Wedge play
How Wedge Play Affects Ball Flight and Scoring
Use trajectory and spin choices to leave shorter putts and fewer awkward comebacks.

Height changes everything
A low wedge launches with less spin and more release. A higher wedge may stop faster, but only with clean contact, enough speed, and the right lie. Into the wind, high floaters can stall; downwind, even good shots release more.
Scoring wedges are about proximity
From 40 to 100 yards, a player who controls carry has more realistic birdie chances and easier pars. Poor wedge play leaves long first putts, chips back across the green, and short-sided recoveries that did not need to happen.
| Situation | Useful flight | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Back pin, firm green | Lower landing short | Uses release and avoids long miss |
| Front pin over bunker | Medium-high with enough carry | Clears trouble without overswinging |
| Into wind | Lower, shorter finish | Keeps spin from ballooning |
| Fluffy rough | More loft and speed | Grass reduces clean contact |
Smart miss
Aim at the landing area that leaves an uphill putt or a simple chip. Wedge play rewards imagination, but it punishes fantasy.