Hopefully, many of you will have watched The Open Championship over the last few days. Sadly, I didn’t get to watch much, but it never disappoints watching the best players in the world trying to figure out how to navigate a tricky course and trickier conditions. For the ones who are competing and playing well, it can look effortless as they exhibit complete control around the course, but I promise you that is not always the case.
You see, the best players in the world (and their caddies) all have a plan that they go out with before they play. They know the pin locations, the best spot to attack that location from in the fairway and the club that will put them there. They will know the overall direction and strength of the wind for the day, the forecast that is coming and the shots they will need for each hole. If hole 3 is into the wind they will play it one way, if it is down wind, they will play it another. This is not beyond your capability either. If you play the same course regularly, you could easily spend some time mapping out the best place to be on a particular hole, the best areas to miss the fairways for certain pin locations, the best place to miss the green for those pin locations, then practising those shots when you are out on your own or with friends.
You could get a course planner if they are available at your club (or make your own if they aren’t) and make notes of the various ways you like to play the hole. If you are playing a lot of tournaments at different courses, try to get a practice round in first, or at least walk the course with your rangefinder before you play it and make notes of the spots to be and the spots to avoid. Websites like https://www.provisualizer.com/ are great for this too.
This is worth doing on a regular basis as our skills tend to change and adapt across time (hopefully on an upward trajectory), which means that our “that’s the way I’ve always played this hole” approach may no longer be our best approach and could be costing us valuable shots.
Yes, this may sound like a lot of work, but if you’re on the course with your friends, treat it as a game. Start by finding the easiest shots around the green for the regular pin locations at your club. They are usually rotated into the same areas so this shouldn’t be too difficult. Once you have the best place to chip from, work backwards and see which is the best side of the fairway/ rough to hit from to get there and then the best shot to hit off the tee to leave yourself in that area.
I know for some of you, this may sound like it’s far beyond your current ability, or too much like hard work, but if you want to improve your scores, you need to start acting in a way that will help you do that. We all know the famous Einstein quote: “Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result”. This approach will seem like hard work to begin with, but while we are in the middle of the season, it’s a very simple way of lowering your scores without needing to change your swing or improve your ball flight and surely, for most of us, that is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
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