Trouble shots

How Trouble Shots Affects Ball Flight and Scoring

Use ball-flight expectations to choose recoveries that protect the hole.

How Trouble Shots Affects Ball Flight and Scoring illustration

Trouble changes launch and spin

A normal swing from an abnormal lie rarely produces a normal flight. Rough can launch the ball with less spin and more roll. A downhill lie lowers launch. A ball above your feet tends to move left for a right-handed player; below your feet often leaks right. Sand, pine straw, and hardpan all change how much club you can put on the ball.

Scoring math from bad places

The goal is usually to preserve bogey or leave a chance at par. That means avoiding the second mistake.

Lie or obstacle Likely flight Scoring plan
Deep rough Low spin, flyer or heavy Aim for center, allow roll
Tree window Lower launch needed Choose enough club to punch out
Downhill lie Flatter, faster landing Take less loft and swing with slope
Fairway bunker lip Limited height Advance only if clearance is certain

Know when to stop attacking

If reaching the green requires perfect contact, perfect curve, and perfect luck, the shot is probably not a plan. A clean pitch back to the fairway may feel dull, but it keeps the next full swing meaningful.