Top teachers weigh in on how he overcame the chipping yips.
STAN UTLEY
“When Tiger got in trouble with his chipping, he tended to let the handle move too wide in the backswing. When that happens, the head isn’t really swinging; you’re moving the whole stick together. Then if you accelerate the grip to start the downswing, you bring the grip through impact first, which ruins the engineering of the club. In the swings I see now, the club is setting earlier and releasing earlier, and he’s using the bounce. When you use the bounce, the lies don’t become scary. You’re hitting the turf with the back of the wedge and skidding. You want to land the plane shallow and on the back wheels.”
RANDY SMITH
“It’s absolutely amazing to me what he’s done to recover – a total transformation. You can call it release point, rust or whatever, but there was something yippy going on. He was literally playing away from his wedges. But as the greatest player in the world might do, he figured out something different – a different feel, a different way to approach it, a slight grip change. Anything to feel less action in his hands. That’s fine in practice, but he’s now doing great on the real stage. His short game is back. He still has the yips. In the back of his head, they’re still there. But for now, the change is a warm blanket.”
HANK HANEY
This story is from the July 2018 edition of Golf Digest South Africa.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the July 2018 edition of Golf Digest South Africa.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Rule The Short Game!
4 steps to developing consistency and touch around the greens.
Life Of Harmon
Claude III on his famous family, famous pupils and the blank canvas that was tiger woods.
Power Outage
New data shows we’re not hitting it further.
Is It Better To Watch The Masters On TV Or In Person?
It’s well known that the great oak behind Augusta National’s clubhouse is where the power brokers of golf and business gather during Masters week.
Banish The Banana Ball
A different way to turn a slice into a draw.
Life- Family Ties
His uncle Ernie Els has the Open claret jug, and now Jovan Rebula is British Amateur champion.
I'll Have What He's Having
Toasting a golf legend by name
A Quick Way To Cure Your Slice
Draw drivers really work, our testing shows
Undercover Tour Pro
The battle of dumb versus smart
Kingswood First For Garden Route
George estate is top club in annual John Collier Survey