This is my latest blog entry about my tourney yesterday...let me know what you guys think and if you have any other advice, thanks!
In this tournament, I shot 74 and got 6th place. I hit the ball extremely well and didn’t miss any putts from 7 feet and in nor did I 3-putt. What kept me from shooting under par (and probably winning) was course management mistakes which will improve only with tournament experience ( make a mistake and learn and then don’t make that mistake again!).
This blog entry will explain what went wrong and how to fix it.
On approach shots make sure to always consider the “fat of the green” and where not to miss.
Many times on a golf course there is a strategy involved in setting up the pins. So you will come to a par 3 and the pin is on the very front of the green which is protected by a deep green side bunker all the way across the front. Or the pin is tucked into the back left corner and there is a pond or lake behind the green.
The mistake is to always be going for the pin. And what happens many times? In the sand or in the water and the hole is over as far as your golf score is concerned.
Why not just play to the fat part of the green in the very center and two putt for par? And every once in a while you’ll drop that birdie putt? But our ego gets in the way, especially if our golf buddies are egging us on! (if you can’t putt well enough to be confident in this concept, you had better get good at putting!)
In this tournament, I shot 74 and got 6th place. I hit the ball extremely well and didn’t miss any putts from 7 feet and in nor did I 3-putt. What kept me from shooting under par (and probably winning) was course management mistakes which will improve only with tournament experience ( make a mistake and learn and then don’t make that mistake again!).
This blog entry will explain what went wrong and how to fix it.
On approach shots make sure to always consider the “fat of the green” and where not to miss.
Many times on a golf course there is a strategy involved in setting up the pins. So you will come to a par 3 and the pin is on the very front of the green which is protected by a deep green side bunker all the way across the front. Or the pin is tucked into the back left corner and there is a pond or lake behind the green.
The mistake is to always be going for the pin. And what happens many times? In the sand or in the water and the hole is over as far as your golf score is concerned.
Why not just play to the fat part of the green in the very center and two putt for par? And every once in a while you’ll drop that birdie putt? But our ego gets in the way, especially if our golf buddies are egging us on! (if you can’t putt well enough to be confident in this concept, you had better get good at putting!)
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