It’s the key to playing an uphill bunker shot. 

Maybe the best “sandy” I ever made helped me clinch my second Masters green jacket, in 1981. It came on the par-4 17th hole on Sunday, after I was short with my approach shot. I had an uphill lie in the bunker a long way from the hole—about 45 feet. 

Most people leave this shot short because they hit too far behind the ball or take too much sand, or both. The keys are to angle your shoulders at address to match the upslope, then swing up the slope and release the club through the ball. You don’t want to hold the face open, as you would on a normal sand shot. 

Keep most of your weight on the inside of your right foot so you don’t lean into the slope. Play the ball opposite your left instep, with your stance and clubface slightly open. Your right knee should stay kicked in toward the ball. You might try using a stronger grip to help you turn the face over and project the ball forward as well as up. 

In that Masters, I flew the ball about 15 feet short of the hole, it ran another 10, and I holed the five-footer for what some people used to call a “Watson par.”