Being caught between clubs sounds like a small problem … until it costs you shots.
You have 147 yards. Your 8-iron goes 150 when you hit it well. Your 9-iron goes 138. The pin is tucked. There is trouble short. The wind is doing something weird.
Now you are standing over the ball with doubt.
That doubt is often worse than the yardage gap itself. Most golfers do not miss because they picked the wrong club by three yards. They miss because they never fully committed to the shot.
When you are between clubs, the goal is not to find the perfect answer. It is to choose the smartest miss and make a committed swing.
Start with the trouble
Before you decide between clubs, look at where you cannot miss.
Is short dead?
Is long dead?
Is there a bunker on one side?
Is the green sloping away?
Most amateurs choose clubs based only on the flag. Better players choose clubs based on the safest playable miss.
If the trouble is short, take more club. If the trouble is long, take less club. If the pin is tucked right over a bunker, aim away and stop pretending the flag is the only target.
Being between clubs is easier when you stop trying to hit the perfect number and start playing the hole.
Know your real carry numbers
A lot of between-club mistakes happen because golfers use best-case yardages.
They think their 8-iron goes 155 because they hit it 155 once. In reality, their normal carry might be 145. That matters.
When choosing a club, use your stock carry, not your career-best strike. The course does not care what you did once on a warm day with no wind and a perfect lie.
Your stock number is the distance you can usually produce with a normal, balanced swing.
If you do not know your true carry numbers, start tracking them. Use a launch monitor when you can. On the course, pay attention to where well-struck shots land, not where they finish.
Take more club and make less swing
For many amateurs, this is the best option.
If you are between a hard 8-iron and a smooth 7-iron, the smooth 7 is usually the smarter play. A slightly shorter swing often improves contact, balance and face control.
The key word is smooth, not lazy.
You still need commitment. You are not guiding the ball. You are making a controlled swing with a club that gives you enough distance.
Try this feel: three-quarter backswing, full finish.
That gives you speed through the ball without overswinging.
When to hit the harder club
There are times when the shorter club makes sense.
If the lie is perfect, the wind is helping, long is bad and you are comfortable making a committed swing, the harder-hit shorter club can be the right choice.
But a hard swing often brings more spin, more curve and less center-face contact. If you are already tense, trying to squeeze extra yards out of a club usually makes things worse.
The harder club is a good option only when you can swing aggressively and stay balanced.
If the thought in your head is “I have to kill this,” choose something else.

Use trajectory to solve the gap
You do not always have to change speed. Sometimes you can change flight.
A lower shot with more club can take distance off while staying controlled. Move the ball slightly back, put a touch more pressure on your lead foot and make a balanced three-quarter swing.
This works especially well into the wind or when you want to avoid a shot ballooning.
A higher, softer shot with less club is harder for most amateurs. It requires speed, contact and loft control. Unless you practice it, do not make that your default on the course.
The reliable shot is usually more club, lower flight and a committed finish.
Pick the middle of the green more often
If you are between clubs and the pin is not accessible, aim at the middle.
This sounds boring. It is also how you stop making doubles from decent positions.
A shot to the middle of the green with the wrong club is often better than a perfect club aimed at a terrible target. Most golfers would lower scores quickly by accepting more 25-foot birdie putts and avoiding short-sided misses.
The flag is not always your target.
Final thought
Being between clubs is not a math problem. It is a decision problem.
Check the trouble. Use your real carry numbers. Pick the club that gives you the best chance to make a committed swing. Most of the time, that means taking more club and swinging with control.
The worst choice is not the wrong club.
The worst choice is standing over the ball unsure and hoping your swing figures it out.
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