Many practice facilities use mats vice grass for their hitting area. This is not uncommon where I live because the mats are much easier to maintain. There are some courses that have both mats and grass where the usage will depend on weather and ground conditions. Regardless, I personally do not like hitting off mats at the range because I find that I do not glean the same feedback from the ball flight. This might seem strange, but I have used enough mats to understand that there is a major difference in my practice sessions when I do not hit on grass.
<!–more–)Early in the golf season, mats are use exclusively in norther climes. Using the grass at the range causes unrepairable damage early in the season. Hence, mats are used to protect the practice area. Unfortunately, this slows my process of knowing off the winter’s rust. Below is a good example:

I was hitting behind the ball and yet still produced a decent ball flight. I realize my set up position is wrong and I corrected that challenge immediately. However, if I was not paying attention to where my ball was first making contact with the mat I would have thought all was right with my golf swing.
I do believe that golf mats have a place at the practice range. Given where I live, they provide a valuable service to avid golfers like myself. It is a matter of understanding how to garner the most benefit from using a range mat. Because I have a DIY indoor driving range for the winter months, I am learning to lightly tough my driving mat with all my clubs. It actually helps come spring, but I will save that conversation for later.
Ultimately, this is the question:

I am a grateful golfer! See you on the links!
Solution – Just lay a tee on the mat about two inches before the ball to give you the feedback you need.
Might want to be cautious trying that indoors though. The ball can do weird things if you hit the tee first.
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Thanks Kevin.
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Your welcome. I didn’t really like doing it at first. It made me start thinking I had to get the swing steeper. And being lazy I wasn’t thrilled with having to set it up for every swing. But after I got past that I found it worked well enough. But I just had a thought that will certainly kill the idea for most. I hover. If you start from a grounded position it’s not going to work for you.
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Thanks Kevin.
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Good article Jim. I agree the results can be misleading – mats are way more forgiving. But as you note they have a place. For me it’s the mechanics of the swing the take away, set , turn and yes you will get a good result. So I use it for that purpose. Believe me if you hit it poorly – even a mat can’t help you. lol.
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Thanks Linley. You are correct about a poor hit due to mechanics producing a poor shot. It is a matter of going through the proper process regardless of the ground conditions. This is something I hope to replicate today at the Hickory Stick Championship of Ontario.
Cheers Jim
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