Every golfer wants to improve their golf game but many aren’t successful. If you can’t improve your golf game, it could be a mix of reasons from your mental approach to your practice routine to your equipment. Take a look at these seven mistakes that might be keeping you stuck.
You’re taking advice from the wrong sources
Some things in golf aren’t set in stone. You can have debates about whether a stronger or a weaker grip is better, for example. However, a lot of golf advice is generic and wrong. Taking lessons and watching videos from trusted sources can help but the best advice is to learn more about the game yourself.
Do some research, experiment on the range, read books and learn what truly controls the ball’s starting direction.
Your club fitting specs are no longer accurate
You were fitted for your clubs two years ago but, since then, your swing speed has dropped, you’ve gained mobility or you’ve started hitting a fade instead of a draw. Your clubs haven’t adapted to the change but your swing has. Players change their paths and low points over time so what used to work may now exacerbate problems.
Recheck your lie angle and shaft flex, especially if your miss pattern has changed (e.g., hitting shots thin, pulling everything or losing distance unexpectedly). Small adjustments can make your current clubs fit again.
You’re practicing without feedback
Most practice sessions don’t include any feedback loop. Your feel and reality are likely not the same if you aren’t including things like alignment sticks and launch monitors in your practice session. The good news is you don’t have to spend $10,000 or more on a high-end launch monitor.
Something as simple as spraying your clubface with foot powder to identify your impact position or setting up your phone to video your swing works as effective feedback. Collect some data and get a baseline, then use feedback every time you practice to see how you are improving.
You think a good shot means good mechanics
One perfect strike doesn’t necessarily mean your swing is fundamentally sound. I have this battle with my husband often. He’ll hit a good shot (with poor mechanics) and I’ll try to help him correct the mechanics. He insists that his way is just fine.
His way was fine for that shot. However, when it comes to consistency, his way isn’t going to cut it. (At some point, I decided that was his problem, not mine, and it works to my benefit in a match.)
After a great swing, reflect on what you did right. Was it set up, path or balance? Or just good timing? Knowing the difference is what leads to long-term improvement. You have to build the right fundamentals.
You’re waiting to “perfect” your swing before playing golf
You’ve convinced yourself that once your takeaway is perfect, once your slice is gone, once you don’t have to worry about your hip turn, you’ll start hitting it better. That day never comes. There’s always something to improve in golf.
Many players delay learning shot-shaping or scoring skills because they think they need a “perfect swing” first. Start hitting draws, fades, high and low shots while you are working through swing changes. You’ll never feel like your swing is perfect.
Pick a range session where you only focus on shaping shots. Forget mechanics for 20 minutes and see if you can make the ball curve. Learning to play is just as important as learning to swing.
You have one shot shape and that’s it
You’ve got one shot: a 240-yard draw, a low fade, whatever. It works, but golf demands adaptability. You need to challenge yourself to learn other shots and incorporate them into your game. Train a completely different ball flight by making adjustments to your clubface and setup.
Practice the opposite of your go-to shot. If you hit a draw, exaggerate a fade. You’ll gain control of your club path and face angle and reduce your reliance on one shape.
You’re not willing to exaggerate in practice
Real swing changes feel exaggerated. Sometimes they feel wrong. Have you ever seen the pre-shot routine that Justin Rose does to try and get that feel he needs at impact? It’s exaggerated but it’s what helps him get it done in the regular swing.
Sometimes using a launch monitor can help you see if you are exaggerating your practice enough. You may feel like you are swinging 15 degrees left but TrackMan showed it was only five.
Get uncomfortable in your practice so you can make big changes.
Final thoughts
The reason you’re not improving might not be a lack of effort; it might be one of these seven habits. The good news? All of them are fixable.
Improvement starts with honesty. Are you practicing with feedback? Are you chasing gimmicks instead of fundamentals? Are you treating swing tweaks as substitutes for skills? Sometimes it takes being just a little harder on yourself and stepping outside your comfort zone to see real improvement.
The post Can’t Improve Your Golf Game? These 7 Mistakes Might Be The Reason appeared first on MyGolfSpy.
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