will give the look of coiling around the original spine angle established at Address.

With this simple awareness change, common unwanted tendencies naturally self-organize out of the backswing. Tendencies like swaying and tilting (picture below) would not conceptually make sense when moving the body in the direction we want to hit the ball.

A great concept or drill to get this feel besides looking over your shoulder is to grab a range basket and set into your posture with Hitting Angles. Keeping the basket level in front of you, swing the basket around you as if throwing it forward towards the target.

When doing the drill, be aware of not only the direction the body turns, but the amount. The drill will first help you understand the concept. Next make some practice swings. When swinging, look over your lead shoulder and slowly replicate how the basket drill made your body move.

www.kelleygolf.com

Twitter: @KKelley_golf

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The Wedge Guy: What really needs fixing in your game?

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I always find it interesting to watch how golfers interact with the practice range, if they do so at all. I certainly can figure out how to understand that some golfers just do not really want to get better — at least not enough to spend time on the practice range trying to improve.

What is most puzzling to me is how many golfers completely ignore the rationale for going to the range to at least warm up before they head to the first tee. Why anyone would set aside 4-6 hours of their day for a round of golf, and then not even give themselves a chance to do their best is beyond me. But today, I’m writing for those of you who really do want to improve your golf scores and your enjoyment of the game.

I’ve seen tons of research for my entire 40 years in this industry that consistently shows the number one goal of all golfers, of any skill level, from 100-shooter to tour professional, is simply to hit better golf shots more often. And while our definition of “better” is certainly different based on our respective skill level, the game is just more fun when your best shots happen more often and your worst shots are always getting better.

Today’s article is triggered by what we saw happen at the Valspar tour event this past Sunday. While Taylor Moore certainly had some big moments in a great final round, both Jordan Spieth and Adam Schenk threw away their chances to win with big misses down the stretch, both of them with driver. Spieth’s wayward drive into the water on the 16th and Schenk’s big miss left on the 18th spelled doom for both of them.

It amazes me how the best players on the planet routinely hit the most God-awful shots with such regularity, given the amazing talents they all have. But those guys are not what I’m talking about this week. In keeping with the path of the past few posts, I’m encouraging each and every one of you to think about your most recent rounds (if you are playing already this year), or recall the rounds you finished the season with last year. What you are looking for are you own “big misses” that kept you from scoring better.

Was it a few wayward drives that put you in trouble or even out of bounds? Or maybe loose approach shots that made birdie impossible and par super challenging? Might your issue have been some missed short putts or bad long putts that led to a three-putt? Most likely for any of you, you can recall a number of times where you just did not give yourself a good chance to save par or bogey from what was a not-too-difficult greenside recovery.

The point is, in order to get consistently better, you need to make an honest assessment of where you are losing strokes and then commit to improving that part of your game. If it isn’t your driving that causes problems, contain that part of practice or pre-round warm-ups to just a half dozen swings or so, for the fun of “the big stick”. If your challenges seem to be centered around greenside recoveries, spend a lot more time practicing both your technique and imagination – seeing the shot in your mind and then trying to execute the exact distance and trajectory of the shot required. Time on the putting green will almost always pay off on the course.

But, if you are genuinely interested in improving your overall ball-striking consistency, you would be well-served to examine your fundamentals, starting with the grip and posture/setup. It is near impossible to build a repeating golf swing if those two fundamentals are not just right. And if those two things are fundamentally sound, the creation of a repeating golf swing is much easier.

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