Playing from uneven lies

Advanced Playing From Uneven Lies for Competitive Golfers

How better players can use trajectory, spin, and target discipline to score in uneven lies.

Advanced Playing From Uneven Lies for Competitive Golfers illustration

Control the flight window

Competitive golfers can be aggressive in uneven lies, but only after choosing the correct window. Trajectory matters as much as direction. A lower finish, softer speed, or extra club can reduce spin and protect distance control. A higher shot may still be right when the landing area is generous and stopping power matters.

Slope shots ask better players to separate three decisions:

  1. Start line — where the tilt will encourage the ball to begin.
  2. Apex — how much height you can manage from your stance.
  3. Landing spot — where the first bounce can finish safely.

Pressure changes the math

At even par with three to play, the smart miss may be different from a casual Saturday. Know the score, the opponent, and the hole location. If short-sided recovery is brutal, center green is the attack. If the safe side leaves an uphill 25-footer, that may be the best birdie chance available.

Practice the uncomfortable version

Do not rehearse only perfect range swings. Hit 7-iron or hybrid to half targets, different flights, and awkward yardages. The player who owns three reliable shapes at 80 percent will handle uneven lies better than the player who owns one full-speed swing and hope.