Approach shots

Beginner vs Advanced Approaches to Approach Shots

Compare simple green-finding habits for newer players with refined trajectory, spin, and target choices for stronger golfers.

Beginner vs Advanced Approaches to Approach Shots illustration

Different players need different goals

A beginner and a low-handicap player can face the same 130-yard shot and need different plans. The newer golfer should prioritize clean contact and a safe target. The advanced player may think about spin, slope, wind, and which side leaves an uphill putt.

Side-by-side approach

Player stage Main goal Good target
Beginner Get near or on the green Center or open side
Improving Control carry distance Middle third with a chosen miss
Advanced Shape trajectory and spin Specific quadrant based on slope

What beginners should avoid

Don’t chase every flag or change technique for every yardage. Use fewer clubs at first, learn your comfortable wedge and iron carries, and accept that a chip from the fringe is a fine result.

What advanced players refine

Better players can vary height, curve, and spin, but only when the risk is worth it. A cut 6-iron into a back-left pin sounds attractive; aiming center and leaving a 25-footer may still be the tournament play.

Takeaway

Progress in approach play is a shift from “hit the green somehow” to “hit the right part of the green for this situation.”