Quote:
Originally Posted by cody west
i always chose my miss like say there is water on one side of the green and a bunker on the other. say the pin is near the water i will still aim for the pin but you can bet anything my miss will not be into the water. i will aim like 5 ft to the side away from the water.
also play your strengths. i know for me i love being in bunkers its the strongest part of my game other than my aproach shots so if there is a bunker near the pin i have no problem going right after the pin because if im in the bunker im getting up and down. but if the pin is near deep rough or a large run off area i might take an extra club and swing much more controlled to make sure i stay away from rough or run off areas
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As long as you are weighing the pros and cons of your shot, you shouldn't worry about "course management". What course management means is that you are determinting what shot is best and executing the best shot given the situation you are faced with. If you hit your drive into the woods, course management" dictates that you think before you swing. Sometimes going after the pin is best; sometimes just hitting the green is an accomplishmenet all in it's own. What course management truely is involves determining what shot is best given he specifics of what you are faced with. If you have to hit a perfect 15 yard draw through a small opening in the tops of the trees to even have a small chance at hitting the green in regulation, "course managemement" dictates that your should just punch your ball out into the fairway and be happy with saving bogey.
Most people cannot save bogey when they land in a green-side bunker. Most people cannot save par when they have to pitch a shot onto the green from a lie in the deep rough. If your short game is good enough that these type of situations do not affect your, then by all means go after tough pin positions. If tight pin positions scare you, if touchy pitch shots scare the crap out of you, or if anything in the sand is a work of magic to get you out in one stroke, for all means and purposes aim for the part of the green away from trouble. You might not get a birdie on the hole, but you'll prevent anything higher than a bogey.
One thing most inexperienced golfers forget is what it truey takes to shoot a certain score. if you are a 5-6 handicap, most of the time that means that on average you will bogey half the holes you play and par the other half. That means that half the holes you play you aren't shooting par. Given that thought, what is the obsessiong with trying to force a par on every hole? If there are 3-4 difficult holes on a course that getting a bogey is an accomplishment, why would you be sad with something less than a bogey? Learn to be happy with a bogey on those holes, and learn to be aggressive on the other holes.