Launch monitors are everywhere. They break down your swing in detail, looking at metrics like clubhead speed, spin rates, launch angle, carry distance, and more. Here’s the catch: no matter how accurate and detailed the data, they don’t always tell you what matters most—your ability to score. If your launch monitor numbers look better and your equipment is dialed in, but your scores still aren’t dropping, this could be why. Here are a few ways to take what your scorecard reveals and translate it into real improvement on the course.
What the scorecard sees (that the launch monitor doesn’t):
Course management mistakes
Mental errors under pressure
Short game execution
Decision-making off the tee
Recovery shots and creativity
Scoring ability from bad lies or uneven terrain
Course management mistakes
Your scorecard tells you when and where you make poor strategic decisions. If certain holes consistently rack up bogeys or worse, reassess your approach.
Are you attacking pins unnecessarily or hitting a driver when a safer club would do? Use your scorecard to identify problematic patterns. Learn to be a smarter player. Track the holes where you have the most trouble, then change how you play them to see how it impacts your scorecard.
Mental errors under pressure
Pressure can change your golf swing. Your scorecard will show when nerves get the better of you. Sometimes you’ll see this in a series of poor holes, or maybe you have a great round going, and then you watch the collapse.
Recognizing this pattern can help you prioritize routines, breathing techniques, or mental drills to manage pressure more effectively. Start adding pressure to your practice to simulate it on the course.
Short game execution
Launch monitors aren’t great at the 50-yard and in metric, yet this is one of the most important areas of the game for amateur golfers.
Are you routinely three-putting or failing to get up and down? Do you have difficulty even hitting the green from 50 yards out? Do you struggle with short-sided pitches?
If so, spend more time practicing realistic short-game scenarios rather than obsessing over another session of full-swing analytics. Set up an up-and-down challenge around the green with a par goal. Track how often you save par from 10+ different lies.
Decision-making off the tee
A poor decision off the tee doesn’t always manifest as a bad swing on your monitor, but your scorecard will show it.
If certain tee shots consistently cost you strokes, rethink your strategy. Evaluate safer lines, more forgiving club choices, or even when to confidently lay up to ensure lower numbers.
We know that getting your first shot as close to the hole as possible is the best option from a statistical standpoint. Sometimes, a controlled 3-wood on a hole with a lot of trouble is the best choice for you that day.
Recovery shots and creativity
If you want to go low, you have to be creative. Launch monitors can’t quantify your creativity.
Practice unconventional shots like low stingers, controlled fades, punch-outs from trouble, and you’ll find scoring is quite a bit easier. Set up obstacle-based shots on the range (e.g., hit low under tree limbs or curve around a target). Practice with a limited backswing or from tough lies.
Scoring ability from bad lies
Golf isn’t played from perfectly flat mats, yet launch monitors are often used with a perfect lie.
Identify holes where bad lies hurt you. Incorporate uneven lie practice into your routine. Find an area of the range where you can work on sloped golf shots uphill and downhill. If you can’t find areas to practice uneven lies, try to get out to the course for a practice round occasionally.
Put yourself in positions where you have struggled.
Whether it be fairway bunkers, thick rough, these situations don’t get enough of your attention.
Final thoughts
Your launch monitor is great for helping you dial in swing changes, check the quality of your strike, and even determine which golf clubs are best suited for your game. However, as great as this information is, if it’s not translating to lower scores, blend your data insights with these performance insights to get the complete picture.
The post What A Launch Monitor Can’t Tell You (But A Scorecard Can) appeared first on MyGolfSpy.