Fairway Support
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Fairway SupportIrons & ApproachShank

Shank

The ball shoots sharply and low to the right, hit off the hosel instead of the clubface.

✗ Shank hosel meets ball The swing drifts closer to the ball, so the hosel gets there first. ✓ Solid middle of the face The club returns where it started, and the face meets the ball.

Why it happens

A shank happens when the ball contacts the hosel (the neck where the shaft meets the clubhead) instead of the face, usually because the swing moves too close to the ball, either from setup or during the downswing.

Possible causes in your swing, and how to fix each one

Tap any cause to see its fix. Work through them one at a time, usually one or two are the real culprit.

1Standing too close to the ball, or drifting closer

Either at setup or during the swing, moving closer to the ball brings the hosel into play instead of the face.

Fix: Recheck your setup distance so your arms hang naturally. On the range, place a spare ball or headcover just outside your ball and practice swinging without hitting it, to build a feel for the club staying away from your body.
2Weight or hands drifting toward the ball ("swaying in")

A lateral sway toward the ball during the swing has the same effect as standing too close.

Fix: Practice with a rod or alignment stick lightly against your right hip at address, checking that you don't press into it during the backswing.
3Steep, out-to-in path with an early release

This combination can push the hosel into the ball's position at impact.

Fix: Work on a rounder, more inside swing shape, and practice syncing the arms with your body rotation rather than swinging with the arms alone.
4Overactive hands pushing the toe outward

A grip that's too strong or overly active hands can flare the toe of the club out and expose the hosel to the ball.

Fix: Check your grip for neutrality, and rehearse slow-motion swings focusing purely on a smooth, connected path.

When to stop self-diagnosing

If you've genuinely worked through two or three of these causes over several range sessions and the miss keeps showing up, that's not a failure since it usually means the real cause is something you can't feel or see in your own swing. A single 30-minute lesson with a certified instructor, who can watch you hit balls, will find it faster than any website. Bring this page along and tell them what you've already ruled out; it'll save you both time.