August 8, 2008 












Tip #8: Learn to Love the Sand

Sand play was one of the last aspects of golf I took seriously. It was not until after I started playing the U.S. Tour regularly that I really began to work on my bunker game. Oh, I had a grasp of the basics, but I had no real finesse, no sharpness. I guess I was so cocky in those days that I figured I'd rarely have to dirty my spikes in the sand.

Consistent swing motion and speed will result in more solidly struck shots.

Boy, was I naive. After a couple of years of watching guys like Gary Player and Seve Ballesteros I realized I'd never be a complete player -- or a consistent winner -- without a strong bunker game. So I worked on the refinements, using the bunker as my laboratory and experimenting with all sorts of nuances of stance and swing.

I learned a couple of important things. First I saw that there is more room for artistry and creativity in a bunker than in any other comer of the course. You have so many options, so many ways of playing a shot. And the more of these options you know, the more confident and aggressive you can be.

Second, I saw that bunker finesse is far easier to develop than putting feel or a soft touch around the green. Why? The sand acts as a buffer, a margin for error. And therein is another source of confidence, another reason to play bunkers the only way they can be played -- aggressively. Until you can make firm, confident swings and actually try to sink that ball out of the sand, you won't be going at these shots with the proper attitude.

The best way to learn sand play is to teach yourself, by relating different setups and swings to the corresponding ball flights and rolls. In this way, you'll develop your own sixth sense in bunkers. What you'll learn, more than anything else, is the way to vary the length and trajectory of your shots. There is a greater variety of opinion on this subject than on almost any aspect of golf instruction.

Some teachers and players advocate that to increase the length of a sand shot, you simply increase the length and force of the swing. Others say it's merely a matter of increasing or decreasing the distance you hit behind the ball. And still others key on ball position and weight distribution.

My own practice sessions have put me in the "vary the amount of sand" camp. I've spent hours hitting balls, thousands of sand shots -- hundreds of those swinging with my left hand only, to get a feel for the way the club reacts with the bunker -- and I know that one thing is not arguable: the more sand you take in back of the ball, the less backspin you'll apply, the lower the ball will fly, and the longer it will run. Conversely, the less sand you take, the more backspin you'll apply, the higher the ball will fly, and the faster it will stop.

Related to that law of the desert is another law: The more open your sand wedge at impact, the less sand you'll explode and the more height and backspin you'll put on the shot; the less open the face, the more the club will dig down into the sand, and the less height and backspin you'll get.

Combining these two laws will help you to play virtually any shot you'll encounter. For instance, if you want maximum height and bite, the idea is to turn the clubface as open as possible and take as little sand as possible by hitting right next to the ball. Indeed, if you can make impact so that just a few grains of sand intervene between your club and ball, you'll have the ultimate in friction and backspin. In a sense this is like hitting the ball with a sandpaper-faced club -- as you can imagine, it produces maximum backspin and bite. When you see me or other Tour players make the ball suck back from sand, this is what we've done -- we've played a wide-open-faced shot and we've taken just a thin veil of sand with the ball.

Looking at it another way, this is the reason that a ball always runs a long way when it's hit from a buried lie. When the ball is buried, you have to go down after it. To get down after it, you have to dig into the sand, which means a square face. Digging down deep means that you'll be taking a lot of sand with the shot, which produces a low ball that runs a mile.

The suck-back shot and the buried lie are two extremes. More often, you encounter a situation that's somewhere in between, and naturally that calls for a compromise in your technique. Let's say, for example, that your ball is semi-buried but you don't have the luxury of hitting a hot-running explosion, because you're near the front lip of the trap and the pin is fairly close to you.

It was for situations such as this that I developed the stab shot -- an open face combined with a hard downward dig into the sand. The open face gives me the height and bite, the downward dig gets the ball out.

Other players have developed other solutions. Creative guys like Ballesteros and Chi Chi Rodriguez have dozens of different sand shots, but Jack Nicklaus played superbly for years with just two basic shots he called the explosion and the splash. As I said, the best way to solve the mysteries of the sand is to take the basics with you into a bunker, learn how the physics of earthmoving affect ball flight, and develop the shots that fit the course you play most often, and fit your overall game.

Knowing the basics of sand play takes away your fear; knowing the subtleties will actually lead you to enjoy playing from bunkers. Once you have a feel for these things, you can pursue some of the finer points of bunker play, adapting your technique to different types of sands and the challenges of uneven lies.

- Greg Norman


Golf Tip Archive
Tip #61Gamesmanship - Posted Dec. 31, 2003
Tip #60The Seven-Fingered Shot - Posted Dec. 24, 2003
Tip #59Slice An 8-iron On Long Bunker Shots - Posted Dec. 17, 2003
Tip #58Reading The Green - Posted Dec. 10, 2003
Tip #57Handling Heavy Grass - Posted Dec. 3, 2003
Tip #56The Pitch Shot - Posted Nov. 26, 2003
Tip #55Post Impact - Posted Nov. 19, 2003
Tip #54Three Trick Shots - Posted Nov. 12, 2003
Tip #53Getting Out Of The Trees - Posted Nov. 5, 2003
Tip #52Fades and Draws - Posted Oct. 29, 2003
Tip #51Sixth Sense In The Sand - Posted Oct. 22, 2003
Tip #50The Downswing - Posted Oct. 15, 2003
Tip #49Low Shots - Posted Oct. 8, 2003
Tip #48The Right Club On The Tee - Posted Oct. 1, 2003
Tip #47Reinforce On The Course - Posted Sept. 24, 2003
Tip #46The Lob - Posted Sept. 17, 2003
Tip #45Brave And Bold Putts - Posted Sept. 10, 2003
Tip #44Club Selection - Posted Sept. 3, 2003
Tip #43Meaningful Practice - Posted Aug. 27, 2003
Tip #42Tackling Trouble Shots - Posted Aug. 20, 2003
Tip #41Adapt To Different Sands - Posted Aug. 13, 2003
Tip #40Difficult Lies - Posted Aug. 6, 2003
Tip #39The Takeaway - Posted July 30, 2003
Tip #38The Chip Shot - Posted July 23, 2003
Tip #37The Punch - Posted July 16, 2003
Tip #36Shotmaking Strategies - Posted July 9, 2003
Tip #35Metal Readiness - Posted July 2, 2003
Tip #34Aptitude Starts with Attitude - Posted June 25, 2003
Tip #33Perfect Your Putting Position - Posted June 18, 2003
Tip #32Take the Right Position - Posted June 11, 2003
Tip #31Learn to Read the Green - Posted June 4, 2003
Tip #30Dig it out of the Rough - Posted May 28, 2003
Tip #29Get the Stiffest Shaft You Can Handle - Posted May 21, 2003
Tip #28Get Hungry around the Green - Posted May 14, 2003
Tip #27Blast it Out of the Water - Posted May 7, 2003
Tip #26Think Your Way Out of Trouble - Posted April 30, 2003
Tip #25Overhaul Your Game - Posted April 23, 2003
Tip #24Become a Sand Expert - Posted April 16, 2003
Tip #23Know When to Pick Your Shots - Posted April 9, 2003
Tip #22Learn to Work Your Shots - Posted April 2, 2003
Tip #21Countdown to Takeoff - Posted March 26, 2003
Tip #20Perfect Your Alignment - Posted March 19, 2003
Tip #19Learn the Basics of Sand Play - Posted March 12, 2003
Tip #18Playing in the Rain - Posted March 5, 2003
Tip #17Should You Swing the Same? - Posted Feb. 26, 2003
Tip #16Finish Your Swing Strong - Posted Feb. 19, 2003
Tip #15Hit it Through the Wind - Posted Feb. 12, 2003
Tip #14Put Horsepower in Your Swing - Posted Feb. 5, 2003
Tip #13Hit the Right Club - Posted Jan. 29, 2003
Tip #12You Can Spin the Ball Back - Posted Jan. 22, 2003
Tip #11Don't be a Sucker - Posted Jan. 15, 2003
Tip #10Make Your Practice Meaningful - Posted Jan. 8, 2003
Tip #9Hit it Deep - Posted Jan. 1, 2003
Tip #8Learn to Love The Sand - Posted Dec. 25, 2002
Tip #7Get Inside Their Head - Posted Dec. 18, 2002
Tip #6Get a Handle on Flyer Lies - Posted Dec. 11, 2002
Tip #5Hitting it High - Posted Dec. 5, 2002
Tip #4Swing a Knockout Punch - Posted Nov. 28, 2002
Tip #3Spin it Out of the Sand - Posted Nov. 21, 2002
Tip #2Hit off the Deck - Posted Nov. 14, 2002
Tip #1Attack Every Putt - Posted Nov. 7, 2002

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