Rickochet I haven't shanked any of them....mostly solid contact, with an occasional fat one; I
just can't seem to get the damn things close to the hole!! I also fail to hit the landing spot that I choose
on the green most of the time. Maybe I need to rethink this and go to your idea of lower lofted clubs.....

    fatshot

    fatshot I pretty much use a 54° wedge for all shots around the green. If it is a long chip I might use a 51°. I open it up the 54° for higher shots. It makes no sense why it works for me, but it does. I only tried it out of frustration with the results of my chips that day. I was chunking or thinning chip after chip. This technique has all but eliminated those misses for me. I chip a lot at my home course sometimes only hitting 4 or 5 greens in regulation.

      fatshot Believe it or not, my way actually sends the ball out low like chipping with a 7 or 8 but with a lot more spin. I wish I had a video I could post.

      Dufferman I only tried it out of frustration

      Believe me....I'm about there myself!!!

      Use the JV method, unless you come over the top you'll probably never shank another ball.
      Just make sure you're always coming from the INSIDE.

      Although I think his is a little different then what I do at the end. But the take away is very similar.

      I saw this and it describes both styles:

      Kevin Kisner how to use the bounce which I would guess is over 75% of golfers.

      And Brian Sparks chipping.

      A lot of videos and, like putting, 9 million ways to do it. Chipping has always been a strong part of my game because you could go to the golf course and practice it for free!
      My keys that I use in the clinics:

      Ball back, Feet close together, little knee flex and stand close to the ball.
      60% weight on front foot and stays there
      Arms and shoulders form a triangle, move the triangle by rocking the shoulders.
      Club stays low going back and through

      Practice swings you brush the grass like you’re giving it a haircut.

        Typhoon
        This was the technique I had always heard and used. But, my chipping has always been subpar. Either I would make good practice swings then for whatever reason chunk or blade the actual chip. When I made good contact I would a large chunk of the time blast the ball way past the hole. It just never worked, and to be honest I never practiced much. This new way I'm using has improved my overall game dramatically, and I still don't practice!

        I agree though, when it comes to golf not every technique works for every person.

        Dufferman I think I've been doing something similar on longer chips, but I use a 7 iron. Does your right hand pass your left in a real flipping motion? That's what I do. Works really well for me. I'll have to try it with different clubs around the green. I used to use a pw for any chips and just started using lower lofts but the only time I let it flip is on the low running 7 iron chip.

        Typhoon Ball back, Feet close together, little knee flex
        60% weight on front foot and stays there
        Arms and shoulders form a triangle, move the triangle by rocking the shoulders.
        Club stays low going back and through

        This.
        I would add:
        For low chips, lead with left hand. I think of it as a left hand shot.
        For higher chips, ball forward and it's more of a right hand shot.

        I am one of those "use 1-2 clubs only and learn to use them well" guys.
        Usually SW for me. GW for longer pitches. LW for specialty shots only, like super flops and hard pan.
        🙂

        I always play low when I can. But you may be surprised how high you can hit a chip shot hooding a gap or sand wedge

        Typhoon Ball back, Feet close together, little knee flex
        60% weight on front foot and stays there
        Arms and shoulders form a triangle, move the triangle by rocking the shoulders.
        Club stays low going back and through

        Practice swings you brush the grass like you’re giving it a haircut.

        OK....After the above discussion yesterday I went and got out Paul Runyan's book (he played the tour in the 30's and 40's, but hit it SO short he developed a killer short game to be able to compete). He's a little unorthodox, but it
        has worked for me in the past....don't know why I ever moved on to other methods. Anyway, his video describing his methods is below....putting first....chipping starts at 21:42. Played today going back to this method and got it
        up and down 5 out of 9 times. Still not perfect, but much better than I've been averaging!!

          fatshot
          His putter is too long according to today's teachings.
          Or he has a crooked left arm.
          :/
          and who chips with a 3 or 4 iron these days?
          LOL

          Glad it sorta works for you, but it's really outdated techniques only found on Youtube I think.

            Spuzz and who chips with a 3 or 4 iron these days?

            Who even CARRIES a 3 or 4 these days? My strongest iron is a 6 iron. I'll keep at it until it stops
            working or something else comes along that I think will work better. "My version" is to chip with my
            putting grip and stroke, which is a much shallower stroke insuring more consistent contact.

              fatshot Who even CARRIES a 3 or 4 these days?

              The pros do, but they don't chip with them, ever.