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Okay, if any shot calls for a sixty degree wedge, we don't have that much wind, I've
got a sand trap in front of me, and I'm about probably forty five to fifty yards from the
edge of the green. So I can take a pretty full swing with my sixty degree wedge and
that way I don't have to think about slowing it down or did I take the club back too far
or not enough. I can just really point at my target. So I'm going to go with a little
open stance on this one and open the club face, and I'm going to try to get it to the
middle of the green here. And so we'll see how I can do here. Okay, that wasn't too bad. It was a little
short but it was decently struck. So now I know what I need to work on. So I'm going
to, I'm going to work on that shot again. So I'm going to open the stance to the target,
open the club face a little bit. Okay, now that one I hit a little too hard. So I've
hit one a little too soft, one a little too hard, let's see if I can get the Goldilocks
results here. So I've got to fiddle around with my stance and just get comfortable. And
you need a lot of repetitions of this shot because these shots are so important that
when you get them on the course in a tournament, you want to be able just, now that one was
just right. So that was really good. So that's what you, you want to practice the sixty degree
shot a lot. Open stance, open face, closed stance, neutral face, and closed face. So
you get a really good feel. But this is an incredibly important shot because if you don't
execute this shot well, it can lead to a lot of extra shots.