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Posted
A quick question for the forum;

What would you recommend.

A. Play 18 holes 3 times a month, range time limited to preround. or

B. Range once a week and playing 18 holes once a month.

Being a high handicap player that wants to get better. I was wondering if playing on the course would be better vrs. the driving range.

Thanks.
Whats in my Cart bag:
FT-9 Draw iMix 9°
FT 3 Wood
FT 3 Hybrid
i5's 4-PW UW & SW52° Wedge60° & 64° X Forged Vintage Wedges Rossa Corza Ghost Putterhttp://www.thebreakfastball.blogspot.com

Posted
Although you can get lessons and improve your swing on the range, there's no way to improve your overall game and actually put that swing into action unless you're playing on the course as often as possible.

Ben


Posted
as a high handicapper, hit the range more than playing on course...but don't limit how many times you get on the course...once a month...?

In my Titleist 2014 9.5" Staff bag:

Cobra Bio+ 9* Matrix White Tie X  - Taylormade SLDR 15* ATTAS 80X - Titleist 910H 19* ATTAS 100X - Taylormade '13 TP MC 4-PW PX 6.5 - Vokey TVD M 50* DG TI X100 - Vokey SM4 55 / Vokey SM5 60* DG TI S400 - Piretti Potenza II 365g


Posted
I'd say do 50-50
go to the range 1 day, go on the course the other.

My Clubs
Driver - LV4 10* R flex
Wood - sam snead persimmon 2 wood (for windy days)
Hybrid burner tour launch 20* stiff flex.
Irons - Tour Mode 3i,4i stiffIrons - FP's 5-PW R-flexWedge - spin milled 54.14Wedge - spin milled 60.07Putter - Victoria Lowest round 2010: 79 (par 70)Latest rounds at...


Posted
Hey, seems you guys have different ideas to me! I just didn't find playing on the range to be any benefit whatsoever. Shame.

Ben


Posted
As much as I like to go to the range and just pound balls, for me that just doesn't compare to actually playing a round on the course. From a pure enjoyment perspective I would always choose playing on a course vs going to the range.

I also think with more playing you will get better. On the range you can get into a groove and really start striping balls, which doens't always carry over to the course, because on the course you're not hitting ball after ball from the same spot with the same club.

Ping K15 12* | Ping K15 4h | Callaway Razr X HL Irons 5 - AW | Cleveland 54* and 58* wedges | Odyssey White Hot Tour Rossie | Bushnell Neo GPS | Nike M9 Cart Bag


Posted
A quick question for the forum;

you must be busy to not be able to do both I guess. Or married with a less than supportive spouse! Like me : {

|Callaway X460 draw-biased Driver|Taylormade Burner 3W|Adams Golf Idea A7 19° Hybrid|Adams Golf Idea Pro Gold 23° hybrid|King Cobra Baffler 29° hybrid|Taylormade Burner 6i|Adams Idea Tech A4OS 7i|Mizuno MP32 8i|Pro Select Blaze II 9i|Callaway Golf Forged Chrome 48° PW|Oncourse Target Series...


Posted
Money is the cause of the once a month course play, if it was up to me I'd play three times a week!
Whats in my Cart bag:
FT-9 Draw iMix 9°
FT 3 Wood
FT 3 Hybrid
i5's 4-PW UW & SW52° Wedge60° & 64° X Forged Vintage Wedges Rossa Corza Ghost Putterhttp://www.thebreakfastball.blogspot.com

Posted
you must be busy to not be able to do both I guess. Or married with a less than supportive spouse! Like me : {

I guess the 50hr a week job and the two kids has some effect on it too. HA

Whats in my Cart bag:
FT-9 Draw iMix 9°
FT 3 Wood
FT 3 Hybrid
i5's 4-PW UW & SW52° Wedge60° & 64° X Forged Vintage Wedges Rossa Corza Ghost Putterhttp://www.thebreakfastball.blogspot.com

  • Moderator
Posted
If you want to improve your score, the course. If you want to work on your swing, the range and real grass or at least the simulated grass.

Steve

Kill slow play. Allow walking. Reduce ineffective golf instruction. Use environmentally friendly course maintenance.

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Posted
I suppose it does! My full time and part-time job (so about 60-70 hrs per week) and 1 kid (with another due in September, thankfully AFTER the summer!), and of course the disapproving spouse, limit my time as well.

|Callaway X460 draw-biased Driver|Taylormade Burner 3W|Adams Golf Idea A7 19° Hybrid|Adams Golf Idea Pro Gold 23° hybrid|King Cobra Baffler 29° hybrid|Taylormade Burner 6i|Adams Idea Tech A4OS 7i|Mizuno MP32 8i|Pro Select Blaze II 9i|Callaway Golf Forged Chrome 48° PW|Oncourse Target Series...


Posted
I would say more range time only if you're actually hitting off grass. Those rubber mats give a false sense of good contact. Don't be like a friend of mine who practices his golf, on the golf course. No range at all "I'm gonna hit another, and another" is heard quite often when playing with him. The golf course is to play golf. The range is the place to work on things in preparation to play golf.

I'm a high handicap and now instead of continually hitting balls at the range, I'll sneak over to the executive course and play for the cost of Jumbo bucket.

There are plenty of options. But as long as you get the club in your hands, you can't go wrong. Good luck.
Tools of the trade: Red=Pics
2.0 Push Cart
V14 Club Count Cart Bag
Driver - Nike SQ Dymo 2 HL w/Cleveland Headcover
Fairway Wood - Hibore XLS 5 WoodHybrids - Hibore 3,4,5Irons - CG Gold 6-PWWedges - CG14 52 & 60 CG15 - 56 Degree Custom Squareback 1

Posted
I have always liked playing the most and improved the most playing. Usually at the range, unless I have a specific thing I am working on (I always work on alignment) I feel like I waste my time there. It isn't like playing golf to me. If I hit any more than a small bucket I feel tired and bored by the end. I am much better on the course than at the range becuase when I am playing there is a sort of way about the game. I am wild on the range, when I am playing I rarely am. I vote play.

Brian


Posted
I'll have a really good session on the range (even before a round) and I just cannot get it to transfer to the course. I'm happy with my short game, of course it needs some work, but my real issue is off the tee. Driver is horrible, Left one hole, Right the next, what's a Fairway??? Last round I played I put the Driver away after 13 and used my 3W from 14 on. Hit 4 of 4 fairways. So I plan on woking with the 3W a lot more.
Whats in my Cart bag:
FT-9 Draw iMix 9°
FT 3 Wood
FT 3 Hybrid
i5's 4-PW UW & SW52° Wedge60° & 64° X Forged Vintage Wedges Rossa Corza Ghost Putterhttp://www.thebreakfastball.blogspot.com

Posted
I'll have a really good session on the range (even before a round) and I just cannot get it to transfer to the course. I'm happy with my short game, of course it needs some work, but my real issue is off the tee. Driver is horrible, Left one hole, Right the next, what's a Fairway??? Last round I played I put the Driver away after 13 and used my 3W from 14 on. Hit 4 of 4 fairways. So I plan on woking with the 3W a lot more.

Perhaps you should use the 3 wood whilst you feel un-confident with the driver, meanwhile use the driver at a proper grass range so you have the feel of the ground too. Then when you build a bit of confidence, take it out on the course.

Ben


Posted
When going to the range, always lay down something for alignment, maybe just a club or some elaborate set up. Run through your preshot rutine on every shot. You can just go out there and wack balls, have no clue if your aiming right, then you get to the course and wonder why its going right or left..

Matt Dougherty, P.E.
 fasdfa dfdsaf 

What's in My Bag
Driver; :pxg: 0311 Gen 5,  3-Wood: 
:titleist: 917h3 ,  Hybrid:  :titleist: 915 2-Hybrid,  Irons: Sub 70 TAIII Fordged
Wedges: :edel: (52, 56, 60),  Putter: :edel:,  Ball: :snell: MTB,  Shoe: :true_linkswear:,  Rangfinder: :leupold:
Bag: :ping:

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Posted
This what works for me (Work full time job and i teach golf part time at night 2 to 4 hrs every other night-12 to 14 hrs for work time some days or less and still have time with the kids, married, 3 kids), i go early in the morning and do 9 or 18 hole or on the range do it randomly before work, you don't want to have the same routine all the time every day but every day is diferent couse of the kids or something., lunch at work i spend 1/2 to 1 hrs on the range.
The thing is, there is always ways to work around it, to practice and play if you have family or not.

Posted
What would you recommend.

When you play, make a note of shots you'll need to work on (or shots you'd like to add to your arsenal) next time you're at the range. They may not transfer right away, but stick with it.

When I started golfing, I preferred playing over range time. Then again I worked on the course and on days could practice on empty holes - without paying!!

Mizuno MP600 driver, Cleveland '09 Launcher 3-wood, Callaway FTiz 18 degree hybrid, Cleveland TA1 3-9, Scratch SS8620 47, 53, 58, Cleveland Classic 2 mid-mallet, Bridgestone B330S, Sun Mountain four5.


Note: This thread is 5734 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!

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    • Please see this topic for updated information:
    • Please see this topic for updated information:
    • When you've been teaching golf as long as I have, you're going to find that you can teach some things better than you previously had, and you're probably going to find some things that you taught incorrectly. I don't see that as a bad thing — what would be worse is refusing to adapt and grow given new information. I've always said that my goal with my instruction isn't to be right, but it's to get things right. To that end, I'm about five years late in issuing a public proclamation on something… When I first got my GEARS system, I immediately looked at the golf swings of the dozens and dozens of Tour players for which I suddenly had full 3D data. I created a huge spreadsheet showing how their bodies moved, how the club moved, at various points in the swing. I mapped knee and elbow angles, hand speeds, shoulder turns and pelvis turns… etc. I re-considered what I thought I knew about the golf swing as performed by the best players. One of those things dated back to the earliest days: that you extend (I never taught "straighten" and would avoid using that word unless in the context of saying "don't fully straighten") the trail knee/leg in the backswing. I was mislead by 2D photos from less-than-ideal camera angles — the trail leg rotates a bit during the backswing, and so when observing trail knee flex should also use a camera that moves to stay perpendicular to the plane of the ankle/knee/hip joint. We have at least two topics here on this (here and here; both of which I'll be updating after publishing this) where @mvmac and I advise golfers to extend the trail knee. Learning that this was not right is one of the reasons I'm glad to have a 3D system, as most golfers generally preserve the trail knee flex throughout the backswing. Data Here's a video showing an iron and a driver of someone who has won the career slam: Here's what the graph of his right knee flex looks like. 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    • Day 135 12-25 Wide backswing to wide downswing drill. Recorder and used mirror. 
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