The 2000 PGA Tour season was Tiger Woods’ best and one of the greatest seasons any tour player has ever had. That year he won three consecutive major championships—the U.S. Open, Open Championship and PGA Championship—by a combined 24 shots. He had nine total wins in 2000, and he was named the PGA Tour Player of the Year.
Although Woods lapped the tour that year in just about every area of the game, he was best known for his brilliant iron play, knocking down flagsticks and leaving a lot of easy birdie looks. For the 2000 season, he ranked No. 1 on tour in greens hit in regulation (75.15 percent). That’s more than three out of every four greens!
To give you an idea of just how good he was that year, there hasn’t been a player on the PGA Tour who has hit greens at that high a clip in the last decade.
Tiger’s contact with the irons was so pure in the early 2000s that the tiny wear pattern on his clubfaces is still talked about to this day.
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This got me thinking: If Tiger’s best year was 2000, wouldn’t that be the best time to get some iron-play tips from him?
Unfortunately, I can’t go back in time to ask him, but I do have the Golf Digest Archives at my disposal. So, I dove into the old issues, unearthed some great Tiger instruction and asked my colleagues to help me pick Tiger’s best iron tip from his best year. Now you can dial in your iron play with these nuggets of wisdom from the February 2000 issue.
At that time, Tiger said his natural ball flight was a draw, but he often preferred to play a fade because it gave him more control.
“I can’t always depend on the draw to be gentle enough and stop where intended,” Tiger said. “I need a reliable shot that will fly the right distance and land softly. For me, it’s the high fade.”
“Play the ball slightly forward in your stance . . . align your feet and body to the left of your target (for right-handed golfers) . . . take the club back and through on the line of your feet.”
Sounds pretty simple, and here’s the kicker:
“Don’t let your arms release as much as normal through impact,” Tiger said, “and limit the rotation of your wrists.”
Tiger went on to say that to hit the fade, allow your right arm to extend down the target line through impact, not to the left, as it does for a draw. And don’t cut off your finish—you’ll just hit a weak slice.
So there you have it: Tiger’s secret to playing those laser fades that helped him hit greens at a phenomenal rate and dominate the tour in 2000. Get out there and give it a try.