breaking news: Tiger Woods’ go-to greenside shot, explained… full details below πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡

breaking news: Tiger Woods’ go-to greenside shot, explained… full details below πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡

breaking news: Tiger Woods’ go-to greenside shot, explained… full details below πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡πŸ‘‡

Pinehurst, N.C.β€”Tiger Woods started his U.S. Open week with a star-studded practice round. The 15-time major champion was one of the first players on the course Monday morning, playing the back nine alongside Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, and Rickie Fowler.

Except for Tiger, at least around the greens, his practice round looked slightly different. Unlike most practice rounds, Tiger hardly took his wedge out of his bag. Yes, Tiger used his wedge for bunker shots. But outside of that, Tiger spent most of his time around the greens practicing bump-and-run shot.

As we break down here, pro golfers love taking the low route around the greens, especially this week. For two reasons.

Pinehurst has little rough and lots of sloping, turtleback greens. The best way to navigate them is to use them, rather than try to avoid them.

Going low and rolling the ball up, statistically, takes the worst-case scenario off the table way more than chippingβ€”especially from the kind of tight lies you get around Pinehurst’s greens.

This bunker method helped Tiger Woods hit one of the best shots of his career

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The goal of this shot is to give your ball enough juice so that when it does bang into earth, it skips through the fairway with enough speed to get it to the green, then starts rolling gently once it touches the surface.

It’s Tiger’s go-to this week, so watch for it. Check out this article if you’re looking for your own bump-and-run refresher.

 

James

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