Re: 3iron = 8iron 180yrd!!
Well said Bill. Pound driver, pound wedge (miss green), chip on, 3 putt. There's a double. This has been my story (well, substitute a duffed chip for one of those putts). Distance is no indicator of handicap. Handicap is a fine indicator of short game prowess and consistency.
Well said Bill. Pound driver, pound wedge (miss green), chip on, 3 putt. There's a double. This has been my story (well, substitute a duffed chip for one of those putts). Distance is no indicator of handicap. Handicap is a fine indicator of short game prowess and consistency.
So that became my focus. This helped, but iron shots will still go left and right despite my efforts. I managed to overcome this and won my flight at club champ. Year 3 was finding out that I could play some decent golf, hitting this gigantic cut (my alignment and ball flight looked like Monty). My shots were hammered by the wind and I'd either hit it at my target (but really high and often short) or I'd yank the snot out of it with a massive pull. Really I was hitting it dead straight according to my alignment - I basically played that year aligning my feet to my shoulders: wide open. Truly, it was my first taste of consistency - wobbly as it was. It was good enough to start showing the gaping holes in my short game, but also good enough to repeat as tops in my flight (4th - bottom of the barrel). Last year I discovered the joy of square shoulders. My drives tightened right up, iron shot dispersion zoomed in and I was consistently scoring in the 90's - in fact, I only had one triple digit score last year, and it was due to a) playing the tips and b) not being able to put a solid strike on the ball, which c) sapped my confidence and desire to even play. Needless to say I more or less booted it around that day. However, it was improvement enough to catapult myself into the first flight @ club champ (still a far cry from the championship flight, though) - welcome encouragement that I was on the right track.

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