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17 Comments

  1. This improved my chipping immediately. On faster greens though, I use this
    but instead of Rule of 12 I change it to Rule of 13. Great teacher love his
    videos.

  2. This has really cleared up the short game tactics, can’t wait to try it
    out. I wouldn’t mind a lesson with this fella either, good post.

  3. I’d assume you could easily judge the “rule of” number on the practice
    green before a round by doing a little experiment. Use 12 as a basis and if
    you’re long or short, adjust as needed. One thing I’d like to know though
    is whether you’d assign higher iron numbers to wedges, e.g. 8i, 9i, 10i (PW
    at 45 degrees), 11i (AW at 50 degrees), 12i (SW at 54degrees), 13i (LW at
    58 degrees) etc?

  4. @Zoneofgolf That is a VERY appropiate question. Just have a look at videos
    from Pete Cowen or James Sieklemann. That is good short gametechnic!

  5. Its good as a general rule…and it works..but you better practice a lot on
    the course before u rely on it..you will eventually tweak the math suited
    to your game…

  6. Works really well. I’d say subtract a club when going down hill. So if u
    need a 7 use a 8

  7. Crap I was looking for a chipping lesson and ended up with a math
    test……..and I didnt study……

  8. this is like a cross between george constanza and frank caliendo doin
    robert deniro teaching how to chip

  9. he needed 4 yards carry and 12 yards of roll: that’s 1 part carry 3 parts
    roll.. so 12-3 = 9 iron. if he needed 5 yards of carry and 20 yards of roll
    he would need 20/5 = 4 parts of roll => 12 – 4 = 8 iron.

  10. This may sound stupid but this system confuses me. I get the first chip – 6
    parts role – 12-6=6 iron. Moving back he is roling the ball the exact same
    distance once the ball gets to the tee but says it’s now 2-3 parts role –
    the 6 parts of role should not change since the tee or pin did not move –
    so how does he come up with the nine iron for the longer shot? Thanks
    Richard

  11. This tip has been the trick for me to develop “feel” around the green.
    Played a round over the weekend and almost chipped in twice using this tip
    and some green reading. It helps to read the carry and roll ratios from the
    side of the shot, rather than down-the-line. It will be easier to get the
    right parts of carry and roll.

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