When you hit a bad shot, don’t immediately try to correct your swing. It can ruin the whole round.Getty Images
One of the biggest problems I see in the average golfer is the instinct to focus too much on ball flight and immediately try to “fix” the problem on the next swing. If you do that, your round will be ruined in no time.
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Whenever you make adjustments to compensate for previous mistakes, you are walking down a dangerous path. Because one shot, or even one hole, is not a trend. It takes time to identify and understand the pattern of your mistakes that day, but once you do that, the goal is to get to work. and Don’t fight it, fight it.
Typically, this is how you hit it from the first tee. A player blocks a shot into the correct tree and attempts to negate that block on the next shot, a punch-out, by closing the face or releasing the club more aggressively through impact. result? The next shot goes too far to the left and the cycle repeats. Right, left, right, left. military golf. It’s never fun.
I tell my students to collect data by paying attention to the consistency and patterns of their mistakes during the warm-up and see how it shows up on the course in the first few holes. If the shot is going well × Continue in the microwave × The course may have established a pattern for the day. At that point, accept it and play accordingly for the rest of the round. Fighting your own tendencies will only make it nearly impossible to control the flight of the ball.
The problem is that most amateurs don’t notice trends because they haven’t warmed up or aren’t practicing targetedly. So when they see a ball flight that doesn’t match their shot on the first hole, they want You panic when you hit, then quickly adjust on your next swing. But how do you know that shot wasn’t just a one-off shot or an outlier? You don’t.
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Adjusting every swing will only make things worse. One shot, two shots, or even one hole is not the trend. It could be something as simple as timing, nerves, or a tricky lie on the first hole.
Take time to understand your mistake. Once the trend is clear, you can aim accordingly for the rest of the round.
If you want a deeper understanding of your shot patterns and miss tendencies, use Scott Fawcett’s DECADE Golf system. It’s built around knowing your tendencies, avoiding trouble, and managing failure.
If you control your mistakes, you can control your score.
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