Links golf
Equipment and Shot Choices for Links Golf
Build a links-friendly toolkit with lower flights, bump-and-runs, smarter wedges, and clubs that handle firm turf.

Pack options, not excuses
Links golf doesn’t require a completely different bag, but it does reward having choices. The wind may make your usual 8-iron fly like a 9-iron one hole and a 6-iron the next. Firm turf may make a putter from off the green more reliable than your favorite wedge.
The key is to pick clubs and shots that control trajectory and roll.
Useful shots to own
| Shot | Typical club | When it helps |
|---|---|---|
| Knockdown iron | 6-iron to pitching wedge | Into wind or under a crosswind |
| Bump-and-run | 8-iron, 9-iron, or wedge | Firm approach with room to roll |
| Putt from off green | Putter | Tight turf and no major obstacle |
| Low running rescue | Hybrid or fairway wood | Long approach that can land short |
Wedges need a rethink
High-lofted wedges can be risky from tight, sandy turf if you add too much speed or bounce. Many links shots are easier with less loft and a putting-style motion. Land the ball sooner, let it release, and take the spectacular flop out of play unless you truly need it.
Coach’s tip: Before a links round, hit five bump-and-runs with three different clubs. Learn the release pattern before the course demands it.
Putting it in focus
Links golf rewards evidence as much as imagination. FocusGolf can log shots, distances, club performance, session history, and trends from a Wear OS, Apple Watch, or Garmin watch without club-mounted sensors. After a breezy round, review which punch 6-irons, running hybrids, or flighted wedges actually held their line, then keep the shots that belong in your links plan.
Summary
Links equipment strategy is not about buying a magic club. It’s about knowing which club produces the flight and roll the shot demands. Lower the ball, use the ground, and practice the boring-looking shots that save strokes.