Hinge & Hold chipping technique

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15 Comments

  1. The problem is this video is part of a series where Phil was already
    discussing 3ft putts. So when he mentions “the 3ft circle” everyone already
    knows what he is talking about because it was previously defined. This is
    golf instruction, not a geometry lesson.

  2. Facts are facts, if he chose to define them another way that’s his choice
    but it does’nt make him right irrespective of how many majors he has one, a
    3 foot circle is a 3 foot circle and if you hit the ball to 3 feet from the
    hole then you have hit the ball within a 6 foot circle, THAT IS A FACT.

  3. First of all, nothing in geometry says that a 3′ circle indicates diameter
    nor radius. Perhaps in means circumference. Stating “3′ circle” is
    ambiguous without context. When talking about golf, everyone that I have
    ever known is concerned with distance to the hole, so a 3′ circle around
    the hole is 3′ from the hole. Phil is completely accurate when he states 3′
    circle, so no need to add confusion by even discussing radius and diameter.

  4. A 3 foot circle has a radius of 1 1/2 feet, it is not me who is confusing
    people. If you want to hit the ball to 3 feet from the hole then its a 6
    foot circle, sorry but that’s a FACT.

  5. I have the chip yips, working hard on this, the key is to keep the body and
    head still while you hinge your wrists and accelerate the hands to the
    finish…

  6. Newbies hit the ball within a 3 foot radius of the hole, or a 6 foot circle
    around the hole, or closer if your good enough 🙂

  7. Can i just say that it’s really a 6 foot circle with a 3 foot radius. If it
    was a 3 foot circle around the hole you would need to hit it 1 1/2 feet
    from the hole every time to be within a (3 foot circle). 6 foot circle not
    3, sorry Phil. Otherwise EXCELLENT video presentation.

  8. In golf, a 3 foot circle refers to a circle where every point is 3 feet
    from the hole. Everything is measured as a radius because you’re only
    trying to get the ball to the middle of the circle (the cup). Don’t let
    geometry get in the way of common sense golf terminology.

  9. i just seen a video of hank haney teaching the lock yer wrist technique, my
    local club pro taught me that same technique. I trust Phil. I will never
    take another lesson from my club pro again 🙂

  10. I picked up Phil’s video and have been working on his method for a couple
    of years. It has improved my short game. The locked wrist technique is
    probably okay for a low running chip when the ball is in the fringe near
    the green but that might be about it. Before learning Phil’s method I
    wasn’t using enough wrist in the backswing and was getting inconsistent
    trajectory with the higher lofted wedges. A pitch shot requires more wrist
    hinge than I thought it did before learning Phi’s method.

  11. A point that is 3 foot from the hole makes it a 6 foot circle, not a 3 foot
    circle, sorry but saying dont let geometry get in the way of common sense
    is like saying dont let gravity get in the way of the gall ball. Facts are
    Facts and a person new to the game would know that a 3 foot circle has a 1
    1/2 foot radius. So its important to be accurate just like Phils chipping,
    have a nice day Sir.

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