Instruction
How To Hit A Wedge Half Distance
1. Limit Your Backswing
From 50 or 60 yards, many amateurs make a big backswing and then have to ease off. They blade it or chunk it because they've taken the flow out of the swing. You want to be in a position at the top where you can make a firm swing at the ball -- and not have to baby it. Take it back so your hands are no more than chest high.
2. Kick In Your Right Knee
For solid contact, shift to your left side, and turn your body through; don't just swing your arms down. Try this trigger: Kick your right knee toward the target as you start down. This will transfer your weight and get your body turning forward.
3. Keep Up The Speed
Fight off the urge to steer or guide the club through impact. By keeping the backswing short, you've set it up so you can make an aggressive move through the ball. Feel as if your hands and arms "collect" your body on the downswing, and everything moves through the shot together.
BUTCH HARMON,* a Golf Digest Teaching Professional, runs the Butch Harmon School of Golf at Rio Secco Golf Club, in Henderson, Nev.*