This is an area of the game where we can all make at least some small improvements. A tour player goes from a different course to another different course and they have 2-3 days to prep. Some will have played the courses plenty of times, and will have their notes and course planners, whereas a club golfer will pretty much play all their competitions at their home course.
But do we have a plan for how to play it the best? Probably not. We probably go out and make the same number of errors over and over, like hitting a driver off the same tee and getting into the same bad spots 90 per cent of the time or misreading how a putt rolls.
One thing that we all have in common, as club golfers, is that we all want to reduce our handicaps and play well in competitions. So we want to do the little things that will help us lower our scores.
One way is to just sit down at home and simply think about the tee shot and approach shot – what does a good shot look like for each? What is the best area to put it in? Is 200 yards off the 3rd tee a good place to hit it or is a lay-up always the better option on a tempting short par 4 or reachable par 5? If you know that you can wedge it in nine times out of 10, and you will at least par it, then is that better than bringing in lots of double-bogeys?
By having a simple strategy it will take about 10 minutes to write this down and then see if you can play to it and see, over the course of the next five rounds, if it has helped you? And, if it hasn’t, what hasn’t worked? We are playing the same course over and over so we can definitely become better at our strategy.
By making poor decisions and attacking at the wrong time will hinder all of us, at any level. At an Open there is generally a worse side to miss so managing your way around the course better is huge. If there is a water hazard short of the green and nothing bad particularly long, why are you even looking at front half of the green where a slight mishit or a gust of wind could see us end up getting wet?
Managing ourselves around a course, before we get to the course, is a big way of lowering those scores and at least thinking about the smart side of the fairway and smart side of the green is a great start.
Club golfers can be poor at laying up and we won’t look forward to the shot as we won’t have practised from where that next shot is going to be played from. Whereas tour players are fantastic at this part of the game. One player I work…
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