How To Chip Badly And Get Away With It (The Secret Amateurs Miss)
Instruction

How To Chip Badly And Get Away With It (The Secret Amateurs Miss)

Support our Mission. We independently test each product we recommend. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission.

How To Chip Badly And Get Away With It (The Secret Amateurs Miss)

I came across a Grant Horvat instructional video recently and it clicked with me because it took chipping beyond the usual checklist of setup, club selection and hand position. Horvat drilled into bounce — the most misunderstood feature of a wedge.

Amateurs often think bounce is only for bunkers or special shots. In reality, it’s what makes wedges forgiving around the green. If you learn to use it the right way, even a poor chip can still produce a playable result.

Setup still matters

Before you can take advantage of bounce, you have to get the basics right.

  • Weight forward — around 70 percent on your lead foot keeps the low point consistent. Set your weight there and then keep it throughout the swing.
  • Narrow stance — feet close together help simplify the motion.
  • Ball centered — not jammed back, not too far forward.

These checkpoints set you up to use the wedge’s sole, not just the sharp leading edge.

What happens if you don’t use bounce

Most amateurs instinctively press their hands forward, push the ball so it’s in line with the back foot and dig the leading edge into the turf. That’s when the big misses, like a bladed shot across the green or a chunk, start to show up.

When the leading edge is the only part of the wedge interacting with the turf, your margin for error shrinks.

Vokey WedgeWorks Low Bounce K Grind Wedge

How to actually use bounce

When you let the sole of the wedge interact with the turf, the club “slides” instead of “digs.” That’s bounce doing its job. You’ll feel the club brush the ground rather than stab into it. Horvat demonstrates this in the video by intentionally hitting behind the ball and still producing a playable result.

This happens because the bounce glides instead of sticks the way the leading edge would.

The key to making sure the bounce is used properly is to have your hands just slightly forward, not exaggerated. This exposes the bounce without de-lofting the club too much. Many amateurs push the hands well forward of the ball at setup and it makes it difficult to use the bounce.

Step 4: Why bounce is forgiving

Think of bounce as your built-in insurance policy. It widens the effective striking area so that even if you contact the ground a fraction early or late, the club still has a chance to slide and deliver the ball onto the green.

Without it, your chip shots demand perfect precision. It’s the buffer that could be the difference between saving par and throwing away strokes.

Final thoughts

If you struggle with chunks and thins, the fix might not be hours of working on technique. It might be learning to let your wedge do the work. Bounce is the forgiving part of the club. Experiment with it, feel how it brushes instead of digs, and you’ll quickly understand why pros lean on it and why amateurs can’t afford to ignore it.

For You

For You

Bridgestone e6 SOFT TReadline golf ball Bridgestone e6 SOFT TReadline golf ball
Golf Balls
Jun 23, 2026
This Bridgestone Golf Limited-Edition Ball Might Just Have Some Traction
Drivers
Jun 22, 2026
Four More Srixon ZXi RKT Drivers Hit USGA List, Bringing The Day’s Total To Seven
Golf Balls
Jun 22, 2026
Now Serving: Callaway’s Chrome Tour Hot Dogs. One Of Them Is Flat Wrong
Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

      Peter Jackson

      9 months ago

      Thank you for this really simple explanation for correct chipping. I do watch the Professionals who appear to play the ball next to the back foot, Phil Mickleson is typical. He is extremely skilled!
      If your average golfer does this, he will get very variable results.
      Using, the methods on the video allows so much more reliability and consistency 👍

      Reply

      OpMan

      9 months ago

      Phil does NOT play the ball off his back foot. You are being misled by camera angles.

      Reply

      Greg

      9 months ago

      Yes, excellent video by Grant Horvat. He explains everything with focus and clarity. The left leg as pivot point is esp. helpful to me. It clarifies why the weight is left, so the contact point is consistent. Then in turn shows why you don’t need a lot of hands. I don’t think I’ve ever seen in 60+ yrs as a golfer such a vivid lesson on chipping. I also didn’t realize bounce provides this much margin of error. Thanks for pointing me to this!

      Reply

    Leave A Reply

    required
    required
    required (your email address will not be published)

    This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

    Bridgestone e6 SOFT TReadline golf ball Bridgestone e6 SOFT TReadline golf ball
    Golf Balls
    Jun 23, 2026
    This Bridgestone Golf Limited-Edition Ball Might Just Have Some Traction
    Drivers
    Jun 22, 2026
    Four More Srixon ZXi RKT Drivers Hit USGA List, Bringing The Day’s Total To Seven
    Golf Balls
    Jun 22, 2026
    Now Serving: Callaway’s Chrome Tour Hot Dogs. One Of Them Is Flat Wrong