Getty Images
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 Joey Wueremberger explains four ways pro pros practicing smarter than weekend fighters.
Pro Tour are not just better play golf than the rest of us, they are Better even in practice.
Go in every practice of a PGA Tour event and you will soon see what I mean. There is no one in the practice of foolish balls. Everything is done with a purpose.
It may seem superfluous, but the way these goods became so efficient in their practice routines, well, practice. They have been honoring their shakes every day for YEARSAnd they have become experts to do so better through hours and hours of time spent in practice.
Want to know some of their secrets? Below is a summary from the Golf Top 100 Joey Weurtemberger teacher in four ways pro smarter than Joes average.
4 ways of how Pro practice better than amateurs
Have you ever wondered what a tour player does different from you in practice? I can tell you: they use a highly structured routine to grind their abilities – and you can borrow from their sessions to start shaving shocks as the best.
Before catching a club, the tournament players have a clear attack plan for their game. They know what to work for and have specific training and training assistance that will attack those mistakes. Keeping records after rounds is essential to identify where to focus your time.
Below, I have united some ways their practice differs from yours.
1. Build on a proper heat
Athletes should perform their bodies before exercise. This does not mean simply stretch, but it also includes corrective exercises, foam flip and even any fast cardio to get the flowing blood! In the range, tournament players start with short shots – focusing on quiet tempo and clean contact with their favorite wedge. They take their time, stay calm and do not rush. It is important that they do not start truly practicing until their body is good and loose.
2. Get real -time feedback
Once warm, the tournament players create a ball station. They put stretch rods on the ground and have set objectives they are hitting, starting with short cuffs and working through the bag. You will also see them using training aids to help them achieve a certain feeling. This is something I rarely see amateurs doing. But if you really want to benefit from your practice as much as possible, you need to get real -time feedback.
3 try the block practice
As a general rule, tournament players are looking for shot patterns they can trust in the course. Tournament players move in what is called block practice to develop the ability to achieve these repetitive oscillations, completing the same exercise over and over until they know they have closed in a special feeling without the help of training aid. It can be tedious, but it is essential for ingraining the right swing that will continue on the course.