Zephyr melton
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Shots lower results requires only a little discipline.
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They say the hindsight is 20/20, and you can find evidence in full show in the 19th holes in golf courses across the country.
“If only I wouldn’t have done double there, I would have broken 90!”
“I wish I hadn’t tried that kick.”
“If I could have stopped with three strokes, I would have shot low personal.”
It is very simple to be self-critical in retrospect, but it is not that simple at the moment. If you can start doing this during the round, however, you can shave a lot of strokes from your card.
Below, we asked some of them Golf.comLow low housing handicaps, what mistakes they often see their partners with high handicaps they make. Keep in mind next time – and do your best to avoid them. If you do this you will be amazed The lower the mark.
1. Emphasize course management
I think going below often go down to course management. When you miss the right path it can be seductive to feel as if your hole is already destroyed, simply bring out your longest club and try to make as much distance as you can at your next goal. But if you don’t have an ideal lie, you can end up making up your mistake other published shot. Instead, make an advantage to get back to the highway or trouble with a club you are safe in. This can be a 7-, 8- or 9-Hekuri, even if the green is still 300 meters away. A safe pace again on the right path will allow you to minimize the damage. Also, in forced trucks, do not try to lie down too far! Make a goal to get green at four shots instead of three. Playing for a 6 in a par-4 or 5 is much more liked at the end of the day than to jump into the wind and get an 8 or 9. —Cessica Marxbury (9.6 Handikap)
If I will bend strictly in statistics, I would borrow from the father of shocked shocks, Mark Broadie, who says the fastest way to improve the average player is to focus on the 150-yard approach shooting. His pursuit of statistics has shown that most of the 90s revolts leave them shots a short club. Distance, not running, is the biggest issue. One solution is to work to get clean contacts in those shots. The other is even simpler: the club up. —To Sense (5.6 Handikap)
3. Don’t be a hero
In general, players always try to shoot the hero. And that doesn’t just mean trying to have a water risk or target a gap in the tree. Means that they always try shots that need perfect execution to withdraw. If they are biased, they go to full flop and lose green. If the flag is in a weak green part, they take the dead purpose and place themselves in a terrible place. High handicaps (and many low low skills) need to understand when they take their medicine. Sometimes hitting a 20 -legged chip is the best game. It takes a little discipline to adopt this mentality, but doing so will save you a few blows to the round. —Zephyr Melton (4.6 Handikap)
4. Play the right clubs for you
I agree with my colleagues for everything above, so I will go with one who is in my home and say many top handicap players have clubs that can be very aspirating. People want to play clubs that the good ones play and not what is best for their games. To that point, many golf players are so stressed when they go to fit to set a strip show. But in reality you are probably best not to shake your best and get a group of clubs that will help you when you don’t have your game. Check your ego on the door when you go for a fit and enter with an open mind. You will end up with golf clubs that are not only optimized for your best shakes, but also your worst! —Jack Hirsh (2.1 Handikap)
5. Find a way to get the driver in the game
Within the first two hours of your golf career it is likely that a well-followed golf player, pronounced in your direction the invalid phrase “Drive for Show, Putt for Brupe”. This is a beautiful rhyme and is a real kind for a subset of much better player players, but for most of the world is useless. Being able to run the ball in the game is absolutely essentialNot just for your outcome nor your golf ball supply, but for your conceit. By hitting it from the game, looking balls, dropping, counting from two – it’s all just a real striker. I’m not saying you have to hit the right path every time! No one does this, and you will make some memories from the trees. But you need to be able to hit it in the game a reasonable percentage of time, so you have a blow to get around the green with your second.
So work on the driver in the range. Find a quiet, low pressure time to hit some drivers in the course. If you hit an obstacle (and most people do!) Get a lesson from a PGA pro, or consider fit just to make sure it’s not your club holding you back. But whatever you do, make sure you find a way to hit it in the game. Then we can get the putter called inside. – Dylan dethier (+2.4 Handikap)
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Zephyr melton
Golfit.com editor
Zephyr Melton is an editor for Golf.com, where he spends his days on the blog, producing and editing. Before joining the team in Golf, he attended the University of Texas followed by stopping with the Texas Golf Association, Team USA, Green Bay Packers and PGA Tour. It helps with all things guidance and covers amateur and women’s golf. He can be reached in zephyr_melton@golf.com.