Over the years of instructing, I have noticed many things that people tend to do incorrectly within their short games that continues to cost these players shot after shot, day after day! It pains me to see these wasted shots; furthermore, it screws up your round.

The short game experts have noted for years that improving the short game is the best way to lower your scores and your subsequent handicap — so I urge you to give it a try!

Below you will find the “Top 10 Short Game Mistakes” that I see day after day in my instructional academies. These mistakes below affect the beginning golfer, as well as the single-digit handicapper. Thus, these tips will give you lifelong success around the greens regardless of who you are. Enjoy!

Putting

The Hand Slap

If you look at the address position of your hands in the mirror, you will notice that the forward wrist is for all intents and purposes “flat,” while the rear wrist is bent. This allows the hands to lead and power the shaft and putter head during the stroke. When these alignments are maintained into the backstroke, at impact and into the follow-through, you will have much better control of the direction and speed of your putts. Remember that the forward hand controls the direction that the ball leaves the blade, while the rear hand controls the loft of the blade; thus, if you can’t control your impact alignments you will surely fail on the greens.

In the mirror, practice making strokes monitoring these alignments. You will notice that when you do, your putter blade will have a very solid stroke path driven by the shoulders. At the finish, you should see the same wrist alignments that you began with. But if you see that the rear wrist is flat and the forward wrist is bent, then you will have the dreaded “hand slap” that causes many people to putt poorly. This is a “look, look, look” situation and all it takes to eliminate this slap once and for all is a few daily strokes in the mirror monitoring your hands.

The Illusion of the Putter shaft

If you address the putter in the mirror and look down, you will see that from the player’s eyes the club shaft looks perpendicular to the ground. However, if you look up in the mirror you will see that the shaft is leaning backwards slightly. This is the Illusion of the putter shaft.

Putter manufacturers have placed the shaft behind the blade for whatever reasons, but it is up to the player to understand this illusion because it is different with all putters. If you do not, then you will always place the hands behind the putter head at address and find it impossible for the hands to lead the club through impact.

A good rule of thumb is to forward press your hands to the first belt-loop of the belt buckle toward your target. This usually puts the putter shaft into better position. You must take the time to use your eyes and your mirror to understand this principle, because only you know what you see from above. So you must decipher the correct position of your hands and club shaft even though the eyes are receiving poor information due to the “Illusion of the putter shaft.”

Chipping

The Ball’s Position

The most deadly mistake in chipping is the dreaded chili-dip. I hate to see anyone slap at it and move the ball about two feet, because to your score it is almost as deadly as the outright shank!

Whenever I see the chili-dip, I usually notice one thing right from the start, even before the backstroke has begun — the ball’s position. In order to hit a chip effectively, you must have the ball in front of your rear foot so that you can impart a descending blow to the ball while using the proper type of swing that will be described below. Most of the time I notice in my chipping lessons that the ball is center to forward in the stance. That’s asking … begging to be mishit!

Please take the time and place the ball in the proper position in your stance from the beginning or you will have a tougher time with chipping than you really need to have. It is from this distance that you should be thinking about making a few from off the green, not struggling to hit it solidly.

Use a Putting Stroke, NOT a Hit

Now that you have the ball in the correct position, directly in front of your rear toe, the next thing is to give the club the ability to produce very solid and controllable shots while this close to the green. The biggest mistake I see with chipping, next to the improper ball position, is using a “hitting” type of motion as you would use in your full swing. That causes the impact alignments (mentioned in the putting section) to break down. This soft shot requires a “putting” stroke where the hands are dead with no wrist break on the way back or through. This is the key to chipping well and the biggest mistake I see from day to day.

The “hit” will cause your hands to become overactive through the ball and this will cause the ball to leave the blade in an uncontrolled fashion. Around the greens, especially in chipping, you need all the “touch” possible because if you are this close to the green you should at least get up and down 50 percent of the time or more. Use your putting stoke and you will see just how much easier this will become!

Pitching

The Role of the Ball’s Position

The first question I ask anyone trying to hit a pitch shot is what trajectory are they going to use? If they can answer that question, then the next question I ask them is what ball position accommodates the trajectory they are trying to use?

Ninety percent of the time I see players trying to hit pitch shots with the ball in the rear of their stances. This is fine if you are trying to hit it low, but if you have another trajectory in mind then you will have to manipulate your weight and/or hands through the ball, which is an unreliable action at best. I will give you a simple way to hit the ball varying trajectories — by moving the ball around in your stance. Yes, there are other ways to hit the ball higher or lower, but this is the most foolproof way I know to keep it very simple.

If you are trying to hit the ball high, put the ball in the forward portion of your stance. If you are trying to hit the ball your normal height then place the ball under your sternum. Finally, if you desire to hit the ball lower, place the ball in the rear portion of your stance. These three simple ball positions must match up with the shot you are trying to hit or you are history around the greens for sure.

The Shank

Nothing in the world can ruin your day faster than the shank for sure, but in order to get out of this dilemma you must first understand WHY you are shanking it. Article after article has been written about techniques that get you out of the shanks, but few I have read address the real problem — the swing’s path.

When you shank the ball, your swing path is either either moving severely in-to-out or out-to-in.Whatever the reason for it, the bottom line is that if you don’t know what swing path you are using to shank the ball then you’re not going to have a lot of luck fixing the shanks! There are two simple drills for the shanker:

In-to-out shanker: Place a head cover or board just outside your target line and you will be forced to make a better pivot motion through the ball. This will help fix the in-to-out path. This drill is very effective because it gives instant feedback as to when a golfer swings too much from the inside. If they do, they hit the headcover.

Out-to-in shanker: Place a headcover just outside the ball but angle it toward right field (for the right-handed golfer). Try and make swings from the inside and hit the extreme inside of the ball, but don’t hit the headcover. This will force your swing path to be from the inside — not over the top as you have swung in the past.

These two drills work best if you start with small pitch shots and work op from there SLOWLY. You must gain your confidence first, and then you can add speed!

Bunkers

Improper Side Bending at Address

It seems that most people tend to hit the ball fat or thin out of the bunkers. If you seem to always hit it fat, then this is the tip for you. In the regular shot set-up, you will always have your spine leaning rearward, but in bunkers you want just the opposite. Your spine in the bunker should lean slightly to the forward of center.

This causes the low point of your swing to occur later than normal, eliminating the fat shots. When you lean your spine too much to the rear at address, then you will find that your weight will tend to “hang back” through impact, increasing the probability that the low point of the swing arc will occur too early. That makes you hit fat shots.

This hang back will also cause many other things to happen, but if you want to avoid all these poor shots then just simply lean your spine to the left. Using the “line” drill and this new spine tilt you will be better able to track when the club bottoms out. This will help you to have consistency out of the bunkers like never before.

The “U” versus the “V”

When you hit the ball thin and over the green head high at Mach 1, then you will be like the millions of golfer who don’t understand the “angle of attack” and what it will do to the ball’s flight out of a bunker. Most golf shots are struck with a “U” type of action, where the club gently rises and falls, like the letter “U.”

But, in a bunker when you are trying to hit a softer shot to a tight pin, you must hit the sand first. To do this you must re-arrange your swing’s path to look like a “V.”

This quick setting of the wrists and steeper angle of attack will cause you to hit the sand behind the ball. Your job is to keep moving and not cut off the forward swing! If you are successful in changing your angle of attack, then you will notice that for shorter shots the “V” is best and for very long bunker shots, where a lower shot is more acceptable, the “U” will work as long as you set your wrists enough to hit the sand. Experiment and you will love the results!

The Mental Game

Where to Leave the Ball

During schools, I see people hitting shots around the green with absolutely no regard for where they are leaving the ball. I would rather have a day of 10-foot uphill right-to-left putts (as a right-handed player) than a 5-foot downhill left-to-right sliding putt on fast greens. If you doubt this fact, come to the mountains and hit the ball above the hole!

Remember this: In darts you aim at a very small target on the board, not at the total board, and thus, your dispersion pattern is very tight to your target. Golf is the same way — if you just aim at the hole, you will have a wide array of shots and putts to make. But if you aim at a certain quadrant of the hole, then you will find a much tighter dispersion of shots, not to mention easier putts in general!

Dial-a-Shot

When people come up to the green and have a simple pitch, shot I usually see them grab the lob wedge and head off to the other side of the green to hit their shot. This is the last thing I try and have my students do! I want you to have options –“dial-a-shot” the pros call it– where you have one shot with several ideas on how to play it.

There are times where the shot calls for one type of execution, but your nerves call for another or vice-versa. If you only have one way to play shots around the greens, then you are severely limiting yourself on the golf course. Take the time to experiment with different clubs under different circumstances and you will see that sometimes a putter is a better choice over the 7 iron, or the lob wedge is better than the pitching wedge. Whatever the choice, take your time to think and identify what you are trying to do and you will be much happier with the results.

I hope by now you have seen that these mistakes plague many players from good to bad. Take your time and eliminate the top-10 mistakes and your scores will lower. I guarantee it!