You’re right, my slice needs some real work. Gonna come back better than ever for the next one. For the shot tracer I use an app called “Shot Tracer Editor” on iphone ✍️
Its kind of cheating and you;re short game is good but look what the green looks like on your camera or take a photo of the green, its hard to see with your eyes with everything around but easier to read when you can focus. Or just stand back to where your camera is, people stand on them where their ball is and its hard to read, or even on other side of your ball (across the hole) You kill with that 3 wood, great golfing man.
Thanks for letting me know, I will try to be considerate of this in the future. I am glad you enjoyed the video and hope you will stick around for more. And thanks for the love on the 3 wood, its definitely an adjustment
When you're off the green just a little and you really don't want to putt because you don't trust the roll off the uneven grass around the apron of the green. Try putting with the putting stroke with a 7 iron, then your worse shot is still not bad. Also google toe down chipping for when you're in a tough lie but the other method doesn't with the 7 bump and run won't work. Toe down chipping helps a person who hasn't perfected the ability to control the low point of the swing on a short chip out of a tough lie.
Thanks boss, I will check these out. I’m definitely familiar with the bump and run, I just recently lost my gap wedge though and haven’t been using that shot much since then because I dont have it super perfected with my next best club
@@c_golfYou have a pretty good swing and rhythm, you will be breaking 40 soon. Pushing the toe down by lifting the grip up like a putter and using a putter stroke makes the low point much easier to control meaning less fat or thin shots and using the 7 iron means you don't have to hit the ball as hard so on a thin shot the ball doesn't roll out as far and on a fat shot the ball still goes a bit farther so miss hits around the green aren't as bad. On a course with a bumpy apron around the green I use the 7 iron like a putter meaning I put feet closer together, lift the up with hands like a putter. For distance control, I hit like 1000 practice shots from various angles and distances. I like the 7 iron because it has enough loft but not much so it can be hooded or opened to decrease or increase loft for short controlled hops. I pick one spot and hit from that spot until I can get 3 to 5 good consecutive shots depending on how much time you have. Then move to a new spot and repeat, then a new spot and repeat. After this you will be very confident. BTW this method works with all clubs and shots. Obviously the bump and run isn't always viable though you know, sometimes a chip is required. In cases where I am close enough to putt but the bump and run is not viable do the same thing but with a higher loft club like a 50, 54, 58 depending on how far the ball needs to carry in relation to rollout distance. This is the toe down chip I was referring to. If too far away to hit a putting stroke though, then need to switch to a standard chip or pitch swing.
@@alexmass9866 I completely agree, it can definitely be helpful to go into the round without any expectations, and that’s actually what I did here! I didn’t really set a goal of 40 until after the first few holes
@@c_golf Actually I was projecting my game onto yours, so forget what I previously said. Do this and you will be break 40. Put a tee in the green and take your wedge you have the most confidence in for controlling the low point in your swing and distance control. Pick a spot close by such as 5 yards and hit shots from that spot until you can hit the same arc landing it near that tee for 5 consecutive shots, if you miss one the counter starts over, you must hit 5 in a row. Once you accomplish that move a little further away and repeat, if you find the new spot is then move a little closer and keep repeating until you can do it from a longer distance. After doing this, you will have the confidence and muscle memory to chip ball and land it anywhere you want allowing you to adjust your landing zone for any green and any shot. Note that different balls will spin less or more so sticking to one brand and model of golf ball will increase rollout consistency. Additionally learning what a leading edge and a bounce angle is and how to use a wedge bounce angle will significantly help with your consistency on these shots. If properly used the bounce angle will guide the leading edge of the wedge into the ball there by adding a little forgiveness on catching the ball perfectly clean when striking the chip shot meaning you will almost never hit a fat or thin shot that destroys the chip's overall success. The more you practice this the better, I'd expect 1000 practice shots in a week and your you will be money, you would be astonished at how many stokes you shave off your game. You will be regularly chipping close enough for easy 1 putts on every green you come close but do not GIR. This practice with the bounce angle will carry over into your pitches from inside 100 yards or whatever you consider a pitch shot. How often have you had a nice shot and been 100 to 40 yards off the green and then hit thin or fat? Learning where the low point in your swing is and understanding how to use the clubs bounce will prevent those bad shots.
love this video
Thank you! You are the best!!!!
Great video!!! Looking forward to the next!!
Thanks for watching!!!
keep it up
@@KazingaD Will do, thanks for watching!
Banger vid, p-wedge was the difference maker today
Absolutely. P Wedge took the game to a whole new level. Glad you enjoyed, thanks for the comment 🫡
once you fix your slice you have so much potential, also love how you do the shot tracer i have no clue how to do that
You’re right, my slice needs some real work. Gonna come back better than ever for the next one. For the shot tracer I use an app called “Shot Tracer Editor” on iphone ✍️
Love this video. Looking forward to watching some more. Keep it up 👍
Thank you! I absolutely will. I had a blast making it and love how it turned out. Thank you so much for watching and for the comment!
Hahaha fun video dude
Its kind of cheating and you;re short game is good but look what the green looks like on your camera or take a photo of the green, its hard to see with your eyes with everything around but easier to read when you can focus. Or just stand back to where your camera is, people stand on them where their ball is and its hard to read, or even on other side of your ball (across the hole)
You kill with that 3 wood, great golfing man.
Thanks for letting me know, I will try to be considerate of this in the future. I am glad you enjoyed the video and hope you will stick around for more. And thanks for the love on the 3 wood, its definitely an adjustment
love the vid, earned a sub
So glad to hear that you enjoyed! Thank you for the support 🫡 more to come
When you're off the green just a little and you really don't want to putt because you don't trust the roll off the uneven grass around the apron of the green. Try putting with the putting stroke with a 7 iron, then your worse shot is still not bad. Also google toe down chipping for when you're in a tough lie but the other method doesn't with the 7 bump and run won't work. Toe down chipping helps a person who hasn't perfected the ability to control the low point of the swing on a short chip out of a tough lie.
Thanks boss, I will check these out. I’m definitely familiar with the bump and run, I just recently lost my gap wedge though and haven’t been using that shot much since then because I dont have it super perfected with my next best club
@@c_golfYou have a pretty good swing and rhythm, you will be breaking 40 soon. Pushing the toe down by lifting the grip up like a putter and using a putter stroke makes the low point much easier to control meaning less fat or thin shots and using the 7 iron means you don't have to hit the ball as hard so on a thin shot the ball doesn't roll out as far and on a fat shot the ball still goes a bit farther so miss hits around the green aren't as bad.
On a course with a bumpy apron around the green I use the 7 iron like a putter meaning I put feet closer together, lift the up with hands like a putter. For distance control, I hit like 1000 practice shots from various angles and distances. I like the 7 iron because it has enough loft but not much so it can be hooded or opened to decrease or increase loft for short controlled hops.
I pick one spot and hit from that spot until I can get 3 to 5 good consecutive shots depending on how much time you have. Then move to a new spot and repeat, then a new spot and repeat. After this you will be very confident. BTW this method works with all clubs and shots.
Obviously the bump and run isn't always viable though you know, sometimes a chip is required. In cases where I am close enough to putt but the bump and run is not viable do the same thing but with a higher loft club like a 50, 54, 58 depending on how far the ball needs to carry in relation to rollout distance. This is the toe down chip I was referring to. If too far away to hit a putting stroke though, then need to switch to a standard chip or pitch swing.
you’ll never shoot the score you’re trying to if you have it in mind, you just need to play the game and let it come to you
@@alexmass9866 I completely agree, it can definitely be helpful to go into the round without any expectations, and that’s actually what I did here! I didn’t really set a goal of 40 until after the first few holes
I break 40 every day but on a 9 hole par 34 course.
I wish 😅
@@c_golf I play 27 holes every day on this course though i could not shoot nearly as well on a par 72 hole course. It still requires good golf though.
@@c_golf I played 36 last saturday then 41 holes last sunday. I play around 600 x hole rounds per year. Friends tell me I am obsessed with golf.
@@UnknownMoses Haha sounds like it dude, that is pretty nuts
@@c_golf Actually I was projecting my game onto yours, so forget what I previously said.
Do this and you will be break 40. Put a tee in the green and take your wedge you have the most confidence in for controlling the low point in your swing and distance control.
Pick a spot close by such as 5 yards and hit shots from that spot until you can hit the same arc landing it near that tee for 5 consecutive shots, if you miss one the counter starts over, you must hit 5 in a row. Once you accomplish that move a little further away and repeat, if you find the new spot is then move a little closer and keep repeating until you can do it from a longer distance.
After doing this, you will have the confidence and muscle memory to chip ball and land it anywhere you want allowing you to adjust your landing zone for any green and any shot.
Note that different balls will spin less or more so sticking to one brand and model of golf ball will increase rollout consistency.
Additionally learning what a leading edge and a bounce angle is and how to use a wedge bounce angle will significantly help with your consistency on these shots. If properly used the bounce angle will guide the leading edge of the wedge into the ball there by adding a little forgiveness on catching the ball perfectly clean when striking the chip shot meaning you will almost never hit a fat or thin shot that destroys the chip's overall success.
The more you practice this the better, I'd expect 1000 practice shots in a week and your you will be money, you would be astonished at how many stokes you shave off your game. You will be regularly chipping close enough for easy 1 putts on every green you come close but do not GIR.
This practice with the bounce angle will carry over into your pitches from inside 100 yards or whatever you consider a pitch shot. How often have you had a nice shot and been 100 to 40 yards off the green and then hit thin or fat? Learning where the low point in your swing is and understanding how to use the clubs bounce will prevent those bad shots.