I stumbled upon "Rule of 12" chipping the other day and it intrigued me. I've been taught my whole life to pick one club and do all short game shots with it. The remotely analytical approach to Rule of 12 chipping and getting the ball rolling quicker seems like it would help a lot with consistency.
Basics of the Rule of 12 Chipping is that it helps you pick what club to chip with based on how long you have to carry it and how long you have to roll it. So if you have a 1 yard carry and a 5 yard roll you would go
12 - (5/1) = 7 iron.
If you had a 3 yard carry and a 3 yard roll you would go
12 - (3/3) = 11 (Gap Wedge)
The idea is you use the formula to calculate what club you need then use the same stroke for all the chips. You would obviously accommodate uphill and uphill/downhill lies, uphill/downhill rolls, and different speeds as well by going up or down 1 or 2 clubs.
Anyone chip like this? This seems like it would take a little of the guesswork out of it and the inconsistency I sometimes struggle with when chipping with my SW for every shot. It makes even more sense when I switched to single length clubs.
Edit to say if my explanation is lacking there are some good videos out there if you google. It used to be rule of 11, but the strengthening of the lofts in modern day clubs increased it by 1.
Basics of the Rule of 12 Chipping is that it helps you pick what club to chip with based on how long you have to carry it and how long you have to roll it. So if you have a 1 yard carry and a 5 yard roll you would go
12 - (5/1) = 7 iron.
If you had a 3 yard carry and a 3 yard roll you would go
12 - (3/3) = 11 (Gap Wedge)
The idea is you use the formula to calculate what club you need then use the same stroke for all the chips. You would obviously accommodate uphill and uphill/downhill lies, uphill/downhill rolls, and different speeds as well by going up or down 1 or 2 clubs.
Anyone chip like this? This seems like it would take a little of the guesswork out of it and the inconsistency I sometimes struggle with when chipping with my SW for every shot. It makes even more sense when I switched to single length clubs.
Edit to say if my explanation is lacking there are some good videos out there if you google. It used to be rule of 11, but the strengthening of the lofts in modern day clubs increased it by 1.
