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Welcome Razor A series of golf.com where the brightest games of the game share their tips to help you, well, shave strokes! Today Top 100 Golf teacher Trent Wearner explains a challenging game for your practice in greens.
Practice can get a little monotonous sometimes, so it is important to keep things interesting to stay engaged. One of the best ways to do this is including games in your practice routine.
If you are looking for a Excellent game to play in green setting, You have luck. Below, the top 100 teachers Trent Warner shared a great game you can use to call on pressure under your pressure. Check it.
‘Barrier’ by placing the game
If you just have to play a game by setting up during your practice, that’s it. One of the most common things that all golf coaches hear their students complain is that they cannot get their game on the course. I wrote a book on this topic that contained competing practical games years ago. This game, which I call “barrier” is the best setting game I have ever seen – plus you can play it yourself or against any number of friends.
Setting and rules for the game are as follows:
– Choose nine holes to insert into green practice. You can use two therath if there are not enough cups
-Distania of your first blow should be 25-40 meters
—Hit your first putt, and if it is not Hold, pull back from the hole a putter length
For example, let’s pretend that the first hole is a place 20 meters. You flip your first putt just to lose with about two feet to the right of the hole. Instead of getting out of two legs, you must pull it back in accordance with the hole a putter length (which is nearly three extra legs) making your second fork turn into a five -legged blow.
If you make the five legs, mark two in the hole. If you fail to do it, you draw it again a different length from where it stops. Continue to pull it after each lost blow until it is placed.
As you can imagine, this is a challenging game – but comes with some great benefits, including:
1. Mind: Your mindset varies in the first blow of each hole by simply trying to delay it near the attempt to do it. Keep in mind, trying to make a stroke from 20 to 45 meters does not mean to cross it beyond the three or four -legged hole. On the contrary, it means trying to pick up the ball to fall over the skirt, so that if you miss it, it could be just one foot in front of the hole. Trying to make every blow you hit, regardless of length, is the mentality of a sample.
2. Pressure: It is inevitable that you will not make many strokes from 20 to 45 meters, which means you will have many short pressure strokes. You will grind a lot from three to six feet, and this is a great thing to practice. After all, how do you think you will put pressure on the course if you do not put yourself under pressure in practice?
3. Get it in the course: When you are attracting every blow lost in practice, it will make those delays feel even easier for two putt during your round. When you do not have to pull any miss, it will make normal delays feel like a breeze.
While you are likely to do with three putt (and maybe four times with four putt), the benefits you get from playing this game will help you get your game on the most successful course. Just because it’s hard doesn’t mean it’s bad for you. Indeed, it is the opposite. You have to make the practice as difficult, or even more challenging than those you experience in the course. The barrier is perfect for this.