Jump to content
IGNORED

My mental game is killing me!!! Help me please


Note: This thread is 5975 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Recommended Posts

ok i shoot in the low to mid 80's now but i am so shaky. I will go and shoot a 83 then a 100. My biggest problem is my confidence on the range i am so relaxed and i know that i can strike the ball well . But on the course i am all up tight and i base my confidence on the last shot. My final problem is leaving birde putts short! i need advice on how to go for them if i start making those i will be in the high 70's more often

please help!!

Thanks for your time

. Chris

Chris Nunes,17 yrs old

In My Bag:
Woods:Nike Sasquatch Tour Model (Driver), Nike Sumo 3 wood
Irons: Callaway X-Forged (Project X 6.0)Wedge: Callaway C Grind 58 degree,Titleist Volkey 54 degree (oil can)Putter Cleveland Classic 2 or Scotty Cameron Santa Fe teryllium "Everyday you miss practicing it...

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Here's a good way to stay relaxed: Who cares. If your just playing for fun, don't worry about your score so damn much. I wish us ameteurs would start to realize we just play for the fun of the game, don't worry what you are shooting. If you are less focused on your score, you'll start shooting real good scores. Focus on your shots, but stop looking ahead, "Oh, I have to shoot 75 today, etc. etc." because then only bad things will happen. Take it one shot at a time, and don't worry so much about your score. If you've shot 100 before, you know their are bad days, can't get much worse...so don't worry about it.

I know it's easier said than done, but...

Driver Ping G10 10.5*
Hybrids Ping G5 (3) 19* Bridgestone J36 (4) 22*
Irons Mizuno MP-57 5-PW
Wedges Srixon WG-504 52.08 Bridgestone WC Copper 56.13
Putter 33" Scotty Cameron Studio Select #2

Link to comment
Share on other sites


what i did today at the range is tell myself one thing before i shot, for me it was keep your head down...then i swung. You know how to swing, so trust yourself first...thats all it is, TRUST!!

In my Xtreme II carry bag:

Mizuno Driver
MacGregor 3Wood
Taylormade Rescue Hybrid 3i CG Gold Graphite Irons (4-PW) 52* CG14 wedge Vokey 56* Sand Wedge Vokey 60* Lob Wedge 33" Newport

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Here's a good way to stay relaxed: Who cares. If your just playing for fun, don't worry about your score so damn much. I wish us ameteurs would start to realize we just play for the fun of the game, don't worry what you are shooting. If you are less focused on your score, you'll start shooting real good scores. Focus on your shots, but stop looking ahead, "Oh, I have to shoot 75 today, etc. etc." because then only bad things will happen. Take it one shot at a time, and don't worry so much about your score. If you've shot 100 before, you know their are bad days, can't get much worse...so don't worry about it.

I second this. Just chill out man, you aren't trying to make the PGA tour.

In My Bag

Driver: Sasquatch 460 9.5°
3 Wood: Laser 3 Wood 15°
5 Wood: r7 19° (Stiff)Irons: S58 Irons 4-PW Orange DotWedge: Harmonized 60°Wedge: Z TP 54°Putter: Tiffany 34"Balls: Pro V1 Shoes: Adidas Tour 360 IIThe Meadows Golf Coursewww.themeadowsgc.comAge: 16
Link to comment
Share on other sites


In regards to leaving birdie putts short...

i do a drill where i put the ball in my right hand(right handed) and get in my stance without a club, then i throw the ball with my right hand only and that helps me relaize how slow or hard i have to swing, PLUS

prcatice, practice, practice....TRUST again tho, trust yourself to make the birdie putt!!

In my Xtreme II carry bag:

Mizuno Driver
MacGregor 3Wood
Taylormade Rescue Hybrid 3i CG Gold Graphite Irons (4-PW) 52* CG14 wedge Vokey 56* Sand Wedge Vokey 60* Lob Wedge 33" Newport

Link to comment
Share on other sites


. I will go and shoot a 83 then a 100. My final problem is leaving birde putts short!

I don't think I'd be too concerned about leaving birdie putts short if you shoot 100 pretty often.

Pars aren't going to hurt you. I seriously doubt that your scoring woes have much to do missed birdie opportunities. Your problem is keeping the 7 and 8s off your card. If you're scoring 100, there aren't too many birdie putts.
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Just go out on the course and put your ipod on and try to distance yourself from what your trying to achieve. Yesterday i played for the first time in 3 months and was not expecting to play well, yet scored in the high 70's. This was because i was not expecting to play well so just swung the club naturally, not thinking bout it. My score could have been 5-6 shots better if i could putt but i except that because that is what you loose if you have not played in a long time, touch and feel!
Golf is a game whose aim is to hit a very small ball into an even smaller hole, with weapons singularly ill-designed for the purpose.
Winston Churchill

Taylor Made r7 425
Taylor Made V steel 3woodCleveland Halo 2hybridCallaway Big Bertha 4-9Taylor Made 48 & 56Taylor Made Tp 52Odyssey XG 2ball...
Link to comment
Share on other sites


I don't think I'd be too concerned about leaving birdie putts short if you shoot 100 pretty often.

its not that bad ive onlty done it twice im almost allways in the 80's

Chris Nunes,17 yrs old

In My Bag:
Woods:Nike Sasquatch Tour Model (Driver), Nike Sumo 3 wood
Irons: Callaway X-Forged (Project X 6.0)Wedge: Callaway C Grind 58 degree,Titleist Volkey 54 degree (oil can)Putter Cleveland Classic 2 or Scotty Cameron Santa Fe teryllium "Everyday you miss practicing it...

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Sunday I looked at every shot as "I've made this shot before" and "I can make this shot" and put my best swing on it. Every shot as in individual shot. I was 1-under at the turn, and personal best. Carded a couple Doubles on the back from bad breaks, but didn't let them get to me, and ended up par-ing the last 3 holes tom come in @ 5 over 40. 4 over 75 for the day my best round ever. Just look at every shot as an indivual shot.
I've spent most of my life golfing - the rest I've just wasted.

In my bag todayâ¦.
Driver: 2009 S9-1 10.5
19d Hybrid4-SW:2008 FP 58/10 Mizuno MP T-10Putter: White Hot XG Sabertooth
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Sunday I looked at every shot as "I've made this shot before" and "I can make this shot" and put my best swing on it. Every shot as in individual shot. I was 1-under at the turn, and personal best. Carded a couple Doubles on the back from bad breaks, but didn't let them get to me, and ended up par-ing the last 3 holes tom come in @ 5 over 40. 4 over 75 for the day my best round ever. Just look at every shot as an indivual shot.

thats what i am trying to do easier said then done hopefully it will come

thanks everyone .Chris

Chris Nunes,17 yrs old

In My Bag:
Woods:Nike Sasquatch Tour Model (Driver), Nike Sumo 3 wood
Irons: Callaway X-Forged (Project X 6.0)Wedge: Callaway C Grind 58 degree,Titleist Volkey 54 degree (oil can)Putter Cleveland Classic 2 or Scotty Cameron Santa Fe teryllium "Everyday you miss practicing it...

Link to comment
Share on other sites


I was struggling with this too, and i played nine holes by just going up to the ball and hitting it, i took no practice swings(except on short game) i shot a 41, this even works in some tournaments ive played if im playing bad i just go up and hit it

I no it sounds simple but it works

In My Edge Bag:
Driver: R7 Draw
3-Wood: Burner
3h,4h: Idea A2
Irons: 5-PW Idea A2Wedges: X-Tour 52, 56, 60Putter: White Hot XGBall: OPB (Other People's Balls)

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Do yourself a favor and go and buy the book "Golf is Not a Game of Perfect" by Dr. Bob Rotella, its all about the mental part of the game and is an amazing book.
Driver-Taylor Made R7 460cc 10.5* Fujikara REAX Stiff
Fairway Wood-Taylor Made R7 Draw 15* Fujikara REAX Stiff
Hybrid Taylor Made 19* Rescue Mid Steel Stiff
4-PW-Golfsmith G40 TT Lite XL Stiff
GW-Ben Hogan Riviera 8* Bounce 50*SW-Ben Hogan Riviera Medium Bounce 56*LW-Cleveland 60* 588 ChromePutter-Taylo...
Link to comment
Share on other sites


A birdie putt counts the same on the card as a putt for double-bogey. Just think about the putt you need to make, not what your score will be. The score will take care of itself. Get yourself a good pre-shot routine and follow it on every putt, whether it's for eagle or to save quadruple-bogey on a tough par-5.

Brad Eisenhauer

In my bag:
Driver: Callaway Hyper X 10° | Fairway Wood: GigaGolf PowerMax GX920 3W (15°) | Hybrid: GigaGolf PowerMax GX920 3 (20°)
Irons: Mizuno MX-25 4-PW | Wedges: GigaGolf Tradition SGS Black 52°, 56°, 60° | Putter: GigaGolf CenterCut Classic SP3

Ball: Titleist ProV1x or Bridgestone B330S

Link to comment
Share on other sites


yea im actually reading Rotellas book now

Chris Nunes,17 yrs old

In My Bag:
Woods:Nike Sasquatch Tour Model (Driver), Nike Sumo 3 wood
Irons: Callaway X-Forged (Project X 6.0)Wedge: Callaway C Grind 58 degree,Titleist Volkey 54 degree (oil can)Putter Cleveland Classic 2 or Scotty Cameron Santa Fe teryllium "Everyday you miss practicing it...

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Concentrate on strategy and not stroke count. Focus on exactly what you are doing, not your next shot, etc. Save that for the walk between shots.
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Go to the library
There's almost certainly mental golf books there
Recently I've read Zen Putting (also related Zen Golf)
Those were nice, kinda metaphysical, Buddha-like

Kids in all sports are known for having more ups and downs than adults
Sounds like you are actually better than average in that regard

In addition to others' advice I'll say:
At the least, PRETEND to be cool, relaxed, focused, consistent
and you will, in time, actually become more cool, relaxed, focused, consistent

And lastly:
Even if you do nothing about your mental game,
if you start young and play enough golf,
you'll simply TIRE of all the mental baggage in your golf game
once you do something wrong like
million dollar drive, 10 cent birdie putt
enough times, you'll simply get bored with that
and you'll start doing it less and less

reminds me of a story/joke

supplicant comes to successful CEO type
and says, "how did you become so successful?"
CEO says "good decisions"
supplicant says: "how do you learn to make good decisions?"
CEO says "experience"
supplicant' says: "how do you get experience?"
CEO says "bad decisions"

You've got at least 50 years of bad decisions ahead of you
Lighten up and enjoy the journey
You have the main qualification for being a good golfer:
a willingness to change
Link to comment
Share on other sites


supplicant comes to successful CEO type

That is great. Good thing to think of when your in trouble right there.

Sooo true.
In My Bag

Driver: Sasquatch 460 9.5°
3 Wood: Laser 3 Wood 15°
5 Wood: r7 19° (Stiff)Irons: S58 Irons 4-PW Orange DotWedge: Harmonized 60°Wedge: Z TP 54°Putter: Tiffany 34"Balls: Pro V1 Shoes: Adidas Tour 360 IIThe Meadows Golf Coursewww.themeadowsgc.comAge: 16
Link to comment
Share on other sites


I read most of Rotella's book. It really does give you a good insight on how to think about your shots to keep your swing consistent. My problem is that the moment I made a good shot or put (or even birdie a hole), I start telling myself not to screw up a good thing and where do you think that gets me? Yea, it gets me 10 over on the front nine....
Driver: Sasquatch 9.5 Stiff
Rescue: Mid 3
Irons: 3100i/h (4-S)
Putter: Dual Force
Ball: One Black
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Note: This thread is 5975 days old. We appreciate that you found this thread instead of starting a new one, but if you plan to post here please make sure it's still relevant. If not, please start a new topic. Thank you!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Want to join this community?

    We'd love to have you!

    Sign Up
  • TST Partners

    TourStriker PlaneMate
    Golfer's Journal
    ShotScope
    The Stack System
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-15%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope. 15% off TourStriker (no code).
  • Posts

    • Ok, that makes sense. I was trying to wrap my head around that concept when I was writing my post.   
    • 78 today at Minnesott (36 front / 42 back) - a new first with an even par on the front.  A big day of up and downs for par.  Only 26 putts against 4 GIR and 5 nGIR.  Was a CPO (cart path only) day due to recent rains.  Overall game was on - until 18 where I was looking at having a first “no-sixes” and made a triple 7 (tee shot in the lake, 2nd tee in fairway, shot 4 approach to right of green pin high, shot 5 bogie on the green, long two putts for triple 7.  Still a solid round and new personal best. 
    • I believe that 76 bpms is the tour average (or somewhere around that). I think that's from taking it back to impact. I'm not 100% sure of exactly how it works since a typical pendulum is already moving when it starts going back. The putter on the throughswing ideally would work pretty much exactly like a pendulum though. To get the exact same time period from starting the putter back to impact, you'll have to accelerate it a lot faster on a longer putt right at the beginning until it gets to the speed it needs to be to make the putter move the right distance. Probably all way too much to think about while actually hitting a putt, but bottom line is I agree entirely that a metronome is a good thing to use if you're working on your putting tempo. As to the split between backstroke and downstroke, the tour tempo lot said 2:1 is the ideal. 3:1 for full swing. 2:1 for short game and putting. Whenever I go on a SAM I am about 1.7:1 I think and I can't for the life of me get my backstroke to be slow enough to get it to 2:1. Ho hum. Last comment - if you do have a perfect pendulum putting stroke and you have the ball slightly forward of the center of your stance, then the putter should be just starting to rise again at impact and with the way that pendulum motion works, it should be very slightly decelerating at impact, which I believe someone may have suggested once 😛 
    • Was going to chime in on Erik’s videos - they were and are solid teaching on better putting.  
    • I'm a big fan of the metronome. I forget what my actual numbers were, but something like 0.59 seconds: my backswings, regardless of the length of the putt, is 0.59 seconds (or 0.72 or whatever the actual number was). The period of a pendulum is determined by the length of the pendulum. So, to hit a putt harder, you take it back farther… in the same amount of time. So you have to swing it faster, and thus, it comes through faster. The putter head has to travel faster to travel farther in the same amount of time. Everyone tends to have a "beat" that they like. For some it's slower, and they have to make bigger backswings to make a putt go the same distance as someone like Brandt Snedeker. It also has a metronome IIRC. 😄 
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to TST! Signing up is free, and you'll see fewer ads and can talk with fellow golf enthusiasts! By using TST, you agree to our Terms of Use, our Privacy Policy, and our Guidelines.

The popup will be closed in 10 seconds...