This Patrick Cantlay Short-Game Strategy May Be Worth Stealing
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This Patrick Cantlay Short-Game Strategy May Be Worth Stealing

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This Patrick Cantlay Short-Game Strategy May Be Worth Stealing

Around the green, golfers are overwhelmed with options. Bump it with a 9-iron. Open the face and float a lob wedge. Keep the wrists quiet. Use more hinge. Play it low. Play it high.

Depending on whom you listen to, there is always another shot you should be learning.

The result for many players is not creativity. It is confusion. Too many choices can lead to hesitation. That’s exactly the problem Patrick Cantlay was running into with his short game.

How Cantlay simplified his short game

In a video from GolfPass, Cantlay explains that he used to vary clubs constantly around the green. One shot would call for a higher-lofted wedge. Another would be played lower with a different club. He was capable of hitting all of them but the constant switching created indecision for him.

He found himself caught between choices.

To simplify the process, he began thinking of his 61-degree wedge first on almost every chip. If there was a shot available with it, that was the shot he hit. Only when the 61-degree wedge clearly could not produce the shot would he move on to another option.

What this strategy is really about

This strategy is not about saying your most-lofted wedge is the best option you have; it’s about reducing mental clutter.

By starting with a default club, Cantlay removed an entire layer of decision making. Instead of choosing a club and then choosing a shot, he focused on choosing a landing spot.

He describes working backward from the green. First, he looks for the largest and most predictable landing area such as a gentle upslope or a section of green that produces similar results even when the strike or carry is not perfect.

Once that landing area is chosen, the swing becomes simpler and more committed because he knows it’s the 61-degree wedge.

How lie and grain shape the shot

Cantlay also explains how lie and grain affect expectations. On Bermuda grass into the grain, he knows the ball will come out lower.

Instead of trying to force a high spinning shot, he plans for rollout and bounce with the 61-degree wedge. His control comes from choosing the correct landing, not trying to manufacture spin or roll on a shot that is not set up for it.

Amateur golfers often try to hit shots the turf conditions do not call for. Committing to one wedge helps you better understand how lie and grain influence the ball around the green.

My take on making this work for regular golfers

I am all for finding what works for you around the green, within reason.

There are times when my pitching wedge chip is my most consistent option. The motion is simple. The rollout is predictable. But there are also situations where it is clearly not the smartest play.

Cantlay is not ignoring those situations.

The takeaway from this tip is to reduce indecision. Get really good with one option. Use it often. Change only when the situation truly demands it. The challenge that I believe faces amateur golfers is learning to identify when the situation has changed and another shot is necessary. That takes time and practice.

That is where a professional like Patrick Cantlay separates himself. Even with fewer choices, there is still a decision-making process on every greenside shot.

How about you? How do you approach your greenside shots?

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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





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      Duffer1

      1 month ago

      Shooster and Dr T are right… this is only pro or VGG (very good golfer) “advice”. Much more is written that most golfers should take the 60 degree out of the bag. A 50 or even 70% success rate with a club is poor golf. Unless there is a bunker to get over, I use a pitching wedge to bump it up. Totally predictable, and scores dropped.

      Reply

      Turtlehacker

      1 month ago

      Had Meniscus knee surgery end of May 2025. After about a month of healing and rehab, I was able to go to the course for some chipping and putting only, no full shots. Worked on chipping with the heel of the club up as I moved closer to the ball while using a putting grip. It took awhile to get the shot down, something I probably wouldn’t have done if not for the surgery. But, by putting in the practice time, in August I shot my record lowest score to par of a 2 over par 74 at my local 18-hole course. It was something I was very proud of, especially at my age of 69. And believe me, that chipping really paid off.

      Reply

      Stoosher

      1 month ago

      Completely agree. Cantlay’s “system” is great if you can practice for hours with one club to determine run out in all different situations and have the ability/time to practice to spin the ball.
      For the rest us that practice chipping once a week – pick a club that will get it on the green with a putting grip and stroke and run it to the hole.
      Yes, sure, short sided, fast green – flop it in with your 58-60°. But I totally agree with your approach.

      Reply

      Sven

      1 month ago

      Anything that speeds up Cantlay’s play is a good thing.

      Reply

      Pat

      1 month ago

      I use kind of a hybrid version of this with three wedges. 80% of the time it is the PW. Consistent landing spot and roll out. If I need a little more carry and less roll out, then it’s the SW. In emergency situations where I have to carry a bunker or other obstacle I pull the LW. I do practice a bit with all 3 but with the last two I only practice the shots I use it for. This has helped my chipping consistency immensely.

      Reply

      Dr Tee

      1 month ago

      Absurd. This totally flies in the face of good advice, green side mastery really does not have that much to do with the type of grass. The lie, yes, maybe, but trying to do everything with a lob wedge: NYETSKI tovarisch!
      Years ago a system was developed called the Rule of 12 by “Little Poison” Paul Runyan to calculate flight to roll ratio for each club in the bag using a chipping motion. It was good enough for Bobby Jones but not good enough for Patrick Cantlay??

      Reply

      Ken

      1 month ago

      There’s a whole article waiting to be written on just this statement: “ On Bermuda grass into the grain, he knows the ball will come out lower.”

      Talk about grain and grasses in different regions (not ‘This is a hybrid cross, ah, of Bluegrass, Kentucky Bluegrass, Featherbed Bent, and Northern California Sensemilia.’), and how they impact ball flight and spin.

      Reply

      Always loved playing on Sinsemilla. Don’t know how it affected ball flight, just the personal perspective.

      Reply

      BH

      1 month ago

      Registered Carl Spackler Bent?

      Reply

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