If the entry point is consistent, the only other two components to controlling distance in the bunker are your clubface’s loft, and the speed in which you rotate your body through the shot. ![]() And I tell them it’s fairly simple, provided their clubhead contacts the sand 1-1/2 to 2 inches behind the ball. I’m often asked by my students how to vary the distance of their sand shots, especially from short and long range. They’re able to control the clubhead’s entry point in the sand and their distance so well, that they can stick the ball within a few feet of the hole just as easily from 10 yards as they can 20 yards. ![]() ![]() By John Stahlschmidt, Senior Head Instructor, TOURAcademyįrom a greenside bunker, the average PGA TOUR player gets the ball up-and-down in two shots or less about 50 percent of the time.
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