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Originally Posted by 300Yards I usually club down two clubs. Swing at more of a decending angle, snap my wrists hard, and roll my right arm over my left real hard. Be sure to hold the face closed, on the followthrough. That should help to keep the ball from going right. |
I'm a bit confused...

In my experience, heavy rough (talking 3" or more) tends to grab the hosel and close the clubface for you... holding it closed isn't a problem... trying to KEEP it from closing down is. I find that I have to address the ball with the face open, and even then it can be very hard to keep the ball from going left. Watch the pros when they are hitting from the deep stuff in a major type of tournament. Most of the time the ball goes well left of the target.
One other thing, if you are planning to really get the ball back in play, then you are much better off playing back to the fairway with a wedge or short iron and taking your medicine. Deep rough is no place to be trying a mid to long iron... it's too hard to control either distance or trajectory. You won't see the pros do it at the US Open, why should us ordinary mortals try it? Take a shorter club, play the ball back in your stance a bit to minimize the distance the club has to move through the grass before it hits the ball (steeper line of attack), grip extra tight with the last 3 fingers of the left hand, and say a little prayer to the golf gods.
You have to evaluate any lie in the rough and determine from experience what your chances are for advancing the ball. And expect surprises... sometimes the ball will unexpectedly come out hot, other times you will struggle to advance it at all. My home course has every kind of rough imaginable, from 1" first cut off the fairway, to 2" ordinary rough, to 3"+ grass bunkers, to native that can be from 6 inches to 3 feet tall. And all types can have good and bad lies... and most of the time if I'm in deeper than 2", I'm playing a safe shot... sometimes even 2" rough can leave you with little more than a pitch out.
So best advice to the OP, don't get too greedy. Evaluate your chances honestly, put your ego back in the bag and play for the bogey.... you might just make par, but at least you'll make far fewer "others".