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Want To Hit Your Driver Off The Deck? Here’s How

Want To Hit Your Driver Off The Deck? Here’s How

I’ve always been reluctant to hit my driver anywhere but off a tee. I don’t ever hit behind the driver when it’s teed up but once that tee is gone, it makes me nervous. Still, there’s something intriguing about flushing a driver from the fairway, chasing it up onto a par-5 green. If you want to try it, here’s what you need to know and how I go about it.

When (and when not) to hit driver off the deck

There is a right and wrong time to do it. This is not a “get out of trouble” shot. It’s a calculated play and the conditions need to be just right.

The lie must be perfect – a tightly mown fairway, sitting up, no slope. No forced carry – you need plenty of room to run the ball up. You can miss a little – a fade or slight cut is common, so prepare for that. Don’t force it – if it doesn’t check all the boxes, reach for a fairway wood or long iron.

Set up adjustments for the driver off the deck

You can’t hit this shot like your normal driver off a tee. A few key changes include:

Ball position: Move it slightly back in your stance from where a normal driver shot would be, more like a 3-wood. Choke up: Stand a little closer to the ball and grip about one inch down from the top of the grip. Lead foot flare: Point your front foot outward for more stability and pressure shift. Pressure: Lean a bit more into your lead side at address.

Execution

Once you’re set up properly, you’ll want to take a backswing that’s a little shorter than normal to help you stay in control and avoid “helping” the ball into the air.

The attack angle is important when hitting a driver off the deck. You want to try to brush the ground with a flat to slightly descending strike. Don’t look for an upward launch like you do with a teed-up driver.

Your divot will be a thin, brushing divot after you contact the ball. If you don’t take a divot, that’s also acceptable. Finish with the club getting through the ball. It may not be a full high finish like you get with your driver but you’ll need something that gets you through the ball.

Expect a fade

Don’t try to fight the cut. A fade is normal when hitting driver off the deck, the path will likely be a little out to in and the face is hard to close down without the tee and the normal ball position. A low chaser with a little fade spin is typically the shot shape you are going to get.

Hitting the driver off the deck is not about shaping a high draw onto the green. It’s a knock-down runner that gets you 20-30 more yards than a 3-wood if you strike it flush.

Video breakdown

If you want to watch a good demonstration of how to hit a driver off the deck, this one gives a lot of valuable information.

Final thoughts

Driver off the deck isn’t a shot for every round (or every golfer) but knowing how to do it (and when to try it) can add a fun and useful tool to your game. Whether it’s a wind cheater into a long par-5 or just something you want to try for the challenge, hitting driver off the deck might be another tool to add to your game.

The post Want To Hit Your Driver Off The Deck? Here’s How appeared first on MyGolfSpy.

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