Most golfers automatically assume greenside bunkers are the bigger problem.
They’re closer to the hole. You feel pressure to get up and down and if you happen to leave one in the trap, a par save opportunity can quickly turn into a double bogey.
But when we dig into the Shot Scope data, the answer isn’t that simple. The damage bunkers cause depends heavily on your handicap.
The data: Where the stroke penalty is bigger
Using scoring-to-par data across handicap levels, here’s the average scoring penalty when players hit into each bunker type:
| Handicap | Greenside Bunker Penalty | Fairway Bunker Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | +0.43 | +0.19 |
| 5 | +0.48 | +0.29 |
| 10 | +0.46 | +0.36 |
| 15 | +0.50 | +0.45 |
| 20 | +0.42 | +0.55 |
| 25 | +0.41 | +0.58 |
For golfers from scratch to about a 15 handicap, greenside bunkers cost more per occurrence. Once you get into the 20-plus handicap range, fairway bunkers become more damaging.
Why fairway bunkers hurt higher handicaps more
For many 15-plus handicaps, distance is already a challenge.
So when you hit into a fairway bunker and advance it only 50 or 70 yards, you’re not just losing a shot. You’re setting up a much longer, harder approach.
Fairway bunkers create compounding problems. The data shows the penalty jumps to +0.55 and +0.58 for 20–25 handicaps.
Why greenside bunkers cost better players
When lower-handicap players find greenside bunkers, they are still thinking about getting up and down for par. Scratch players save par from greenside bunkers 37 percent of the time. For a 10 handicap, that drops to 20 percent.
When you’re trying to shoot even par or break 80, failing to convert from the sand is expensive.
It’s not the frequency that hurts; it’s the missed opportunity.
What’s worked for me from both locations
I’ve spent a lot of time working on bunker play, both as a player and when I was teaching. While we are talking about bunkers hurting score, I figured I’d share a few of my best tips for both types of bunker shots.
Greenside bunkers
For lower handicaps especially, the key is practice. Good players don’t end up in greenside bunkers continually. Sometimes you go a few rounds without hitting a bunker shot but then fear and doubt creep in when you land in one.
A few things that helped me:
- Learning to use different lofts, especially a 60-degree wedge.
- Playing with lead wrist angles and feeling just a touch more extension through impact to control loft and strike.
- Focusing on proximity when practicing; at some point “getting out” is not enough.
- A bunker shot with a great lie can be a scoring opportunity so shift your mindset accordingly.
Fairway bunkers
The most important thing for me in a fairway bunker is stability. If you make a big move off the ball, you almost always hit behind it.
A few simple keys:
- Stay centered and feel stable over the ball.
- Hover the club directly over the ball, not behind it in the sand, before starting the backswing. It encourages a cleaner strike.
- Think “clip it” not “lift it.” You’re picking it clean.
- Be smart with club selection. Just because you’re 200 yards out doesn’t mean fairway wood is the right play. A controlled 7-iron that guarantees you get out is often the better scoring decision.
The post Fairway vs. Greenside Bunkers: Which Hurts Your Score More? appeared first on MyGolfSpy.
Article Link: https://mygolfspy.com/news-opinion/instruction/fairway-vs-greenside-bunkers-which-hurts-your-score-more/