T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1289.1 | Take notes | WALTA::LENEHAN | | Fri Jun 21 1991 10:16 | 30 |
|
Hi Bob,
When I first started to get my swing repetitive I found
that when my game went bad, it was due to something I
already went through. Like forinstance, I started to
spray the ball... and hit shots fat/thin etc. , the
fix was to place the ball in the EXACT same spot relative
to my left foot (I'm a righty). Anyhow it frustrated me
to continuously re-correct my swing by re-learning
what I already knew.
So I decided to keep track of anything that worked to
make my swing better. I have a file on putting, chipping,
the full swing (grip,stance,tempo etc.). I truly believe
it has been the single most accelerator to lowering my
handicap... and recovering from a slump pronto. Practice
and playing is devoted mainly on ingraining good habits...
or learning more advanced shots and not wasted on re-learning.
The golf swing is VERY complex, when you want to make it happen
the same way over and over. There's just too much stuff to
remember... and so little room in my brain to store it! :)
good luck,
Walta
|
1289.2 | Me too | BTOQA::SHANE | | Fri Jun 21 1991 11:21 | 18 |
|
Good note, I'm sure going to pay attention to this one. I too am in
a slump of sorts.
I really feel that I've gotten better at this game, but I just don't
seem to score any better. I'm still stuck right around a 100 for 18.
Instead of playing very mediocre on every hole, I can string together
3-4 pars, a boggie here or there. But I still have those big blow up
holes that keep me from really showing improvement on the score card.
Saturday is a good example. I shot 48 like this:
Double, Triple, Bog, Par, Par, Par, Par, Bog, Quad.
Sometimes I think I better learn to be satisfied at the level I'm at.
Shane the VT Hacker :-(
|
1289.3 | | PUTTER::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Fri Jun 21 1991 12:02 | 14 |
|
CUres for a slump:
1. Take some time off; you may be playing too much. Even the pros take a
week off every so often.
2. Take a lesson or two; you may be getting away from a sound swing & flaws
may be creeping in.
3. Quit trying so hard & enjoy; the pressure you are putting on yourself
is affecting your swing.
4. Practice putting; you won't have to try to hit the ball stiff, if you're
making some putts
|
1289.4 | You gotta love the game... | XANADU::CAMPBELL | A mind is a terrible thing | Fri Jun 21 1991 12:05 | 15 |
| I'm not really in a slump, but I'm like .2 where it's just a few
holes that kill my score.
Off the tee I'm fine and my putting is good. My strokes come when
I have to use the 'P' word. I'm just not hitting the Pitching Wedge
well and it's counting for at 6-9 extra strokes each match.
But then, when my Pitching Wedge is working for me, I'm usually bad
off the tee or my putting stinks.
Oh! To be able to put together a perfect round ;-). Practice,
practice, practice...
Shawn
|
1289.5 | Sage advice | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Fri Jun 21 1991 12:51 | 6 |
| RE:CURE FOR SLUMP
As one of my teachers told me some time ago...Take two weeks off...then
quit.
SCD
|
1289.6 | "Tips are Frequent and Easy to Find" | CSG002::GLASS | | Fri Jun 21 1991 12:51 | 26 |
| For me, the grip is always the basis for my problems......
......A recent grip tip has really worked wonders for me.
It had to do with first taking your normal grip, then lifting the club
up via your arms, holding it up a few seconds and then returning the
club to its normal spot behind the ball.
......The key here is to "accept" what ever grip and pressure happens
when you lift the club and don't change when you return the club back
to the "normal" address position
I find that it allows me to properly grip with the two left hand
fingers and the one right hand finger.....i.e. I hold the hands
properly and with the correct amount of pressure.
I achieve this condition by only lifting the club about waist high!
This tip is being followed by many of the flat belly pros and the Lord
of Latrobe. Must be a good setup key if they use it.
The key success factor may well be:
*****Proper hand position(i.e. Vs to the right shoulder)
Proper pressure in each hand
Reduction of pressure/tension in the arms or shoulders
Proper grip strenght(i.e. right hand position)
Works very well for me and allows me to hit straight and long versus my
often "bannana ball" results if my hands are not in a correct position.
Tom
|
1289.7 | #3 says it all...I agree | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Fri Jun 21 1991 13:41 | 1 |
|
|
1289.8 | | DLOACT::ONAKA | Born to Golf | Fri Jun 21 1991 20:57 | 22 |
| Re: .4
If you're wasting strokes around the greens, leave your wedge in the
car next round. You'll be amazed that you don't HAVE to use a wedge
around the green to score well. Many players underestimates the precision
required to use the wedge to finesse the ball. I'm sure everyone in
this notesfile has experienced this: you hit a great shot to the green
but the ball came up few feet short of the green or the ball trickeled
off the green. You take out your wedge and...THUD, you just wasted a
shot...or worse you skull it over the green into a trap or water. You
tell yourself you could've putted that shot better than thta. Well,
if you did use your putter or chip it with 7 or 8 iron you probably did
had a good chance to make that putt.
Try it next time, it should save you some strokes. I know...I used to
give my friend stroke-a-hole and still win my 'lunch money'. Then I
made a mistake of telling him of the advice and now if I give him more
than 3 a side, I can't count on winning my 'lunch money' anymore.
I'm not saying NEVER use the wedge, there are shots that you should use
it but most of the time you'll have higher percentage with less lofted
clubs.
|
1289.9 | PRACTICE, PRACTICE, PRACTICE! | ANGLIN::SUZDA | | Sat Jun 22 1991 16:18 | 22 |
| Well, here it is Saturday morning and I just finished my round with the
boys. I considered myself in a slump since the beginning of the year.
I've been a 14 handicap and since the beginning of the year had a hard
time breaking 90. I gave up last week and swore off the golf course
and spent a week(every day at lunch and in the evenings) at the driving
range. This morning I was real disappointed when I started playing,
shot a 44 for the front 9. Had a bogey on number 10, but felt a
difference in the swing. I started feeling the same swing that I had
felt all week at the driving range and had the best back nine of my
life, an even 36. Had 4 birdies for the eighteen, pitched two of the
birdies in, so don't necessarily forget your pitching wedge, for an 80
for the round.
I guess my point is, GO PRACTICE! I, probably like many others out
there, practice day in and day out at the beginning of the season, only
to have a few good rounds. Then we say "Hey, this game isn't all that
hard", and forget what got us where we are. PRACTICE, PRACTICE,
PRACTICE! I am a beliver once again that for every good round I have
there is probably 2-3 days at the driving range that allows me that
good round.
|
1289.10 | TAKE A BREAK AND COME BACK EASY | AIMHI::CROCKETT | | Mon Jun 24 1991 16:44 | 7 |
| Bob, get a new partner. That is half you problem.
John, you're the best.
|
1289.11 | be abusive, but not on the course | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | | Tue Jun 25 1991 14:35 | 9 |
| Break a golf club, beat the wife, kick the dog, kill a bottle of jack,
and wash it down with a 12 pack of your favorite ice cold beer.
AHHHHH! MUCH BETTER!
Now go out and play the best round in your life.
bob
|
1289.12 | | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | | Tue Jun 25 1991 14:37 | 9 |
| That last entry was a joke, in all reality, I notice that taking a
break is in proper order. When you get back to the course, don't spend
more then a few seconds at address. I notice that when I spend to much
time at address, I hack big time. When I grip the club, line up my
shot, I step up to the ball, and less then 2 seconds later, I take a
smooth swing. Boom. Now I just hack.
bob
|
1289.13 | HESITATION SLUMP | DNEAST::ROGERS_GORDI | GORDI | Wed Jun 26 1991 13:10 | 16 |
| SLUMP????? Boy, I can identify with that! As some of friends can attest
to in the Corporate Cup Challenge, I am in the worst slump of my
golfing career. I am hesitating in the middle of my back swing and
losing all my balance, kinda look like a drunk trying to play golf. I
have gone from an 18 to a 21 handicap over the last month, not much
fun, very frustrating. I like the advise of taking some time off. I
also feel and did this is the advise of going to your PGA pro and take
a lesson. I feel it helped me 110%. He gave me something to work on and
it took my concentration off of the hesitation. My scores are not where
I want them but it will come with PRACTICE. Last but not least keep
smiling, a positive attitude is half the battle. It may be frustrating
but I have had to laugh at it at times. I know the folks around me were
laughing whether it was outside or inside, my swing was horrendous!!!!!
but halarious at the same time. Keep swinging!
Gordi
|
1289.14 | And the slump continues | BTOQA::SHANE | | Wed Jun 26 1991 13:42 | 17 |
|
Well I hope everyone's right about taking a lesson to get out of
a slump.
Went out last night, shot another 55. I was cruising right along on my
way to a nice sub 50, when BANG, I pulled my tee shot into the woods
O.B. the 6th hole, a par 5. Reteed, hit a mediocre shot, hit the next
one in the woods. You could hear the wheels coming off for 10 miles!!!
The only positive thing that happened after that was that I didn't lose
my cool. Just finished out, practiced some chips and had a beer, (well
I had 2).
Lessons start next Tuesday, 3:00 p.m, can't wait!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Shane
|
1289.15 | slump with a slice | PICKET::MARLAND | | Wed Jun 26 1991 15:19 | 11 |
| What happens to me more than not is that I tend to slump with a
particular club, usually the 3 wood. I never hit a driver, so I usually
use a 3 wood off the tee. If that starts to fade, then I'll drop to the
5 wood, better acuracy but fewer yards. But I'd rather be in play. I
think everyone has a favorite club, they consistantly hit well. I'll
try to play that to get some confidence back, than gradually bring the
other clubs back into play. Works for me.
Fore !!!
|
1289.16 | You need an analyst not a golf pro :-) | EPAVAX::OBRIEN | Certifiable golfer | Wed Jun 26 1991 16:28 | 13 |
| RE: .14
Shane this is not a slump!
>> I was cruising right along on my
>> way to a nice sub 50, when BANG, I pulled my tee shot into the woods
You have convinced yourself that playing under 50 is not your game.
I remember when I was first trying to break 80, somehow I'd always
finish double, double for 81. You need to forget about the dam score
and just hit the ball. I know you can do it, now all we have to do is
convince you that you can do it!
KO
|
1289.17 | I know | BTOQA::SHANE | | Thu Jun 27 1991 08:19 | 12 |
|
KO,
I'm sure you are right. Maybe my first step towards that was the fact
that I managed not to get upset when the wheels came off. I kept an
even mood and did make some good shots going out.
Shane
|
1289.18 | scoring comfort zone... | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Thu Jun 27 1991 09:52 | 5 |
| .16 is right on the money.....we all have our scoring comfort
zone and the trick is to either 1) forget about the score or 2)
give yourself tougher goals to reach when scoring...
one method works for some the other method works for others...
|
1289.19 | Mr. 50 | BTOQA::SHANE | | Fri Jun 28 1991 09:10 | 11 |
|
KO,
You sure are right about this comfort zone thing. Last night I started
really bad. Got to the 6th tee and duffed the drive. I managed to
calm myself, and hit the best 3 wood I've ever hit. Got me going
finished with 2 boggies, and 2 pars. Final score "50".
Call me Mr. 50......
|
1289.20 | Slumps and Mental Blocks... | MAST::FITZPATRICK | Juuuust a bit outside. | Fri Jun 28 1991 12:50 | 15 |
| Re: Slumping with a particular club.
I have now officially graduated to a full-fledged mental-block
against hitting my 3-wood. For the past couple of years, I've had some
trouble with it (usually slicing or pushing it way right). Last
weekend, on the 7th hole at Maplewood, a par 5, I hit my drive
straight, but a little shorter than usual. Usually, I'll hit my 5 wood
(which I have no trouble with) on the second shot, and be in position
to go for the green with my 3rd shot. Since I was a little shorter
than usual, I pulled out "Boo-Boo" (I have a "bear" head-cover for the
3-wood 8-). I then proceeded to hit one of the fattest shots I've hit
in a long time. Maybe I should just leave the 3-wood in my trunk.
Any advice?
-Tom
|
1289.21 | | EPAVAX::OBRIEN | Certifiable golfer | Fri Jun 28 1991 13:38 | 18 |
| RE: .19 Shane
>> Call me Mr. 50......
When will this be shooting your age? :-)
Next time out don't try so hard. Think about making a bogey on each
hole. That would give you a score of 45. When you get on the tee the
object is to get the ball into play, the next shot near the green then
chip and 2 putt. The mental image is not to hit it "dead solid
perfect". This should help take the tension out of your upper body and
let you relax and make a normal swing. Also while your out there enjoy
the day, your playing partners and the view. Once you've broken the
barrier a couple of times, your comfort zone will change then you can
go after the next barrier.
KO
|
1289.22 | CLosers to yours than mine | BTOQA::SHANE | | Fri Jun 28 1991 13:54 | 7 |
|
KO,
I've got 17 more years to get ready for the Sr. Tour.....:-)
Shane
|
1289.23 | Work, work and more work | TSO02::STACK | | Sun Jun 30 1991 14:54 | 25 |
| re: .20
Sounds like you've got a mental block. The best advice I could give
you is to take only your 3 wood to the range for a day. Make sure that
your stance, posture and ball position are correct and then work out
the kinks with this club. Remember, the swing used with the fairway
woods should be a sweeping swing. If you're taking divots with these
clubs then either your ball position is incorrect (too far back in your
stance) or you're trying to hit down on the ball when you should be
hitting through the ball.
Remember, you payed good money for all those clubs. No reason you
shouldn't be able to use them all. Also, there are many times when you
need to hit a 3 wood whether it be for distance or accuracy. Many
courses force you to hit something other than the driver off the tee
for position. Others make it necessary to hit a 3 wood on the second
shot to a par 5.
Good luck and let us know how things work out.
Jeff
p.s. as a last resort have the club checked to ensure it's swingweight
and overall weight and make sure the head hasn't swelled.
|
1289.24 | GOLF MANAGEMENT 101 | DNEAST::ROGERS_GORDI | GORDI | Mon Jul 01 1991 09:34 | 10 |
| I really like the idea of playing bogey golf to break 50. Golf course
management is very important. A tip I was given once was look at every
par as one over; 3's being 4's; 4's being 5's and 5's being 6's.....it
helped to a point until I figured I ought to be able to par a hole more
often then not. Now, I just play the more difficult holes as bogey
holes. It is difficult at times to tell yourself not to go for the
green but more often then not if you can convince yourself to do it,
you'll start reducing your scores. Good luck.
Gordi
|
1289.25 | | CSOA1::CONNER | Welcome to the jungle | Mon Jul 01 1991 14:57 | 6 |
| re.23> p.s. as a last resort have the club checked to ensure it's swingweight
re.23> and overall weight and make sure the head hasn't swelled.
My head swelled once and made for a real tough back 9 ;-)
Mike.
|
1289.26 | | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Mon Jul 01 1991 16:44 | 21 |
| Swing et al.
First, I refuse to comment on the swelled head topic. Second, I tend
to disagree with the commenton swing vis-a-vis the fairway. I think
most golfers, especially those shooting 50+ have problems because they
don't pinch the ball off the fairways, causing many topps, rollies and
shanks.. Hitting into the back of the ball will cause a cleaner shot,
but may cause some slice because the club head meets with resistance.
I can now hit my driver out of most fairways and donot carry a three
woods anymore. The divot you take should start after the ball is
struck. IF the divot starts before the ball, then this "fat" shot is
not because of the club but more likely the result of "dipping" or drop
the right side to get some "extra" distance. We all do it.
Allow for the fade, hit into the back of the ball, try you driver out
of the fairway or do like the MadHacker does and hit it so far off of
the tee you don't need a three wood.
SoCalDandy ( just burned a course a 38-42, Rated 73 (125 slope) Gave
me a net 66. Never broke 85 on the course before...maybe I'm on the
right side of a slump)
|
1289.27 | Stay on the path !!!! | RAYBOK::COOPER | One-ton Tomato ! | Mon Jul 01 1991 16:52 | 7 |
| I prefer to keep my driver in the cart and on the path, that way
the marshal leaves us alone. As far as slumps go, don't worry about
it !!! Slumps come and goe like mother-in-laws. When they are around
your whole life is screwed up and when they go, its like they were
never here !!
Mad Hacker
|
1289.28 | Lesson number one | BTOQA::SHANE | | Wed Jul 03 1991 12:13 | 16 |
|
Well, I went for a lesson last night, and the instructor picked
out two big flaws with my swing, both to do with my left side.
Seems I've been spinning out on my left foot, and locking my
left legt straight at impact. He has me working on going from
the inside to the outside of my foot, without getting up on my
toes, and keeping my left knee flexed through out the swing.
Feels strange right now, but at least now I know what to look for
and feel for.
Hopefully this will be a big step in the right direction.
Shane
|
1289.29 | The vacation helped too. | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Mon Jul 08 1991 13:18 | 30 |
|
Things may be looking up, I took my wife to the range during my
vacation, to try and help her out. She did pretty good. Anyway, in
the course of this, to show her some things I hit a couple of balls
(went as usual, great takeoff then sudden right hand turn). Anyway,
she was watching some golf on TV and pointed out that the guys on
TV, when they are done with the swing, the hand are high, when I did
it my hands were on my shoulder. This never occured to me, but when
I thought about it it did seem familiar. Off to the range and
concentrate on swinging through (not at) the ball and extending the
arms all the way through the swing, guess what, started banging the
ball long and straight again.
In my last league match I shot a 41 with an OB ball that was caused by
lining up to play the slice then hitting long and straight.
Hopefully the slump is over, here are the things I need to concentrate
on:
1) Swing through the ball, not at it
2) hands finish high, not on my left shoulder
3) Concentrate on alignment (seems the course is wide open and I have
fallen into a trap of not concentrating and lining up correctly, the
bad shots I hit last week were the result of not concentrating and
rushing)
Hopefully the slump is over and the good times can roll on.
--Bob
|
1289.30 | Yogi's advice for breaking a slump | VERGA::F_MCGOWAN | | Tue Jul 23 1991 13:23 | 9 |
| According to Joe Garagiola, Yogi Berra called to ask him if he was
playing golf. Joe was recuperating from an operation at the time, and
told Yogi he hadn't played golf for six weeks. Yogi replied,
"Don't worry about it. You always play better when you're not playing."
Words to live by.
Frank
|
1289.31 | MTCW | FDCV07::VOUTSELAS | | Tue Jul 23 1991 17:38 | 44 |
|
I watch the pros, pick out one specific thing , and try to
see what they are doing. Not a big believer in lessons , once you have
reached a certain "stage". For me the stage is "I'll figure it out
myself ". Also called arrogance.
My slump is at least 2 years in duration. And started with some
injuries but we won't discuss.
#1 Watched all pro tournaments and only watched the
the back of the left hand's plane in relationship to the plane Ben
Hogan talks about. Then watched right hand in the set position on
the back swing AND what it did on down swing. Then go practise
what i saw. After 2 or 3 months, it felt comfortable. And I stopped
hooking wedges thru 6 iron. Point is IF you know what is wrong,
you should be able to fix by watching and doing.
#2 In order to NOT worry about this plane and have it
be a natural, I turned my left hand over a little to a stronger
position. Again watched the pros, only their left hand grip. And
after practising found it not only "more natural" and giving more
distance, it actually felt better with the "fat" part of the palm
cushining my shaft for a nice "firm but soft" feeling. Again it was
watch and practise.
#3 Since driver is my toughest club, That's what I
practise the most. You can't fool a driver. And for people who say
"don't hit them then" aren't doing you any favors. It's like saying
I want to go to MIT but don't bother me with math !! Even if you
aren't hitting them well plan ahead and say " On this hole, I can
get away with a lousy driver shot" . And use it.
AND spend 60% of your practise time with the driver.
I'm not back yet but the above 3 items have really
helped.
Ang
|
1289.32 | Confidence goeth before the fall... | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Tue Jul 23 1991 18:13 | 27 |
| Re: Watch and Practice
Good points Ang. But lest we forget, not all people learn by or translate
well what they see others do. I have found this technique to be very
valuable, but many just don't copy well. If this were so then some of
the swings you see on a golf course could never be explained.
A recent article talked about a new way to practice at the range. Take
two clubs...Driver and pitching wedge. The premise being that these
two clubs cost you moe strokes and can therefore take off more strokes
than any others. It's is a replay of the hit it in the fairway and get
it on the green approach. I have tried this...and guess what...it
works. My drives are better and even my other irons have improved,
partially because of the swing and also because I do not fear missing s
shot nearly as much because I now think I can at least get it in the
hole in three strokes from the fringes and sometimes two.
Now that I have recovered from a bout of "sandtrapitis" I can even go
for more greens and not worry about the dry hazards. The pros seldom
worry about such things, therefore they are rewarded more than punished
for bravado on the course. This confidence carries over...remember Ian
Baker Finch on the tee at 17 and the announcer said..."no reason to hit
a driver here" and Ian takes out his driver and splits the fairway.
Confidence is a wonderful thing and it is usually what is missing
during a slump.
SCD
|
1289.33 | SCD, agree "confidence rules" | FDCV06::VOUTSELAS | | Thu Jul 25 1991 12:21 | 21 |
|
SCD,
right , I see teaching pros at Stow Acres and it's either a wedge
or a driver that they practise the most with. I try to alternate
driver/wedge at driving range in order to transpose the better
wedge swing to the the driver swing. I try to murder drivers at a
range, and all it does is cause more problems.
You make birdies and pars with the driver, not the putter.
Or at least a 3 wood. Unless it's a super easy, short course.
Baker -Finch, yes , you are right. NEVER saw so much confidence in
a golfer !! And the drives set up his putting attitude, I think.
To make sure I "copy" right I have my 18 year old son check me
out to see how it looks. So I do have some one who can play the game
check me out. But mostly I'm on my own; my DEC league partner
Walter"the train" Lenehan helps, so I got two low 'capers always
looking at my swing.
Ang
|
1289.34 | learn the game from green to tee not versa.. | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Thu Jul 25 1991 13:48 | 7 |
| re: .33
> you make birdies and pars with the driver not the putter....
I disagree, putting and the short game(missed greens) are at least
50% of the game...that's why the professionals spend more time
working on the short game than other aspects.......IMHO
|
1289.35 | short game "rules" | SOLVIT::BUCZYNSKI | | Thu Jul 25 1991 14:08 | 6 |
| I totally agree with .-1. I can hit a fairly consistant drive. I loose
it with the short irons and putter. I wish I had a buck fro every
green I 3-putted this year.
If only I could use my 3 wood nearer the green?!?!
Mike
|
1289.36 | OFF THE TEE | MR4DEC::DIAZ | Octavio, SME International | Thu Jul 25 1991 14:24 | 11 |
| RE: Last three
I have to agree with both sides. I think I have the same problem as Ang,
which is, once I get off the tee, I feel confident on making it to the
green or around and get a par or maybe even a birdie, but my drives are
very inconsistent.
For those of you who have steady drives, then the game around or on the
green is what you consider critical.
Tavo
|
1289.37 | stop the bleeding | WALTA::LENEHAN | | Thu Jul 25 1991 14:25 | 20 |
|
reply last few;
Hi ,
For the "pro's" it's all putting and chipping etc. seems
they all hit it far enough to have good/great greens in regulation
stats... But, then again a pro who hits it 10 yards farther than the others
scores even better. So it seems both the short game and long game
rate highly on lowering your scores.
What's the stroke saving secret for your game? Find the worst
part of your game and work on improving that priority one. Continue
until you simply brush up on each part of your game to keep
playing well. In about 50 or so years? you'll be ready for the
super seniors tour! :)
Walta
|
1289.38 | I'll take a hot putter ANY day | INDEV1::GSMITH | I need two of everything | Thu Jul 25 1991 14:26 | 11 |
| re 33
You make birdies and pars with the driver, not the putter.
Everyone has his/her own opinion.... but I think most golfers will
agree with the 'drive for show.... putt for dough' saying.
3 wood or driver.... doesn't make a difference.. 10-30 yards.. So I'm
hitting a 6 iron your hitting an 8... You still gotta get it on the
green THEN MAKE the putt.
Smitty
|
1289.39 | hit it long AND STRAIGHT...!!! | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Thu Jul 25 1991 15:16 | 29 |
|
> For the "pro's" it's all putting and chipping etc. seems
> they all hit it far enough to have good/great greens in regulation
> stats... But, then again a pro who hits it 10 yards farther than the others
> scores even better. So it seems both the short game and long game
> rate highly on lowering your scores.
This may be what people percieve but in fact the good/great GIR's
is only about 11-13 GIR per 18 hole round for the pro's who are best at it.
The rest have great short games to be able to compete. Hitting it
far enough has nothing to do with GIR's, hitting it on line does....the
farther one hits the ball the harder it is to keep on line, most pro's
can keep the ball in the fairway at around 255-265 yards but the closer
they go toward the 280 mark the more offline they get....if it was the
longest hitters with the best GIR's it would show up in the weekly stats
but over 30 years the opposite has been true except for one pro who stood
out over the rest....NICKLAUS...he could belt it 260-270 and still keep
it in the fairway....
so, the pro who hits it 10 yards farther does not score even better, and
once most of us amatuers realize this and start keeping the ball in play
instead of seeing how far we can hit it, the we'll score better maybe and
maybe even enjoy the game again.....
keep blasting away.....{;^)
|
1289.40 | Mirror image is always reversed | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Thu Jul 25 1991 15:17 | 19 |
| Ang,
Good luck, with Walta's help you should probably ask for more stokes.
I think it is interesting how the game has changed with the advent of
high tech, more fogiving woods and irons. Now with swings like Eamon
Darcey's and Freddy Couples to choose from, the swings of the "Fat
Bellies" on the seniors tour, the game is much more a game for the
masses. Calvin Peete where are you? Best advice I ever saw was by a
golfing Physicist. He explained how the swing was important for two
feet behind the ball to two feet in front after contact. Everything
else was "frosting". He also said something that else that stuck...the
speed or tempo of a swing can change from back swing to down swing,
this violates some law of physics and prevents the club from return to
square. Creates an interesting mental image and can help those of us
in a hurry to get the club to the top or in a hurry to hit the ball.
Hope someday Walta has to copy your swing.
SoCalDandy
|
1289.41 | | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Thu Jul 25 1991 15:32 | 27 |
| Re: Drive for show...
What a discussion...which came first the chicken or Colonel Sanders?
If you think back to the the last several tournaments, the tee shot has
been the demise of most of the golfers. Second was their inability to
hit a green or hit it close enough to have a chnace to make the putt.
Third was the missed putts. Everything has an impact, but mentally, if
you are in "deep sneakers" off of the tee, the rest of the hole is an
abomination. If you are always hitting long or medium irons to the
greens, you are also tempting fate. Watch the Senior Open this weekend
and see what they say about either 17 or 18. Used to be a par five, so
it has a small green. Now it is a long par 4 and is not made to accept
two irons or woods...too small. This is the way many courses are
designed. If you go against the design...you have to have one or more
strong parts to your game to survive.
I never know which one of me is going to show up...maybe Freud should
have been a golfer. I pushed the ball all around the other day, hit
every iron stiff, missed 6 birdie putts and still shot an 82 (easy
course 109 slope, 68 rating). Philosophically, if my drives had been
straight, I'd have muffed my irons. If I had hit normal irons, I
wouldn't have had realistic birdie putts.
Hit each shot like it was a single event...the sum of the total is not
nearly as important as one of the single events.
SCD
|
1289.42 | a quote from Tommy Armour.... | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Thu Jul 25 1991 15:58 | 8 |
| re: .41
Yes, everything does have an impact BUT.....
you can partially miss a driver shot, a fairway wood, a long iron
and recover....if you miss a chip or putt you've lost a stroke....!!!!
|
1289.43 | | KOALA::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Thu Jul 25 1991 16:18 | 17 |
|
For me it's always been my drives. My iron game is pretty good. It
probably has to do with when I grew up as a inner-city kid and could
only use the park over my back fence to play golf. I could only use my
6-9 iron's. I couldn't afford to go to a REAL golf course until I was
in the Army.
As for the pro's, I think may be a individual thing as it is here in
the notes file. I remember watching the masters several years ago, and
they were talking about how Jack was having such a bad year. He hadn't
finished near the top in any of the turnaments he entered, yet he was
2nd on the tour for GIR. Obviously something else was wrong!!
Mike
|
1289.44 | GIR stats and other junk | NHASAD::BLAISDELL | Keep an even keel | Thu Jul 25 1991 23:16 | 23 |
|
re: .39
> This may be what people percieve but in fact the good/great GIR's
>is only about 11-13 GIR per 18 hole round for the pro's who are best at it.
For tour players at the top of the GIR statistical category, they will
average between 13 - 13.5 greens in regulation. I would say a good
number would be an average between 12 - 13. Below 12 and you probably
will find players struggling to remain on tour. It is not unusual
to see a tournament winner hitting 85 - 90% GIR over four days. On
the other hand, it seems like most of the greens the pros hit to
are huge.....
....which brings to light the importance of putting. Putting
can be easier by hitting and chipping to spots where you leave
yourself more makeable putts. So, one way to fight your way out
of a slump is to use the mind and develop a strategy for playing
the next shot. More on course management and less focus on the
swing will aid concentration and take some of the tension/pressure
off the swing itself.
-rick
|
1289.45 | QUIET LEFT FOOT, Anyone? | FDCV07::VOUTSELAS | | Wed Sep 25 1991 17:51 | 37 |
| SoCalDandy;
Your physicist may be right.
The offspring ties for low gross and wins a free golf lesson.
Off course, the old man needs it more than him. So I take it
at Marlboro with an asst pro named MARK.
Comments:" You have been swinging OFF balance for 19 years"
Ok , now give me the bad news!!
"Your right hand comes out about an inch on your down swing."
I knew I had "right hand yips" but this!! Swell, anything else ?
"My main concern is BALANCE and that the balance is arrived at
by a lot of work with feet and shoulders. YOUR shoulders
ride up on your back swing.
Solution: Glue the left foot to the ground through out the back
swing and FEEL the coil build up in the right leg;
and your coil unloads TOWARDS your target at impact.
WAS STRANGE !! But actually I did feel in control for
the first time.
He says:" You have the swing and especiallly the hand action
of an 8 handicap now, so next year I expect to see big results"
It's the balance that gets the club face going in the right direction
and keeps you "centered". Everythings else is secondary.
And it may take a YEAR, to lose my old bad habits!!
After 10 to 15 4 irons, I could feel what he was talking about.
OK Walt and Mark, get you guys NEXT year,
Ang
|
1289.46 | | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Mon Oct 07 1991 14:02 | 16 |
| Good advice...I see too many golfers trying to raise the left heel and
figure out when to set it back down. Keep it on ht eground makes
since.
By the way, another way to cure a slump is to do what I did. Played 4
rounds in three days on courses ranging from 72.8 to 75.8 in
difficulty. Add to it 30 mph wind, and rain and you return to the
basics quickly. No room for errant shots. Played every par 4 like it
was a par five and managed to par half of them. Even shot an 88 at the
"Bear" at the GRAND TRAVERSE RESORT (146 slope, 75.8) as a 12
handicapper, this is great...prettiest course I ever saw, wind howling,
rained for 6 holes, and loved every minute of it. The guys I was with
thought I was nuts, but I had the entire course to myself. Forgot
about my slump and just had fun.
SCD
|
1289.47 | | PUTTER::WARFIELD | Gone Golfing | Mon Oct 07 1991 18:10 | 10 |
| Re: -.1
> Even shot an 88 at the
> "Bear" at the GRAND TRAVERSE RESORT (146 slope, 75.8) as a 12
> handicapper, this is great.
I've played the Bear, that's one tough course, not what I would
recommend for curing a slump, but if it works!
Larry
|
1289.48 | Bear Story | AKOCOA::BREEN | Bill Breen Ako2-3 244-7984 | Tue Oct 08 1991 12:33 | 19 |
| SoCal,
So that's where you were. This notes file has been pretty dull
while you were playing the "Bear".
I go out to Michigan every Summer and end up playing my
brother-in-law, giving outlandish strokes and always winning. (didn't
make it this year but that's a long story).
So last year I end up with him and his buddy who are going to play
me as a team and still get strokes. He tells me I should give "Joe" a
stroke a hole and he'll take a mere 9 since "Joe" had a 110 his last
time out.
Well "Joe" and I shared a cart and about the 7th hole after 2 pars,
3 bogeys and only 1 double I find out the "Joe"'s last round was at the
"Bear".
Fortunatly my putter was hot, I WOULD not lose to my brother-in-law
and I ended up 1 up in the match. The way I have played this year I
would have been the one asking for strokes.
Bill
|
1289.49 | | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Tue Oct 08 1991 14:30 | 22 |
| re:47,48
I would recommend the course to anyone. Just a tremendous "commune
with nature" experience. The hitting of the golf ball was an added
benefit. I also played a course called Highpointe, about one mile up
the road from the Bear. This will be a great course too, but now is
only half of a great course. It is about three years old and is one
half "Scottish LInks" and one half "Bear". The nine thru the trees and
up on the hill(Thus the name High Point) is gorgeous. Crowned greens,
elevated crowned greens, sloped fairways, severely sloping fairways,
par fives with two shots over water,, this course was great fun. One
green was at least twenty feet back to front in elevation change, with
three tiers ( pin on the back tier for me). The wind adds 30 yards to
most holes and the back tees make you pucker when you try to squeeze a
straight shot into the gaps in the fairways.
More Bear...best part about the course is that it rambles thru apple
and cherry orchards. The apples were ripe...best and freshest I've
ever had. Easy to see how someone could shoot a 110 and feel good
about it.
SoCalDandy
|
1289.50 | "killing the slump with FEET" | USEM::VOUTSELAS | | Wed Oct 30 1991 11:19 | 23 |
|
More on slumps and getting rid of them...
In 3 Sundays I have 22 pars and 3 birds since concentrating on
BALANCE . That's with NO practise in between. 54 holes of
just getting out there and only hitting some range balls before.
And that's on a slope 124 course , soon to be 130.
So I'm "in the hole" 46% of the time. It's been over 3 years
since I've done anything like that.
I now watch only the pros, feet , ankles , and lower legs to
see what they do before during and after the swing.
There not ALL like JACK where the left foot looks "out of
control"
Balance also relieves the pressure of the right hand , since when I
swung "out of balance" I would use it to "jerk down" and that
just created horrible shots.
CHECK THOSE FEET on TV , and see how smooth some of them really are.
No tippy toes action , no big curl of left or right foot.
ONLY the right foot can release into the left side after you
hit through the shot. On a natural release action
Ang, also known as Angie-ball, coming back!
|
1289.51 | De Feet | AKOCOA::BREEN | Bill Breen Ako2-3 244-7984 | Wed Oct 30 1991 16:58 | 16 |
| I had a dropped into a terrible slump beginning with the last nine
holes of Shattuck when I just couldn't hit an iron. Tried to shoot out
of it on the range and got worse - every iron a hook.
Had a chance for 18, went to Green Meadow and changed shoes and simply
tried to strike the ball - these other shoes seem to set me back on the
heels rather than up on the toes. Managed to play around with 90%
bogies and rest pars with 9th and 18th the only poor holes. But it was
better balance that made the difference.
Speaking of Shattuck and the famous 7th, Gary Wilson and I had a side
match against Rick and put two balls in the hazard but made bogie on a
60' putt to halve the hole. I will let Rick comment on how he felt
about that one.
Bill
|
1289.52 | sigh | NHASAD::BLAISDELL | Keep an even keel | Wed Oct 30 1991 18:40 | 17 |
|
> Speaking of Shattuck and the famous 7th, Gary Wilson and I had a side
> match against Rick and put two balls in the hazard but made bogie on a
> 60' putt to halve the hole. I will let Rick comment on how he felt
> about that one.
> Bill
Oh great, not only do you sink a putt from Venus but you don't even
know what it was for. That won the hole for you! The BB's took a
double on that. After you sank that no-brai.... , wonderful putt, Jeff
and I proceeded to miss our 2 foot bogie putt. Yeah, we were shaken.
We had a nice comeback on 8 (the final hole) though, eh?
We'll get you next year
-rick
|