laitimes

Five rules for quickly reducing the number of rods

author:Ball bag pass

BY LUKE KERR-DINEEN

Five rules for quickly reducing the number of rods

What do you think is the biggest difference between low-handicap golfers and mid-high handicap golfers?

Of course, the stability and control of the overall game are absolutely different; but more importantly, the good player who can play the seven-figure head stably, and the golfer who is always swinging in the 90-plus or even tricycle,

Based on GOLFTEC statistics and figures, as well as some advice from tour coaches and players. We figured out the five laws from the terrace to the green. If you can really follow these five points, soon, the number of poles on your scorecard will be even more beautiful!

1

Every shot has to have a goal

Regardless of your skill level, set a clear goal for each shot you play. The goal can't be negative thoughts like "don't hit the water", "don't OB", but to be more positive, like what I want to do, as the South African star Louis Oosthuizen said: "The most important thing is to figure out the course you want to play, what you want to do." 」 The first thing I'm going to do is I'm going to get the ball to go in the first place, I'm going to let it end up where it ends up, and then I'm going to execute it. Always keep the belief in playing the best ball."

It sounds like something intangible that doesn't seem to help, but it does. That's why pros do it.

2

Know your mistakes

Of course, golf is a sport full of mistakes, and even professional players can't do it if you want to play well from start to finish without mistakes.

GOLFTEC has conducted an in-depth study of this and found that golfers with higher handicaps often don't know what will happen to their missed shots. High handicap golfers may be left or right when they make mistakes, and many of them cannot touch the ball cleanly. GOLFTEC has found that before you can solve any potential problems, simply reducing your mistakes to a single direction — say, only the right curling ball remains — can reduce your par count from more than 100 to more than 90 strokes.

3

Let the ball go back into the game

But no matter what, even if you see in your mind the way you want to play, you will still make mistakes. Now you're in the woods. What should you do? Even Bryson DeChambeau, the PGA Tour super cannon, will tell you: Forget the heroic batting! Bring the ball back into the game.

"For most players, losing a shot and starting over is the smartest decision they can make." He said. "Sometimes trying to strike a heroic blow may end in a blast."

4

Solid touch ball preferred

PGA Tour ace Max Homa said:

According to GOLFTEC statistics, about 70% of the attacking green balls of high handicap players are short. One of the main reasons is that you overestimate the distance you have hit, but the other main reason is that you can't hit the ball steadily. Instead of swinging every ball to the fullest, it's better to give priority to a solid touch in the center of the club, which will definitely allow you to play good balls more often and reduce the number of strokes.

5

Good aiming

The next time you watch the game, notice that they are set up as a aim. They are methodical, pay attention to every detail, and they want to make sure their clubs and bodies are accurately aligned with the target they want. The rest of us? Sometimes the ball is thrown out without even paying attention at all. Justin Parsons, Coach of Worcesters, said it hurt our results.

"Many golfers don't understand how much bad aiming can affect their swing." He said. "They'll start trying to make technical corrections to the swing, but it's often not a swing problem, it's a mistake in the body aiming at the beginning."

END

Article from: Hello Media!