Okay, let’s talk about something that took me a good while to really wrap my head around: golf divots. Yeah, those patches of grass you see flying after a good iron shot. Or, in my early days, the craters I used to leave behind.

When I first started playing, I honestly didn’t give divots much thought. My main goal was just to hit the ball, hopefully forward. My “divots,” if you could even call them that, were all over the shop. Sometimes I’d barely brush the grass, other times I’d dig a hole deep enough to plant a small tree. My shots were just as inconsistent, let me tell ya. It was a bit of a mess, really.
Figuring Things Out
Then, I started to realize something. It wasn’t just about looking like a pro, taking these perfect pelts of turf. A good divot, or a bad one, actually tells you a heck of a lot about your swing. It’s like a little fingerprint of what just happened at impact. So, I decided I needed to actually understand this divot business.
My journey started with just watching. I paid more attention to the good players at my club, and yeah, I watched some pros on TV too. What were their divots like? Where did they start? How deep were they?
Then came the practice. Lots of it. I practically lived on the driving range for a bit. My main focus became something everyone kept harping on about: ball-first contact. This was the big secret, apparently. You hit the ball, then the turf. Sounds simple, right? Well, it wasn’t, not for me at first.
- I started by really focusing on my setup. Made sure my weight wasn’t leaning back.
- Then, I messed around with my ball position. For my irons, I found that moving it just a tiny bit further back in my stance helped me hit down on it better.
- The big game-changer for me was understanding the weight shift. You gotta get your weight moving towards the target as you swing through. If you hang back, you’re gonna scoop or hit it fat.
What I Learned the Hard Way
Let me share a few things I picked up, mostly by getting it wrong a bunch of times. I used to think you had to sort of lift the ball into the air. Bad idea. That’s how you get those horrible thin shots that scream across the green, or chunk it fat and watch the ball go nowhere while a piece of sod flies further.

Another thing: lots of folks, myself included back then, think a good divot has to be massive. Like you’re excavating. Nope. What you’re really after is a nice, consistent, shallow divot that looks a bit like a strip of bacon. And crucially, it should start after where the ball was sitting. If your divot starts behind the ball, you’ve hit it fat. Simple as that.
I remember one round, I was playing with an older guy, a really solid player. He watched me take a few swings and then just quietly said, “Your divots are telling you you’re scooping.” That stuck with me. It wasn’t mean, just an observation. And he was right!
The “Aha!” Moment
Slowly, painstakingly, it started to click. I’d hit a shot, feel that compressed impact, and then see that neat little rectangle of turf fly out just ahead of where the ball had been. Man, that was a good feeling. And you know what? My iron shots got so much better. Crisper. More consistent distance. It was like the divot became my little feedback mechanism.
It’s not like every divot is perfect now, far from it. But I understand what I’m looking for. If I see a divot pointing way left, I know my swing path was out-to-in. If it’s too deep, I know my angle of attack was too steep. It’s a constant learning process.
So, if you’re working on your iron play, don’t ignore your divots. They’re not just cosmetic. They’re clues. They’re honest. And getting them right usually means you’re doing a lot of other things right in your swing. Plus, you know, it’s just good golf etiquette to repair them. Leave the course how you’d like to find it.
