Which way do you think it will go?
It seems to me it has to be a whole lot less physical and a whole lot more mental.
All good players visualise their shots before they play them while us mid to high handicappers are busy with swing thoughts and the like, all of which blurs the all important focus on the target.
I used to meticulously line everything up and the physical limits of my game would send it in that rough direction with variations, but now I don't line up at all but just stand comfortably, try and burn the target into my mind's eye and let the ball go there. It's more accurate, espeically with chips when I get it a lot closer than I used to.
This is still all quite new to me so isn't second nature yet, but I don't think its going to be a fad thing that I'll stop doing.
The only thing I don't do this with is putting as I have a tried and trusted method that involves pacing out the distance, then taking the putter back to a certain point past my back foot to produce an eleven pace putt for example - this is so reliable that I'm not letting it go!
I didn't invent it, but dreamt it up myself due to having played lots of computer golf with swing meters to set the power and thought "wouldn't it be great if it was that easy to dial in the distance in real life"
Ironically, to make it work, you've got to keep mental images and tuition right out of it otherwise you get the situation where you pace out an uphill putt, add three paces or whatever, but when you pull the trigger the sub-conscious gets in and adds a bit more for the slope with the result that you go four feet past.
But if you can putt like a mindless robot it is a lethal method for putts outside about 8 feet when length is more important than line.
It seems to me it has to be a whole lot less physical and a whole lot more mental.
All good players visualise their shots before they play them while us mid to high handicappers are busy with swing thoughts and the like, all of which blurs the all important focus on the target.
I used to meticulously line everything up and the physical limits of my game would send it in that rough direction with variations, but now I don't line up at all but just stand comfortably, try and burn the target into my mind's eye and let the ball go there. It's more accurate, espeically with chips when I get it a lot closer than I used to.
This is still all quite new to me so isn't second nature yet, but I don't think its going to be a fad thing that I'll stop doing.
The only thing I don't do this with is putting as I have a tried and trusted method that involves pacing out the distance, then taking the putter back to a certain point past my back foot to produce an eleven pace putt for example - this is so reliable that I'm not letting it go!
I didn't invent it, but dreamt it up myself due to having played lots of computer golf with swing meters to set the power and thought "wouldn't it be great if it was that easy to dial in the distance in real life"
Ironically, to make it work, you've got to keep mental images and tuition right out of it otherwise you get the situation where you pace out an uphill putt, add three paces or whatever, but when you pull the trigger the sub-conscious gets in and adds a bit more for the slope with the result that you go four feet past.
But if you can putt like a mindless robot it is a lethal method for putts outside about 8 feet when length is more important than line.
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