Burning Wedge Shot

3 min
Added on February 23, 2022
If you're inside 100 yards and you have a wedge in your hands, you should be taking dead aim at the pin and thinking birdie. A full wedge shot from a clean lie gives you the opportunity to spin the ball more than any other shot in the game. And with that high spin, you have the potential to control the ball's flight AND how it reacts on the green, leaving any pin location vulnerable.

However, with the wrong technique, your distance wedges can become very inconsistent. To make sure you
... don't squander these scoring opportunities, we asked for some advice from Titleist staff member Jonathan Yarwood. In this video, Jonathan shares the results of new research that shows how the best players in the world are able generate so much spin and how they hit such accurate shots with their full wedges. Follow Jonathan's keys and you'll soon be flag hunting, too.

DON'T:

1. Chop down steeply on the golf ball
2. Cut across the golf ball

DO:
1. Use a premium golf ball like Titleist Pro V1 and Pro V1x. The soft urethane covers of these balls provide a distinct advantage with regards to spin.
2. Clean and dry the face of your wedge. The newer the wedge and the fresher the grooves, the more spin you can generate (Titleist testing has shown that spin rates degrade significantly after the equivalent of 75 rounds played.)
3. Take a stance that is slightly open and slightly wider than your chipping stance.
4. Grip down on the handle and position the ball just forward of center.
5. Lean a little left (for a right-handed golfer), putting more pressure into your lead leg.
6. Lean the shaft of your wedge towards the target slightly, hands ahead of the club head.
7. Make a wide, U-shaped swing by rotating your ribcage back, feeling that your arms stay in sync with your torso.
8. Continue to rotate your torso through impact, hands ahead of the club face. The ball will adhere to the face of the wedge, launch low and burn with optimal spin!
If you're inside 100 yards and you have a wedge in your hands, you should be taking dead aim at the pin and thinking birdie. A full wedge shot from a clean lie gives you the opportunity to ... spin the ball more than any other shot in the game. And with that high spin, you have the potential to control the ball's flight AND how it reacts on the green, leaving any pin location vulnerable.

However, with the wrong technique, your distance wedges can become very inconsistent. To make sure you don't squander these scoring opportunities, we asked for some advice from Titleist staff member Jonathan Yarwood. In this video, Jonathan shares the results of new research that shows how the best players in the world are able generate so much spin and how they hit such accurate shots with their full wedges. Follow Jonathan's keys and you'll soon be flag hunting, too.

DON'T:

1. Chop down steeply on the golf ball
2. Cut across the golf ball

DO:
1. Use a premium golf ball like Titleist Pro V1 and Pro V1x. The soft urethane covers of these balls provide a distinct advantage with regards to spin.
2. Clean and dry the face of your wedge. The newer the wedge and the fresher the grooves, the more spin you can generate (Titleist testing has shown that spin rates degrade significantly after the equivalent of 75 rounds played.)
3. Take a stance that is slightly open and slightly wider than your chipping stance.
4. Grip down on the handle and position the ball just forward of center.
5. Lean a little left (for a right-handed golfer), putting more pressure into your lead leg.
6. Lean the shaft of your wedge towards the target slightly, hands ahead of the club head.
7. Make a wide, U-shaped swing by rotating your ribcage back, feeling that your arms stay in sync with your torso.
8. Continue to rotate your torso through impact, hands ahead of the club face. The ball will adhere to the face of the wedge, launch low and burn with optimal spin!

Instruction

30 Videos

  1. Categories
  2. Long Game
  3. Iron Game
  4. Wedge Game
  5. Putting
  6. Course Strategy
  7. Golf Fitness
  8. At Home
  1. Instructor
  2. Alex Buckner
  3. Brad Faxon
  4. Dan Whittaker
  5. Dr. Mo Pickens
  6. Matt Leach
  7. Matthew Johns
  8. Sophie Walker
  9. Cameron McCormick
  10. James Sieckmann
  11. Mark Blackburn
  12. Michael Breed
  13. Trillium Rose
  14. Jonathan Yarwood
  15. Dave Phillips
  16. Brandon Stooksbury
  17. Justin Parsons
  18. Layne Savoie
  19. Dr. Rob Neal
  20. Dr. Greg Rose
  21. Skip Guss
  22. Jason Baile
  23. John Kostis
  24. Jennifer Hudson
  25. Ryan Hager
  26. Corey Lundberg
  27. Tom Patri
  1. Drill
  2. Fundamentals
  3. Shot Shaping
  4. Anti-hook
  5. Anti-slice
  6. Alignment
  7. Tight Lie
  8. Long Rough
  9. Bunker Play
  10. Consistency
  11. Distance Control
  12. Trajectory
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