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One key to consistently getting the ball up and down is proper weight distribution. Keep at least 60% of your weight on the front foot at address (left foot for right-handed golfers). Think of hitting slightly down and through the ball. This will encourage a good weight transfer and, in turn, help complete the follow-through. Keep the back of the left wrist facing the target and don't let it break down. That's crucial. Otherwise, your shots will break down as well!
Many golfers make the sand bunker shot more difficult than it has to
be. This is because they were taught that the only way to come out of a trap is
with an explosion shot, a rather unnatural stroke for the beginner since the
club head has to strike the sand behind the ball and does not strike the ball
itself.
There are a number of occasions when the lie of the ball and the lay
of the land make playing an explosion shot unnecessary and even unwise.
Whenever the bank of the trap is low and there is enough putting surface between the
trap and the hole, a golfer would be more sensible to play a variation on a chip
shot—with the club head contacting the ball cleanly and lofting it onto the
green. Allow for some roll.
A chip from the sand is played the same as a chip from any other
lie, with two modifications. First, you grip the club low on the shaft, as far down
as the bottom of the leather if this is comfortable. Secondly, glue your eyes
on the left half of the ball rather than on the right half as you do on
ordinary shots. This enables you to deliver a clean, descending blow, and that is the
essence of all chip shots.
When you are playing a chip shot from off the fringe of the
green, I think it is a sensible practice to visualize this kind
of stroke as a close cousin to the putting stroke. In chipping from the
apron, just as in putting, the club head should follow a straight
line from the top of the backswing through impact with the ball
and on top of the follow-through. Imagine that your ball is
lying atop a yardstick that is pointing toward the hole. Your
club head should stay directly above the yardstick during all
phases of the chip shot. Your stance will be open with your left
foot at approximately a 45-degree angle to the pin, in order to
facilitate the proper movement of the club head. This open
stance and the over-the-yard-stick stroke—these are the
fundamentals that will make it easy for you to keep your chip
right on the line to the pin.
Many golfers make the mistake on their short chips of assuming
a square stance, keeping both feet perpendicular to the line to
the target. The result is that the club head deviates from the
straight line during the swing, and an inaccurate shot is the
consequence.
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