In this episode, Certified Coach Matt Baker from Manchester Golf Club answers a question from member Dan Lockman, who asks:
“Can I use a lead-hand-low putting grip when chipping?”
Matt’s answer is a confident yes — and in fact, it’s encouraged.
At Malaska Golf, coaches teach the "chip putt" — where you chip the ball with the same grip and motion you use to putt. If your putting grip is lead-hand-low (left below right for a right-handed player), then chip that way too.
Matt explains how this approach creates simplified, instinctive motion and reduces the manipulations and mechanical errors that many golfers fall into around the green.
He also notes that using a lead-hand-low grip can actually help some players level their shoulders, which improves posture and prevents the backward lean and hip slide that leads to chunked or duffed chips.
With only a few small adjustments — like ball position slightly back, feet a bit closer together, and light pressure into the lead side — the chip putt becomes a repeatable, reliable short game tool.
You can use this technique with a variety of clubs — wedge, 8-iron, hybrid — the motion stays the same. If it works for you, stick with it.
What You’ll Learn in This Video
• Why chipping with a putting grip (even lead-hand-low) is completely acceptable
• How the chip putt technique simplifies motion and improves consistency
• Key setup adjustments for chipping vs. putting
• How grip style affects shoulder tilt and contact quality
• Why posture — not grip style — is often the cause of duffed chips
Key Insights
• The chip putt method encourages consistent motion and rhythm by mirroring your putting stroke.
• Using a lead-hand-low grip for chipping is not only acceptable — it can help level your shoulders and promote better contact.
• Most poor chips come from bad posture, not bad grip. Tilting backward or sliding the hips leads to fat shots.
• Match your putting grip and feel to your chipping technique to create a simplified, instinctive short game.
• You can chip with any club using this method — it's the motion and setup that matter, not just the club.
• If it works for you and improves your contact and confidence, you’re doing it right.