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Tuesday 27 April 2010

Putting practice

...So many games, so many ways to train. I've been working on a straight putts between two long thin cylinders set two balls apart, then hit between without touching, and also using PuttPucks as a rebound tool. Hit it from 3-4 feet and try to have ball coming directly back to you (ie no push or pull).

My current favorite is one from the Instinctive Golf Team- Putting Stack- very similar to Dr Joe Parent's game to develop touch, except in reverse- set up three markers. All balls must go from the first marker to between the two others. The first should be as close as possible to the back marker, and all subsequent balls must be behind this, not touching or overlap whilst being further on than the second marker. I made it more difficult tonight by increasing the gap between first two markers but this didn't prevent me smashing my precious record of 6.

Happy days! But ask me after the medal......

How to break 90

With thanks to Jason Sutton, @onplanegolf and the Golf Guru. Jason's blog can be found here with the details on how to break 90 here (episode 4a). The main gist is below.

"When a player wants to go from 99 to 89……They must do three things. For those of you who follow my blog, you already know this but it is worth mentioning again. 1) You MUST drive it in play….you don’t have to be perfect but you have to eliminate penalty shots during a round….2) No 2 Pitches and chips/you don’t have to hit every pitch or chip close but you absolutely can’t miss the green from 40 yards and in…..3)NO 3 PUTTS! You don’t have to make everything but you can’t three putt. Distance Control is king when it comes to putting. I don’t care if you can’t read a green better than Ray Charles. If your speed is good, I can guarantee you will limit your three putts."

Now 90 is my goal figure, my target for this year. The interesting thing for me is that I've been able to get into the low 90's without adhering to much of this- how much is therefore possible when I train myself to do all of the above? Exciting times.

I'm also very excited as I've had a further "lightbulb" moment. I met a lad out on the Links on Sunday, who had previously played to a low teens handicap in his early teens- I'm always envious of those who learn gold young and who therefore have more natural abilities, and he commented on my alignment. In fact, my alignment with the target line was fine; I just had absolutely no clue what constituted a "square" clubhead, and thus had some challenging ball flights. Every so often I'd get it right by accident/automatically but after a few good shots would start to worry and it'd be away again. After both Keith and the Instinctive Golf team's intervention I explored what worked, and now get the feel of being absorbed in the process, almost "feeling" the ball onto the centre of the clubface. When putting I now at times get so absorbed I am looking at where the ball was for some time after it's gone.

Despite not lining up any club correctly on Sunday, I scored a 94. Short game had improved but not enough up and downs- the next frontier. Managed to have a couple of looks at birdie and one at Eagle (first par 5 green in two!). My first medal round at my new club on my old course. I'm very excited about this.

Currently my 5&6 I are out of my bag, replaced with a 24 deg Hybrid (4H) and 27 degree 9 wood. Perhaps not ideal for Scottish links golf in the wind, but I found a good bit of success playing it low by gripping down, and playing ball back in the stance. I may lose my nerve and remove my 9 wood for my 6 I but we shall see.

I'm going to commit a shot strategy for the King's Links to paper over the next few days, and will undoubtedly have some more thoughts on last Sunday's round and my upcoming Debut Medal,as I'm very excited.
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Saturday 24 April 2010

Instinctive Golf

I've been neglecting the blog of late as deadlines and work take centre stage. I've managed some practice, and finally got an in with a golf club (Thank you Laurence, and thank you so much Sheila for the introduction. I owe you one!), so it's not been entirely golf free but the blog has been a casualty. I'm absolutely beat tonight, so this won't be a lengthy post (there will be more early in the week on" how to break 90" and observations of my own game) but I couldn't go any longer without praising the people at Instinctive Golf. Empowering, inspirational and as knowledgeable in teaching as in golf. Absolutely fantastic and a day that started to teach me how to "walk the walk". Kendal McWade is a master of asking the right question, encouraging you to find the right answers in yourself, and Scott Dixon a worthy master practitioner. I will write much much more on this subject but just had to record that. They will be who I will go to further my education, and will encourage those seeking tuition for gifted children to check them out. Brilliant. They can be found here. Check them out, it's free to register and there's some very interesting stuff.

Wednesday 7 April 2010

Practice swings...

...before or beside the ball? Different people do and recommend different things for this. I do both, although on different shots, never on the same shot. I'm quite pleased with my system and the reasoning behind it, so I thought I'd share.

Essentially it boils down to what is more important in the shot; if it's a shot where direction is more important than length (e.g. a tee shot, long approach shots), my rehearsal swings are fom behind the ball on an extension of the ball/target line, whereas if it's a shot where distance control is premium (putts, chips and pitches spring to mind) I make my rehearsal swings beside the ball.

Sunday 4 April 2010

36 holes...

...this weekend, and much to think about. Will go into the rounds in a bit more detail at a later date (although perhaps not quite so much detail as last night's post) but had a few observations I wanted to note down.

On today's round I had a disappointing start, and in fact lost a ball on the first hole. I went back and started again, something I regret. It's just not golf, and if I had broken 90 it wouldn't, couldn't have counted. It's not something I'd do again. Fortunately I shot 96 so that wasn't an issue, but it could have been and I'd have been absolutely gutted if I had - not something I want to feel on breaking 90. 35 putts, 40 the day before.

Even with that mulligan, I started poorly, and had also done so the day before. I need to start focusing when starting the car, and thinking about the first tee.

My short game is rusty; my pitching is a lot more consistent, but just need to get the distances down. Chipping needs a lot more work on the stroke, as well as distances. Too often I'm hitting a short game shot, then needing 2 putts (or more). At the moment, even with the ball reasonably far away I'm getting the putt very close; if I can get even a bit closer most of the time that should mean a few more putts holed. I really want to get to the point where I feel there's a chance of getting up and down whenever I miss a green in regulation, I feel that the most important thing for my scoring is becoming a master of the short game; this isn't just about the old "drive for show, putt for dough" adage; when I did Carey Mumford's behaviour style test I came out as a "persuader", the dominant style of the extrovert. That suggests that I won't get the ball to fly straight all of the time, that I can play "Army" golf (Left,Right,Left) but be saved by an aptitude for the short game. And my experience backs that up; often I was in a position to make a decent score despite not deserving to, and just a bit more short game sharpness would have seen me save par (Given my handicap, that's effectively a birdie). I also like the idea of being the type of player that constantly who looks like they're out of a hole but grinds out a score due to their short game mastery- that would be pretty cool.

After writing last night's post I was in contemplative mood, and wrote down a few thoughts, and worked with half swings of my irons. I had a few relaxed and effortless swings that flew well, and I stopped to think what I'd done differently in these swings. I realised that my grip had been very light, lighter than I thought it needed to be, but it produced these lovely swings. It seemed that it made it an awful lot easier to avoid flipping the club.

I putted for a bit and hit a few chips before going back to check it out, as often what I think has made the difference turns out to be something that happened coincidentally but fortunately not in this case. I finally seem to be getting the hang of setting up square with my irons too. My drives now tend to be a pull, pull-draw/hook; I'm going to experiment at the range with using that swing but hitting the ball from the inside, which will hopefully straighten out the flight, although it's easy enough to aim for thankfully.

I managed to string a few good holes together today, and got the fear that comes with not wanting to mess up that run. I started second guessing my club-face aim, hit a power shank (the slicing equivalent of a duck hook) then did the same into a bunker. I'm glad it happened as I need to know how to deal with it if I want to score well. My plan is to use the ClearKey "Never Eat Shredded Wheat" if I'm at all tense prior to a shot or if anything is interrupting the flow of my routine. I'm also going to use it without fail after every poor shot (eg shank). Limiting damage to less than one shot on average if at all possible.

Family is away this week, so it's short game bootcamp for this geek up at the local pitch and putt. None of the proper practice greens are open yet, so that'll be where focus my practice. I feel if I can improve my pitching and also my 1/2 and 3/4 irons that should have a good knock-on effect with my irons and ball striking in general and also work on my aiming, something I often do poorly. It's not uncommon for me to think I've pulled a shot and then check my aim with a club across my legs and realise I've hit it exactly where I was pointing.

Putting wasn't the best again; on Saturday had 40, Sunday 35. I paid attention to what was happening though, and realised I was decelerating. I then tried to stop doing that and of course the ball sailed past the hole, so by the end of the round on Sunday I was taking the club much less far back which started to improve things. I think it's likely that this was the cause of deceleration in the first place. Going to do some work in the breaks in the Masters- although it's on the BBC so no ads, the host broadcaster does of course have them so there are large gaps. I've got putt pucks to use as a rebound tool, trying to get putts to bounce straight back after hitting the pucks, which I'll use as well as a putting cup.

Oh, and I sank a thirty footer for par on the 18th, most gratifying!

A lot to ponder, and some things to do. Hoping the practice greens are open soon.

Saturday 3 April 2010

First full 18 of the year...

...last Saturday. It was a difficult day from the outset, as it had taken me longer than I'd hoped to get through what needed to be done; I was really determined to get out though as I'd had to abandon plans to get out the previous Sunday. It was Miss Geek's birthday weekend and although she'd had a party and a friend staying over she was so flat after they'd left I took her out for lunch instead.

Getting to the course around three, it was clear I'd made a tactical error as it's right beside Pittodrie, the home of Aberdeen Football Club and they were at home. With no place to park, I headed for another of the council's courses, a parkland one with drainage issues.

I teed off on the first hole of Hazlehead number 2 course (the number 1 course, designed by no less than Dr Alastair MacKenzie of Augusta fame was waterlogged). It's a 170 yard par 3, up hill, so I hit my 6 wood (22 degree, put in that day to replace my 21 degree hybrid) with a 3/4 swing and got onto the green. As I approached the green, it became clear that all was not well with the green. There were large yellow circles of burned out turf and the grass was at points longer than the fairway. I hit the putt firmly, but it tailed off quickly on the sodden green and ended with a four putt.

This set the tone for a difficult day, not only on the greens. My ball striking was poor, and I zig zagged up and down fairways and hit a lot of ugly shots with reasonable outcomes. You know the sort- pull slices hit slightly thin that manage to run a decent distance. Lots of heavy pitches and skulled chips. And I had more four putts than I've ever had since I started counting my putts. Pushes , pulls and tops abounded with my irons

The result? 103. With 46 putts. Far from ideal really.

And yet, and yet I'm smiling. A lot.

Why? Well firstly, I don't often take anywhere near as many putts. I had only 1 one-putt, and usually have many more. I usually take 32-36 putts. That's 10-14 shots off already, putting me right into the range I want to be in if I'm going to break 90 this year. And I am. The greens were honestly, truly awful. I don't think I've ever played on such poor greens- to give you an idea, they were in poor shape for a fairway, let alone a green. In many cases the hole hadn't been filled on the erstwhile winter greens and these were all in better condition than the actual greens. If I hadn't swapped my hybrid for the 6 wood I'd have putted with that.

I also lost an awful lot of shots with my short game; I was guilty of Lob Wedge overuse syndrome, where the ball just stops w-a-y too short. I'm home alone from the 3rd to the 9th of April so will be heading with wedges and irons to the local pitch and putt after work, as well as putting bootcamp a few mornings before work and some work at home later on.

I also didn't sort out my nutrition and fluids properly, didn't take enough to eat and lost a bottle of water. This is something I need to pay attention to as it definitely helps my concentration. I can't eat anything fatty now (a long story) which rules out a lot of the usual golf snacks/energy bars but last year I made a mix of cereals, toasted oats and dried fruit with good effect although it looks very very weird.

And given I only hit a handful of shots I liked, I ground out a 103, with 46 of those putts. That might not look great, but to play like that and nearly break 100 on an unfamiliar course is very much better than it would have been even a year ago (in fact 16 months ago I had a day like that and scored nearly 140!). With it being only the first full 18 of the year there was bound to be some rustiness too. I'm also going to an Instinctive Golf putting/short game day which I'm thinking will help scoring too.

I'm also starting to feel at ease with the uncomplicated pre-shot routine from Roseanna Leaton's excellent Golfer Within series. It is expensive but has been worth it for my game. I feel that I'm starting to learn how to get out of my own way.

Aiming is also an issue, and I may well need some instructor time to do that (and to start building up my laundry list of FOPs* and how to fix 'em).

But, most of all, I'm smiling because it's golf. My happiness isn't contingent on my performance in golf. I love the game, and enjoy it regardless of how I'm playing. I think it;s easy to fall into the trap of "I'll be happy when I shoot..." (insert next milestone along the way here). I feel it's very importance to realise that as golfers we are all on the Path; the score milestones are just that, markers to show how far we are along the Path. I'll never be at the stage where my golf is finished, where I feel that I don't need to improve any further, so it would be pretty silly to make my happiness contingent on getting to that point. That's a recipe for lifelong unhappiness, and I'm just not ready to be that miserable.



*FOPs: Frequently Occuring Problems