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5 Mental Game Errors All High Handicappers Make

5 Mental Game Errors All High Handicappers Make

Golf is a physically challenging sport. It may not be the Marathon des Sables or an Iron Man triathlon but contorting your body into unusual positions to propel a miniature projectile towards a four-inch-wide hole, 400 yards distant using strangely awkward implements is quite a trial. But that physical test is nothing compared to the mental battle golfing protagonists take on each time they set foot on the links. For four hours golfers must combat the obstinate adversary that lives between their ears. It’s almost impossible to beat. It will tell you that you’re not good enough when you are. It will tell you that you are good enough when you’re not. It will find every cunning and conniving way to make you fail. No matter how well you’re coping physically on the golf course, if you’re struggling mentally, you’re in for a rough ride. All golfers face mental strife that can have a negative impact on their performance and finding ways to deal with those bad thoughts and poor choices can knock shots off average scores. High handicappers in particular could see significant improvements in their games if they cut out the mental mistakes. Here are some of the key mental game errors all high handicappers make.

Taking On the Near Impossible

The carry over the water is 205 and your average driving distance is 215. How is your 3-wood going to make it? If you played safely to the side and pitched on, you’d still have a putt for par. As it is, you fancy your chances (which are roughly one in 25,) and you let rip with the wood – the ball flares up, starts cutting and drops limply in the H20. Now you do the sensible thing and play safe, pitch on and two putt. It’s a triple bogey when it could have been two strokes better.

Pulling Out Driver

mental game

Why are you hitting driver?

(Image credit: Kevin Murray)

It’s a 450-yard par-4 that you know you can’t reach in two, it’s also a tight tee shot. Why in the name of Old Tom Morris have you pulled out your driver? If you hit three 5-irons you’d get there safely and have a two-putt for a bogey. As it is, you blast driver and watch it sail comfortably out of bounds or into the knee-high rough, the next one is a smothered hook into a bunker – put me down for a blob!

Too Much Loft

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