Unfortunately, there is no magic tip that will instantly lower your golf scores. Yes, you can find on a particular area of your game that requires your attention, however it rarely happens instantly. Over the years, I have found that to truly lower my golf scores I needed to practice and focus on specific aspects of my game. I am fortunate to be fairly athletic, so my golf swing came naturally once I understood the mechanics. I was not a better than average player right away, it took many years to of practice and playing to break 80 consistently and that is the crux of today’s article. We can only go so far without focusing on specific aspects of our game and then working on those challenges in order to overcome their hold on higher golf scores. The question most will have is how do I identify those areas that need the most work?
I decided to revisit an article I wrote a few years back. It focuses on six areas of my game that I needed to work on in order to Break 80. Of course, like all players, I do have games where I do not perform to expectations resulting in a higher score, but we will not talk about those. 😉 To consistently break 80, I need to do the following:
- Practice Putting
- Work on your wedges for all distances
- Practice around the green (within 25 yards) including out of bunkers
- Aim to the middle of the green side of the pin
- Start swinging all clubs under control. This will vary between clubs
- Work on course management
As you can see, my focus is from the pin outwards. To truly lower my score and sustain any level of excellence, my short game had to be at the forefront of how I play golf. Many players overlook the strokes lost around the green (most amateurs shooting 85 and higher have to realize that at least 60% of shots taken during any round happen within 25 yards of the green) Amateurs think that hitting the ball long to get the ball close to the green is where strokes are saved and in some cases this is true. However, chipping and putting account for a up to 60% of their score during a normal round. Therefore, to break 80 consistently, our short game must be the focus.
Since you now know that most shots happen close to the green, you can start to develop a practice strategy to lower your golf scores. I was introduce to a pin outward focus on how to improve my game and decided to give it a try. I worked on my putting first, then wedges and well your read the six areas I improved. Now, my biggest focus is on improving my GIR percentage and by all accounts I am getting there…..slowly.
Lowering our golf score is usually the top goal of golfers. If we were not concerned about how to measure our success on the links, we would not keep score at all. I know that some will not take my advice seriously and that is okay, but for those who want to break any milestone I recommend adopting my six focus area and develop practice strategies to improve your game. You might be surprised at how easy you shoot lower golf scores when you have a basic plan to follow. Good luck and let me know if this advice works for your golf game.
I am a grateful golfer! See you on the links!
#5 is not just about swinging every club with control, it’s about never even attempting to take the club past the point you can no longer control the outcome.
It’s a personal failure of mine too often. And also a reason I will generally make a purposeful choice to club up. It forces me to resist the urge.
#6 comes into play here too. If we’re not trying to kill the ball and taking controlled swings, then we are also tending to be playing to a more specific target. And that means we’re playing the course, not just hacking our way through the game.
Yesterday I took one swing that I allowed myself to really try and push my limits. I shouldn’t have done it, but it has always been a hole that sets up well for me and I have tons of memories of great shots on that hole. But all I needed was a par. I was on track for a 75. Which was my best of the 3 rounds we were playing at this course before moving on. But I was playing well all day. Only barely missed two fairways. And a birdie would give me two over. My best of the year so far on the full sized courses.
So I broke the rule that got me there and gave the swing way too much and blew it. Pulled it hard ob. Had to drop a mile away and still behind the area I didn’t clear off the tee. Ended with the only double on my card for the day and a tied 77 instead of that 2 over round I was dreaming of. I’d have stood a better chance had I just done the same thing I’d been doing all day. Shoulder height driver swings and fairway approach shots to the green.
I won the round with that, but I sure didn’t feel good about it. I knew I’d blown it on the last hole and that’s something that really doesn’t feel very good.
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Kevin,
Thanks for weighing in on my views of how to lower our golf score. I have been in your situation of trying to get too much out of one swing at the end of the round. Several times I finished 1 over instead of one under….so frustrating. But alas, that is golf.
Cheers Jim
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