Overall Rating:No Ratings
Quality Of This Article:No Ratings

Live Strategy

12:19 pm June 1, 2009

Watching a pro golf tournament live is a perfect way to spend a few
days of entertainment with fellow avid golfers. So, if you ever have
the opportunity to watch a professional golf tournament….take it!

These tournaments include the PGA, LPGA, & the Senior Tours.
Future Tours and the Buy.com Tours also schedule competitions
throughout the country. There are also golf tournaments’ regional
tours, also called “mini-tours.”

If you can’t afford to get to any of the above mentioned
tournaments, then you can check out the games on television too.

There’s always something on.

Not only do the major sports channels like ESPN carry professional
tournaments, but you can also subscribe to any number of 24-hour
golf channels that air today.

As I’ve stated in other of my minireports, it’s not always easy or
practical to emulate the pros at, but watching can sure be good
entertainment!

“Wait! We Need Your Opinion About This Article – That’s What Makes This Site Different Than The Other Golf Blogs Online…”

What do you think about this article?

Do you agree with any of the points made?

Rate & review it right now in the space below:

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Overall Rating:No Ratings
Quality Of This Article:No Ratings

Ignore The Pros!

9:18 am

New golfers often want to imitate the styles & techniques of the
professional golfers that they see on TV & in magazines. Every day
we are presented with thousands of tips from the web, the latest
magazines, & special golf videos.

It would be great to become a better golf player just by copying

Annika Sorenstam or Tiger Woods. But it can be counterproductive
to try emulate them right off the bat.

You have to understand that the number of players who make a
living from competitive golf is very small.

Professional golfers don’t play golf after they get off from work.

Golf is their job. They work at golf full time, like you do your
career. Eight to ten hours of their day is spent at the practice range,
the golf course, the practice green, or anywhere else they can swing
a club!

Most of us don’t have the luxury of being able to practice for a
living. Professional golfers sometimes demonstrate shots that loft
into the air & stop just 2 feet short from the hole, without even an
inch of roll.

Regular players shouldn’t spend six months trying to repeat the same
shot. We’re better suited to practice the basics and take our time to
refine our individual styles and techniques.

What type of practice is best for average golfers then? Most golfers
spend over 95% of their time hitting long distance shots at the
driving range. But, they never take the time to practice the boring
shots that count, like short game.

Most people do not enjoy practicing short game. But, the value
you’ll reap from investing your time here can lower your score
quickly.

Did you know that some pros spend 80% or more of their time
practicing short game shots using many different angles & variables?

While you should not imitate the way professional golfers play
individual shots, you can certainly learn how focus your practice on
the right areas, like they do.

A. Why Short Game is Important.

Most people get a huge thrill out of banging their driver for hours on
end. They hit the ball great distances & make long drives until they
are exhausted. However, after their real games are over, they look at
their scorecard and it still reads 100! Their excitement quickly
dwindles to a standstill….

Improving your score means spending less time using your driver,
and more time working on short game. This is one of the best uses of
practice time.

Instead of spending an hour at the driving range hitting long-distance
balls, devote time to putting, chipping, pitching, bunker shots, &
shots made from 45-75 yards out.

Did you know that 50% or more of your score will come from
strokes taken at 75 yards or less? So, does it make sense to spend at
least 50% of your practice time on those shots? According to my
math it does!

It may take some discipline to ignore the driving range for a bit, but
your golf game will improve WAY more by focusing on short game
during practice.

After all, you’ll be one of the only ones who’ve focused on it!

“Wait! We Need Your Opinion About This Article – That’s What Makes This Site Different Than The Other Golf Blogs Online…”

What do you think about this article?

Do you agree with any of the points made?

Rate & review it right now in the space below:

Post Footer automatically generated by Add Post Footer Plugin for wordpress.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,



| Sitemap