Jump to content
Note: This thread is 4975 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...  So I have been playing golf forever and there was a period of time when I was consistent and shooting low 80's.  With my current job I am not really able to play all that often and when I do I usually shoot in the low to mid 90's.  When I do play, I am very inconsistent, 300 yard drive, topped to the ladies tee box type inconsistent.  Anyone out there have any tips/drills for help to regain my consistency from tee to green?n  Thanks in advance for any replies.

When its breezy swing easy!!!!!
 
taylormade.gif Superfast 10.5
cobra.gif  3W .350 Oversize Tip
cobra.gif S9 Irons 4-GWcallaway.gif 56 Degree SW Golfmate 60 Degree callaway.gif 64 Degree odyssey.gif 3300 DF putter


Ha, thanks. Let me add to this. With my limited amount of time to play, my time to practice is cut down as well. So I guess my question really is, does anyone have suggestions/tips/drills to maximize the benefit I get from my practice time?

When its breezy swing easy!!!!!
 
taylormade.gif Superfast 10.5
cobra.gif  3W .350 Oversize Tip
cobra.gif S9 Irons 4-GWcallaway.gif 56 Degree SW Golfmate 60 Degree callaway.gif 64 Degree odyssey.gif 3300 DF putter


i take about 10 slow swings at night in my bathroom from different positions looking in my mirror to keep my movements ingrained in muscle memory. this really helps with balance and posture. i can also take swings in my living room, but unless you have room this is not advised.




Originally Posted by senorchipotle

i take about 10 slow swings at night in my bathroom from different positions looking in my mirror to keep my movements ingrained in muscle memory. this really helps with balance and posture. i can also take swings in my living room, but unless you have room this is not advised.



lol....I love hitting balls in my living room!

5 Simple Keys® Associate

"Golf is not a game of great shots. It's a game of the most accurate misses.

The people who win make the smallest mistakes." - Gene Littler

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades



Originally Posted by In the woods

Ha, thanks. Let me add to this. With my limited amount of time to play, my time to practice is cut down as well. So I guess my question really is, does anyone have suggestions/tips/drills to maximize the benefit I get from my practice time?



Well first lets start with this;

If you are going from hitting it 300ish, to topping it 60 yards. There is some kind of swing flaw going on. IMO at least. You need to figure out what you are doing that is incorrect. It is easy to be consistent when you make a correct golf swing. When you do things that compensate for a flaw somewhere, you run into consistency problems, more so if you do not get a lot of time to practice.

Perhaps if you could get a video of the swing when you do go out and practice that might help us figure out what is going on. I just find it hard to believe that you could go from hitting it 300, to barely nowhere unless there was some kind of flaw going on.

As for making the most out of your practice time; If you are very limited to when you can practice, you need to make sure you practice the correct things. So for example, if you are standing up when you hit your bad shots, that is what you need to work on when you do have time to practice. Or whatever else you may doing in the swing. It will take longer to fix it this way, but you will no doubt improve.

P.S. Please don't take this post the wrong way. By saying there is a flaw somewhere in the swing, I am not trying to be mean, or be little your swing. I am only trying to get to the bottom of it to help!


I completely agree! There is a flaw to my swing and I think it starts with being left handed. In all seriousness, I actually do this with my driver. I was on the driving range yesterday and I believe the flaw is in my initial setup over the ball. For some reason in the last couple of years I have had a hard time getting comfortable over the ball. On the first hole I'll bomb it and on the second I'll top it and hit a screamer that runs for days or buries in the grass just past the ladies tee. It's annoying. I don't top any other club often or at all hardly unless it's a bunker shot. I'll admit I'm scared of the sand shot!! I'll work on a video.

When its breezy swing easy!!!!!
 
taylormade.gif Superfast 10.5
cobra.gif  3W .350 Oversize Tip
cobra.gif S9 Irons 4-GWcallaway.gif 56 Degree SW Golfmate 60 Degree callaway.gif 64 Degree odyssey.gif 3300 DF putter




Originally Posted by In the woods

I completely agree! There is a flaw to my swing and I think it starts with being left handed. In all seriousness, I actually do this with my driver. I was on the driving range yesterday and I believe the flaw is in my initial setup over the ball. For some reason in the last couple of years I have had a hard time getting comfortable over the ball. On the first hole I'll bomb it and on the second I'll top it and hit a screamer that runs for days or buries in the grass just past the ladies tee. It's annoying. I don't top any other club often or at all hardly unless it's a bunker shot. I'll admit I'm scared of the sand shot!! I'll work on a video.



Haha, well yes it would help to play from the correct side of the golf ball! But a video will be of a big help. Its tough to even guess otherwise.




Originally Posted by In the woods

I completely agree! There is a flaw to my swing and I think it starts with being left handed. In all seriousness, I actually do this with my driver. I was on the driving range yesterday and I believe the flaw is in my initial setup over the ball. For some reason in the last couple of years I have had a hard time getting comfortable over the ball. On the first hole I'll bomb it and on the second I'll top it and hit a screamer that runs for days or buries in the grass just past the ladies tee. It's annoying. I don't top any other club often or at all hardly unless it's a bunker shot. I'll admit I'm scared of the sand shot!! I'll work on a video.


I hear your pain....for me the biggest key to feeling good over the ball is an athletic stance (back angle is flat and knees bent so that your weight is over the front centre of your feet). You may have a swing flaw, but you also may be lifting your head up through impact, which would cause you to top the ball no matter how good your swing is. Try fake spitting (after impact) on the ground where your golf ball was. This will definitely keep your head down!


Thanks for the tips and for the guy that mentioned hitting balls in the bathroom(sarcasm I know) funny you say that because I actually chip from my kitchen to living room. Have a nice narrow path between the two. A fluffy lie on a rug in the kitchen and a bowl on it's side in the living room for aiming purposes. As far as everything else, you all bring good points starting with playing from the other side. How far back do you guys go on driver backswing as this could also play a role in my head coming up due to the fact I can see my club head from time to time on the backswing, even when I focus on shortening it. It's crazy.

When its breezy swing easy!!!!!
 
taylormade.gif Superfast 10.5
cobra.gif  3W .350 Oversize Tip
cobra.gif S9 Irons 4-GWcallaway.gif 56 Degree SW Golfmate 60 Degree callaway.gif 64 Degree odyssey.gif 3300 DF putter


I completely agree! There is a flaw to my swing and I think it starts with being left handed. In all seriousness, I actually do this with my driver. I was on the driving range yesterday and I believe the flaw is in my initial setup over the ball. For some reason in the last couple of years I have had a hard time getting comfortable over the ball. On the first hole I'll bomb it and on the second I'll top it and hit a screamer that runs for days or buries in the grass just past the ladies tee. It's annoying. I don't top any other club often or at all hardly unless it's a bunker shot. I'll admit I'm scared of the sand shot!! I'll work on a video.

When its breezy swing easy!!!!!
 
taylormade.gif Superfast 10.5
cobra.gif  3W .350 Oversize Tip
cobra.gif S9 Irons 4-GWcallaway.gif 56 Degree SW Golfmate 60 Degree callaway.gif 64 Degree odyssey.gif 3300 DF putter


The first 3 years I played golf consistenly I went to the driving range 3 times a week and would practice every part of the game. I also got lessons. The 4th year I only went to the range once a week and I started chipping balls in my back yard into a small bucket and got an indoor putting mat and practiced my putting everyday. I have been doing this ever since. When I started playing I was an 18 handicap after the 3rd year I got down to a 9. It was a little harder to get it down after that because it gets into more of the short game when you get into the single digit handicaps. So practice is the best way to get better, but keep in mind you have to practice the right things. It is easier when you hit a bad shot and know why it happened so you can correct it.

5 Simple Keys® Associate

"Golf is not a game of great shots. It's a game of the most accurate misses.

The people who win make the smallest mistakes." - Gene Littler

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

actually, the swings i do in my bathroom are not with a club. it's really to capture my swing sequence in a manner that i can see. it's done really slowly.


If your going to practice, make every shot have a purpose. It was said that Jack Nicholaus never wasted a shot, in round or on the practice range.

Go through your pre-shot routine on each shot you hit at the range. Imagine the shot, and execute the shot. This will  help you create feeling, because you imagine what you wanted, and your body will get the response of it being right or wrong. If your just hitting away, you wont gain any feeling for a swing.

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:

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Slo-mo swings as suggested above. It's the easiest way to make sure you're doing the same thing over and over again.

That builds consistency, but take lessons to learn how to make your swing consistently right.


I find what helps me to hit the ball consistently is to try and have one thing that you focus most of your attention on during the swing. Let's talk irons first.

The only thing going through my brain when standing over an iron shot is keeping my head still. That's it. Everything else to do with my swing has already been ironed out on the range and practiced many times before. So I guess you can't do this unless your swing is already pretty decent and working for you. In my opinion, swaying off the ball is one of the major reasons for inconsistency.

Talking drivers, I know what you mean about not being able to get comfortable over the ball. I used to have a major problem with ball position with my driver. I used to have to put it outside my front foot to even feel like I could make contact, and I would see some guys hitting it from middle stance.

But now I put it inside the front foot and I keep my head a bit behind centre, if that makes sense. I just tilt my head a bit behind centre of gravity and keep the head still.

You asked about backswing. backswing can also lead to major inconsistency. I used to overswing on my irons which would lead to very inaccurate shots. I have sorted that problem out and I'm hitting twice as many greens as before. I think with the driver I do go a little more. As long as you keep the head still and don't sway off the ball.

One last thing regarding consistent ball striking. And this sounds stupid, but I make sure the ball isn't my target. I vision the shot I'm going to hit, and where I'm going to hit it. And that is my target. This helps me swing through the ball and not AT the ball.

That's me. I hope something out of all that helps you and you start getting your consistency back. Good luck bud.


Find an instructor and book some lessons or film your swing, preferably in high speed, and post it here.

Ogio Grom | Callaway X Hot Pro | Callaway X-Utility 3i | Mizuno MX-700 23º | Titleist Vokey SM 52.08, 58.12 | Mizuno MX-700 15º | Titleist 910 D2 9,5º | Scotty Cameron Newport 2 | Titleist Pro V1x and Taylormade Penta | Leupold GX-1

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Yes, post a video of your swing.....That way we can see what you need to work on when you do get to practice.

5 Simple Keys® Associate

"Golf is not a game of great shots. It's a game of the most accurate misses.

The people who win make the smallest mistakes." - Gene Littler

Awards, Achievements, and Accolades

Note: This thread is 4975 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
    FitForGolf
    FlightScope Mevo
    Direct: Mevo, Mevo+, and Pro Package.

    Coupon Codes (save 10-20%): "IACAS" for Mevo/Stack/FitForGolf, "IACASPLUS" for Mevo+/Pro Package, and "THESANDTRAP" for ShotScope. 15% off TourStriker (no code).
  • Posts

    • Day 307 - Mirror swings, focusing on rotation. That seems to take pressure off my lead hip. 
    • With a lot of help from @iacas, I was able to take a great trip down to Pinehurst this past week. Took advantage of having a day off because of Veteran's Day and spent 4 days in the Pinehurst area. @iacas, @Hardspoon, @GolfLug, and @NCGolfer joined me for at least 1 round on the trip. I got in 2 courses in Pinehurst proper - Southern Pines and Pine Needles - and then the Duke golf course in Durham and Tobacco Road. All of the courses were new to me, and I really liked all of them. I am going to add more to this later when I have some time, but I wanted to post a quick recap/thoughts for each course. Duke Golf Club I really enjoyed this course. It's a big ballpark that goes up and down a couple of hills. The front 9 starts off going straight downhill, with 1 and 2 being similar dogleg left, downhill par 4s. You make your way to the bottom of the hill with a par 3 that plays over a lake, and then you creep up slowly. The best hole on the front is the 7, the first par 5. It's a dogleg right goes downhill to a small green protected by a creek and bunkers. If you can get your ball to the fairway, you should have a chance at going for the green in 2. That shot was probably the most memorable one I had on this course. You then crest the hill again with the tee shot on 9, which is a par 5 that goes down the hill and then the green is back on top of the hill by the clubhouse.  The back only goes up and down the hill once, so it's slightly more tame than the front. I really liked 11, which is another par 5. The tee shot plays down the hill, and if you hit a good one, you could have a mid iron into your hand with your second shot. The green is huge, but protected by a creek that runs in front of it. The closing stretch of holes are pretty good. 16 is a short par 4 playing straight up hill. Distance control with a wedge is really important. 17 is slightly uphill, but the trick is navigating the uneven lies in the fairway. 18 is fairly straightforward but a stout par 4 to end the round. The only negative is that there were a lot of holes with forced carries to the green. 4, 7, 11, 12, and 13 all had ponds or creeks fronting the green. Most of those required hefty carries.  Bottom line, I liked the course and the setting. I would be happy to play here regularly. Pine Needles I loved this course. The setting reminded me a lot of #2, and it feels like a mini #2 with a lot of small, turtleback-type greens. The opening 5 holes were outstanding. 1 was a really cool par 5 that was no gimme. The green was pretty wild. 2 was a long, downhill par 4. 3 was one of my favorite par 3s that we played - over a lake with bunkers framing the green. 4 was a short uphill par 4 that I really liked. 5 was an excellent but tough par 3, sitting on a shelf well above the tee. It's a great opening stretch. And again, the feel and look of the place is unique to the Pinehurst area. It feels like something you wouldn't find anywhere else. Other highlights - the green site on 9 was really cool. There is a big run off area to the right of the green that you want to avoid. It reminded me a bit of the second hole at Sand Valley - you don't want to be right of that green either. 12 was a great hole. You can't see the green from the tee, as the tee shot plays over a hill. When you see the green, it looks tiny, with a huge runoff and bunkers to the left of the green. The fairway is pretty wide, so the trick is accuracy with your approach shot. 18 was an extremely cool finishing hole. You can't really see the fairway off the tee, but it turns out to be fairly generous when you get there. And then the green site is fantastic - sitting at the bottom of the hill, but still requiring precision to be on it. I really want to get back and play this course again. There are a few shots that I want to try again (the drive on 10, the approach on 12, the drive on 18). And I just really loved the look and feel of the place. A great course and a fun day of golf. Southern Pines I thought this was the best course of the 4 I played. It's wider than Pine Needles, and the greens are bigger. But the greens are much more undulating. The land here is truly excellent. There is a ton of land movement, and seemingly every hole has elevation changes you have to navigate. I really like both par 5s on the front. If you hit good drives on both, you will get a big kick down the fairway. If you don't, you're going to be faced with a long 2nd shot just to have a wedge in. 2 plays down the hill with the tee shot and then back up the hill with the approach. You have to be careful about club selection and distance control there. 7 was a good, fairly long par 3 with a green perched on a ledge. 11 was a driveable par 4 with a wild green. 15 was really cool as well - the tee shot is downhill, but then the green is back uphill. This is a course I would love to play everyday. It's a thinking man's course, because you have to be really careful with all the elevations changes there. You constantly have to play and commit to a club longer or shorter than the distance. And I don't really think there are any bad holes. Only negative is that a few holes are a bit repetitive - 4, 16, and 18 are all shorter par 4s where you're hitting an uphill approach wedge or short iron. This is a very minor nit, though. One of the best courses I've played. I'd have to think about where exactly to rank it, but easily within the top 10. Possibly cracking the top 5. I will play this again next time I'm in Pinehurst. Tobacco Road I had a blast at this course. It is unique and pretty wild. You start out with these massive dune-like hills pinching in on your tee shot on 1. And then the entire round feels like you're going around these massive dunes. There are a lot of interesting shots here. You have long carries over bunkers, blind tee shots, shots into tiny greens, shots into huge greens, carries over deep bunkers, downhill shots, uphill shots, you name it. The setting is incredible. It is a huge course, and the fairways and greens tend to be very generous. I want to write more about individual holes later. But I really liked 7, 9, 10, and 16. I want to play a couple of the par 3s again with different hole locations and/or different tee boxes. 6 and 17, in particular, could play like wildly different holes with a different hole location (for 17) or coming from a different tee box (for 6).  While I had a lot of fun seeing this course, I do feel like a smart golfer could get bored here. To me, it was fairly obvious that Strantz was trying to bait you into trying a bunch of hard shots. On 11, for example, if you hit a good drive to the right side of the fairway, you could have a shot at the green in 2. But the green is over a massive bunker that has to be 40 feet below the green. And the green is narrow, essentially facing perpendicular to you. The only chance you really have is to hit a perfect shot. The alternative is an easy lay up to a wide fairway, leaving you with a wedge at the perfect angle. Maybe I try going for it with a 7 iron or something shorter, but that's about it. I felt similar on 5 - the direct line to the green is not that far and the green is driveable, But if you miss, you're going to have a 40ish yard bunker shot or a lost ball. Meanwhile, if you play to the right, you have a massive fairway and you'll likely be left with a wedge in your hand. I think it would be fun to play with 2 balls on some of these holes and try the shots. If you are a LSW disciple, though, you are not going to try the crazy risky shots Strantz is trying to bait you into. In the end, I really enjoyed this course. But I think it's below PN or SP. It's still awesome, and it was fun to see and play. I would come back here, but it's a lower priority than other Pinehurst courses. Well, that ended up being longer than I was anticipating. I may add some more thoughts about specific holes later, but this is a good starting point. I do want to think more about course ratings out of 10 for these, too. More to come...
    • Day 123: did a stack session.
    • Day 48 - 2024-11-17 A little work before Junior Elite. Left thumb and the compensating left wrist are better; still not great.
    • I watched a re-release of The Fifth Element.  I am going to give this movie a tap in Eagle. It's a wells shot movie. The actors are great. The story is interesting, and the setting is fascinating. For it being just over 2 hours, the pacing is phenomenal. I really enjoyed watching this sci-fi classic. 
×
×
  • 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...