Nick Pastowski
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You will never be the same in the golf course. You will always change. Pia Nilsson is aware of how “uncomplicated” her thoughts are.
And yet, it can also be part of what holds you back.
“Results usually fall really quickly,” Nilsson said
From her office to the Talking Stick Golf Club in Arizona, she is answering a writer’s question in a tip to hit 80, and she is capable of here. Its resumption is proof. Once playing the pros. A former Solheim Cup captain. Along with Lynn Marriott, a founder of the Vision Instruction Group54. A Golf Top 100 Teacher of Life Achievement. In short, she has seen some things.
And two medium articles Handicappers occasionally forget to check are their temple and their tension, Nilsson said. They tend to stay static in those areas, despite the environment around them evolving.
Your tempo should consider a variety of factors in the course – wind, nerves and continuation and beyond.
“So a player has to be a little more aware of him, you know what, I have to remove a little tempo or you know what, I have to have more constant control pressure,” Nilsson said. “So if we can help them in management, for example, tempo and more tension, the results usually fall really quickly.
“And often that player level of the player has not been exposed to this. They just know they make three triples because they tie it out of bounds. But they don’t understand this because it’s a par-4 and they become So, then this affects their technique.
“And it’s an uncomplicated thing to learn that makes a massive change in how the rhythm is transferred to the golf course, and very often those who want to break 80 can belong to that category.”
Is there any way to know what tempo is best in certain scenarios?
Play slow… Doctors? As the 2 legends are healing the players of the disease
Nick Pastowski
Of course, Nilsson said, though he is addicted to the player and is taught with practice.
“First it’s a little more consciousness with her, so we can just ask them, okay, let’s hit this club with a slow tempo, middle tempo, a faster tempo,” Nilsson said. “Many have said, I have never done it because you have to really feel the difference within you. It doesn’t matter if you have any technology.”
In short, you are managing you. With the game that is natural physical, the inner return can occasionally be forgotten.
Let’s keep the conversation about the 80th. Last November, Golf.com wrote a story entitled “My Nipi is Seeking to Break 80. So I asked Nelly Korda for 1 Tip”, and you can read that story By clicking hereor moving below.
***
Naples, Fla – Sorry, Mason. I was just trying to help.
If you shamed in front of nelly cord, I apologize.
Wait, what? Wild, right? I will try to explain. Mason is my 16-year-old nephew and, according to his uncle’s appreciation, has the true potential of Golf Golf Hall of Fame. But first he has to break 80 constantly.
Cord, of course, you know. Seven times winner this year in the LPGA. Fifteen winners of time in general. With all the measures, it is great in Golf. It is also this week CME Group Championship Championship, the ending event of the LPGA season.
And that’s how I am.
So I thought: Why not? I asked Korda and the next LPGA this:
My nephew is looking to break 80. So I asked Nellly Korda for 1 Tip
Nick Pastowski
My 16-year-old is looking to break 80. He shoots in the mid-80s now. What is an advice you would give?
It was a little frivolous. But the benefit, I think, was threefold. Players talk store. Mason gets some advice. Maybe you do it too.
Besides now Mason is worried that Cord thinks he is not so excellent. Whatever child will live.
Maybe break 80 constantly, too.
Full exchanges are below.
What is an advice you would give to my nephew on his journey to break 80?
Nelly cord
Nelly, type of an easy question. My 16-year-old nephew is trying to break 80 for the first time. It shoots in the mid -1980s, 80s high. What is an advice you would give?
“One advice I would give? Well, two, “Korda said.” Many of the people I see who AMS never have a climb in the range. If you do not know where you are aiming, there is a high chance that you do not know where you are aiming in the golf course.
“Tip two, I see that many people stay in the range and simply pierce golf balls or just practice a lot instead of going out and visualizing.
“At the end of the day, golf is a game of creativity and you will never have your game A. One day the wind will be from the left and one day from the right. The hole will play quite different. It all has to do with creativity.
“So to go out and play a lot.”
Lexi Thompson
My 16-year-old nephew is trying to break 80 for the first time and shoots in the mid-1980s now. What is a quick advice you would give?
“That I would give him to break 80?” Asked Lexi Thompson. “How long has he played?”
Has played about four years.
“Oh, that’s very good then,” she said. “He’s going in the right direction. I always say the biggest advice that helped the most when I went out and practicing was always a goal in mind. Always have something you want to improve. It can be the smaller or bigger things, the mental side. As we know, golf is such a mental sport. It can be working on the mental side and the visualization of the shooting.
“So get there for a purpose. Don’t just go out in the golf course and be like i’d just hit some balls today or play. Have a goal, something you want to improve. That way, you are not wasting any time and is always productive practice.
“Even if you fight a little. You had a goal. You have engaged and are trying to be better.”
Lydia
This is an easy one. Baset based on guidelines. My nephew is trying to break 80 for the first time. It shoots like the mid -1980s, the 80’s. What is an advice you would give?
“One advice. I would say try and nail what is the constant reason – I think when you shoot in the 80s or 70s high, it’s not always because you constantly make a trick but is more like a hole where you made a Doubles, “Lydia said” and most of the time, those mistakes are very repeated. And even for me, I play and have – it’s a kind of the same reason why I make those mistakes. Try and nail what is a key dominant and that way you will be able to work for it and I think slowly adjusts yourself without trying to break everything and try and do everything better. “
ally
My 16-year-old nephew is trying to break 80 for the first time. What is an advice you would give?
“My advice would be to go to a wire box that makes it realistic,” said ally ewing, “and then when you break 80 in that tee box, move a box again. So I would go on a theme – like maybe some people would say it’s not good.
“You know, the shooting 61 from Tees forward is still really hard. You still need to golf your ball. I would encourage him to go into a wire box where he feels like he can reach it and goes on a continuous manner and continue to challenge himself that way. “
Destroying yin
My 16-year-old nephew is trying to break 80 for the first time. What is an advice you would give?
“Break 80? Practice your short game and setting, “said Yin Ruoning,” because this is what you spend most of the time in the Golf course. Let’s say the 62-stainless course. You will probably spend half to decide.
“If you want to break 80, I would say to spend time on your placement.”
The yin angel
A golf guide question I had. So my 16-year-old nephew is trying to break 80 and get into his high school team Varsity next year. What is an advice you would give?
“He hit the ball and not on the ball. It is simple, “said Angel Yin.” I think many people try to hit the ball because it is a ball that you play that the ball is really stationary and you have to go after it. In football, they are throwing it to you; Tenis, the ball is coming to you – you are reacting. Where this, you need, I don’t know, go after the ball. It’s a little different. You have to make the ball move. “
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Nick Pastowski
Golfit.com editor
Nick Pastowski is an old editor on Golf.com and Golf Magazine. In his role, he is responsible for editing, writing and developing stories throughout the golf space. And when he is not writing about ways to hit the golf ball farther and narrower, Milwaukee’s locals are probably playing the game, hitting the ball left, right and short, and drinking a cold beer to wash his result. You can turn to him for any of these topics – his stories, his game or his beers – in Nick.piastowski@golf.com.