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Do you struggle with chipping? This is five things on how not to chip with Jason Day. I’m going to run through five of the things that I see most common in amitters struggling with their chipping. First thing that I see that am struggle with is typically the easiest thing and that is setup. And what I mean by that is having either too wide of a stance. So they’re sitting up and they’ve got too big of a stance. And when you’re trying to hit such a delicate shot, it’s very, very hard to hit a delicate shot from a wide stance. So essentially what we want to do is we want to make sure if this is a wedge stance, we want to kind of have a quarter of that. So we’re looking at, you know, somewhere between 6 and 10 in. You want to make sure that you have enough like not too close because if I tried to have a 7030 uh weight distribution or 6040 I would fall off because I’d be too far on one leg. So, you want to have enough width there to be able to go, okay, I start to feel if this is 50/50 where there’s 50% here, 50% here, I want to get to 60 70 on this side and 30 40 on this side. I want to go, okay, I’m 50/50 right now. How do I Okay, I move my whole body. That’s about 80%. Okay, I’m going to go right there. That’s that’s 70 where I’m starting to feel this quad uh get a little bit uh tense or like you feel like it’s working. Okay, that’s great. I feel feel good there. Because essentially what we want is that when you’re here, the the main problem that we see is guys having too either neutral, if I have my sternum here, too far behind the ball, which obviously push pushes the low point of the shot behind. So you need to be able to have that stance and like narrow enough to be able to get the weight forward enough to be able to stay on top of that ball and be able to propel it forward this way. So a really good tip to be able to understand if you are 50/50 60 40 70 30 whatever you want to do or if you’re too far on your back back foot is to be able to get in there set up and I’m going to push my weight forward. You can either look at your sternum where your center body is and if that’s on the ball then great. Or if if it’s in front of the ball, great. But it’s all almost like if I can take, you know what I mean? Like if I’m too far back here, I’m going to fall. If I’m far enough forward, I’m able to take my foot off without going and balance rebalancing myself. I’m able to just lightly take that right foot off. and that that way I know I’m far enough left to be able to hit the correct chip in regards to setup. Number two, which is something that I see a lot in most amateur golfers is they get this thing way too far on the inside. So, what I mean by that is that if I if I’m coming to set this up, the the club gets too far inside the hands and low and inside the hands, you don’t have enough. Just think about exa exaggerating a little bit. If I’m swinging it too far inside, I’m going to be hitting it here. I’m never going to be able to hit the ball cleanly because the low point is going to be so far back here and so low. Vice versa, if I was going to go really extreme this way, I’ll be able to chop at that thing really easily. I’ll be able to hit the ball first really easy because my my path is so far out. What we need to do is that when we take it back, we need to make sure that we take it back very neutral where the club is through the hands on the way back and vice versa on the way down because if it does get behind, I have I’ve yet to come across someone that can actually chip it very very good with, you know, a lot of inside path. Um, it’s okay to be on your hand and a little bit in front. You don’t want to start the problem that you we get into if we get too far outside is that we start to cut across it. Then you start to toe ball it a lot. Um and then you you there’s other tendencies and potential bad things that can happen from that. But we want to make sure that neutral is key. We take it back. Club is in line with the hands on the way back. Never this way. And it’s okay to have it just outside the hands on the way back and on the way down. No problem. The third thing that I see and it’s something that I struggle with all the time is that I’ve got a good setup. I’m chipping great. It’s going through my hands. I’m very neutral on the way back, very neutral on the way down. I back up. So, as I’m coming into the ball, my head likes to do that. So when my head does that, what does that where does that put my low point? If I start to go like this, head backs up trying to lift the ball a little bit. Low point gets low and behind the ball. I start to hit a little bit behind it and if you’re on grainy grass, which you know the the south, you can get a lot of Bermuda grass, you start to chunk it, you start to lean the club a little bit more. So you don’t do that. An easy fix is just to get a camera out and see what you’re doing. So, if I’m standing in there, I want to make sure that I take the club back and on the way down, I want to feel like there’s a wall here, a hand here, a wall here. Doesn’t matter what it is. So, as I’m coming through, I want to make sure that that doesn’t back up. If you start to back up, you can cause a lot of behind shots. And then that’s when people go, “Okay, I don’t want to hit it fat.” they try and lift it up a little bit more to negate the bottom out of the club and then you can get some fins out that way. So you you’ll get a lot of, you know, fats and thins and that’s an extreme version of your head going back, but you usually get the double sound. You’ll get the first sound of the ground, then the second sound of the ball. That’s when you know like, oh my my my strike is not very clean right now. I need to work on something. And if that’s your head coming back, this is what you need to do. So, if I go ahead and uh set up normal, go through my whole routine. I have a good neutral uh back swing, neutral down swing. I just got to feel like there’s a wall there. I mean, if you’ve got a buddy at home that could potentially hold your head just like or put a club there, you if you feel any pressure, start doing that. You got to work on really just kind of keeping your head steady as possible or as it’s coming into the ball feeling like it’s starting to move towards the target a little bit. I’m not going to say you got to do it a lot because that can potentially if you start moving your head a lot you you can get the long bone across it across the green. So you want to make sure that when you’re chipping this thing is so steady. It stays very very steady. So, kind of just like that. When it comes to your head moving back, I don’t mind small little movements forward or back. Just small. Like I mean it’s very very difficult to keep your head so steady but the larger ones where you can actually start to feel you know if you haven’t felt it for the first time and you try and keep your head steady you’ll know if you’re starting to do this if you have someone’s hand there you’ll know you’re like oh I’m putting a lot of pressure on there that means you got to work on it. So just keep that in mind. Fourth thing that I see that am struggle with is rotation. They stop rotation. um they don’t use their body and arms in sync and correctly. It usually starts with a I’m gonna turn and then the body stops and then they just get really armsy kind of like that. Really armsy through the through the hitting zone. Now granted, just think of a clock, right? Like a nice time piece. The more moving parts potentially there’s more things that can go wrong. um the less moving parts, you know, that there’s either one or two things that could potentially go wrong. So, for me, how we solve that is that we go in here with a towel. And this is something that I have always used throughout my career. Um, sometimes when I do like, now granted, I’ve been shipping so long that I don’t really get too disconnected from my body to my arms, but something that you can do is really lock these arms to your body. So, I’ve got these this towel under my armpits and it’s locking myself in right now. So, wherever I move, my arms are going to go with it. So, that’s essentially what we want. We want the body as the engine to be able to move and the arms, hands, club are just along for the ride. And you’re using the big muscles to be able to create that speed and connection to hit the good shot. So, like I said, if you were coming in to this shot and you stopped and then your arms lifted, the towel is going to come out. Vice versa, the other way. So we what we want to do is we want to make sure that when we put that towel underneath our arms that we come in and we start rotating with our big muscles, we rotate with our torso to and the arms, hands and clubs go along with it. So, so we’re heading into winter here and I think a good drill for everyone is to be able to work on tempo. That’s the fifth thing that I see that amateurs struggle with is tempo. So, what I mean by that is that the tempo is not the same throughout the swing. You don’t want some when you go in there and you set up, you don’t want a quick back swing or a slow back swing and then a quick down down swing because you see a lot of amateurs struggle because the quick change of direction of speed is something that they really struggle with. You want to go in there and you want it to be flowy. You want it to flow. You want to have some like like some soft speed to it, but you want something to go in and be able to get that kind of nice flow to it where everything is connected. It doesn’t look disconnected. Doesn’t look like it’s going fast on the way back, fast on the way down. So, a quick drill that you can potentially do in the winter time, especially for us up here in Ohio or the Northeast or the Midwest, is grab a tempo app on on the app store. I’ve got 189. So, we want to in your basement, if you got one, be able to train the speed. So, the first beep is when you go, the second beep should be the end of the back swing. The third beep is impact. So, we want to train that over and over again so that when we come out and spring and whenever you’re ready to go and play is that you’ve you’re worked on that tempo. you don’t have that quick change of direction and things are flowing nicely. So once again, I’m going to do a couple here. The problem is is if you start to get into it and and you have to pick what kind of tempo you like to have. So you might have like it quicker, you might like it a little bit slower. Um, but you have to really get in there and kind of understand you’re like, “Okay, that’s what I’ve got to do. I got to go beep beep beep.” And if I can really time that up really, really good. And I’ve got everything else flowing, you’re going to hit good chip shots all the time just because the tempo is not going to have that quick dramatic change of direction that will really struggle because you got to really really focus on making sure that your hands are good and you’ll be able to be creative enough to be able to handle that quick uh change of direction. So, if you can really nail this tempo, you don’t have to make it as difficult as you do. So, there you have it. There, the five things that I see most amateur golfers fall into or struggle with.

42 Comments
Been looking forward to this one since yesterday's post. 👌 lunch timing on point.
A good feel to keep connected and rotate properly is initiating the swing with the left shoulder
What Training with the Lads do you want to see next?
Thanks for sharing your golf wisdom!
Sup Bru, im the same age as you.. can i join your crew of Lads?
What grip is Jason using on his club? JumboMax what? @theladsgolf
Could you show me exactly the setup and takeaway on a full swing?
How to fricken aim. Some days I can see it, others not.
Grip, setup and stance on the disco stick boys! Let’s see a comprehensive, complete breakdown of the driver PLEASE
Great video Jason 👌🏻
I would love to see a video that explains how to determine your lie in grass. Pros always talk about ball lie angle, grain angle, and other things about how the ball will react. It would be great to get a video that shows us to see what pros see, rather than just a ball on the ground!
Such a great video! Thanks a lot. Also comes at the perfect time as my wife and I are working on improving our chipping.
Good stuff, thanks!
I really appreciate how JDay’s sincerity and genuine approach comes through in his videos. I feel like he comes across as a really kind person and I find myself becoming a bigger and bigger fan when I see him being successful on leaderboards.
Priceless golf advice
I genuinely love these teaching videos. Please do more of these. I’m glad you’re starting with the basics. Hope to see more specialty shots
Good info Jason. I really enjoy your videos, and I can tell you really enjoy teaching people how to become better. However, as a former teacher and principal I could give you some tips on how to be a more effective teacher. You have all the basics but there are a few things you could do better (teaching wise). Contact me if you are interested. Remember, feedback is how one improves. Secondly, I would like to see a video on how to chip. You did some of that today, but didn't mention grip, what your hands are doing, etc. I'm talking all your different methods depending on situation. My go-to chipping guy is Dan Grieves and his three releases. But I have watched Phil Michelson who is very different, but obviously very successful. You have your "dead hands" technique, but you bring your wrists into play for some situations. I'd like to see your full spectrum of shots, how you adjust to different situations, alternative shots if there are any, etc. Anyway, keep up the great work. You're making a difference.
Legend, J Day is so good at explaining things simply and with reasons why something is important.
As always, good stuff from JDay! 👊
Happy Holidays to you!
The way you explain things are so understandable. I really appreciate it!
Would love to see how you hit shot with a lot of rough close the green short sided. Sometimes I hit them to hard and sometimes I double hit them 😂
Hey Jason, not sure if you remember me I met you and Dash at a Northstar junior league love to be up with you guys sometime
Solid video Jason! You da man!
Love these, J day keep em coming
Clubhead length apart in stance?
Great teaching!!!!! Really good!!!!😊
I wish I knew how to practice better. I hit balls everyday. it's a mix of random and block type practice. I still struggle on the off days, I feel like I can completely lose it in 24hrs.
Nice vid👌🏼How to train compression , and what the hands Are doing thru impact and after
Ty JDay!
Dingy sweatpants and hoodie. JDay is so boujie (s/o Wezley)
Thank you so much extremely helpful
THANK YOU!!! My husband and I are both struggling with our chipping and this gift came at the perfect time for us! Appreciate it!!! ❤
The more you see the best in the world do something, the more you realize they just are better at practicing the fundamentals than you.
Chipping is the main problem for many amateurs but not only the chipping technique as much as chipping the ball consistently close to the pin. That's the only way to lower scores really in my H Opinion because it takes a lot of stress off the long game.
Long game is easy and getting the ball close somewhat to the green on par fours, threes and some fives its relatively not hard, but chipping it close and reading the break on the cup is what makes the diff between u guys and us amateurs. Sometimes I can see the brown low side and the tall green grass on the high side of the cup but other times all sides look the same.
Finally, the pitching game, say seventy yards and in it can be a problem because we don't practice as much as pros do. Thanks for the tips JD, ive been a fan of yours for a long time.
The video u made with tiger on bunker play is one of the best iv seen. God bless u all.
I suffer from all five faults 😂
Jason is my favorite player to watch chip! I really like the minimal wrist action! Been trying to copy him for years!
Excellent advise. Now can you show us how to vary the length of chips, eg, to a short, medium and long pin. How to hit low running, low bitting, medium and high chips. When does a chip become a pitch. Do you use one club or all of your edges?
Great video! Just wondering how does it change off of very soft, wet ground? I find my club digging in a lot
Thanks MR Day 🤑money
i love this video
Always excited to see another instructional video from the lads!
Great video.
It’d be interesting to hear you discuss the grinds on your wedges & why you chose them.
Random question: has switching to graphite shafts changed anything for you regarding short game?