Jump to content
IGNORED

How to break 70 with the stats I have?


tazrestling27
Note: This thread is 4713 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

A huge difference I see between nearly scratch golfers and scratch golfers, is as saltman said, [b]giving yourself birdie opportunities[/b]. A nearly scratch golfer can hit the GIR a good amount of the time, but the birdie putts may not be close enough to make a higher percentage of the time.  A scratch golfer puts the ball close a good chunk of time, giving them the highest percentage of making birdie.  This comes down to two things I think, being confident and able to make putts within 20ft a good chunk of the time, and secondly being able to put your second shots within/around that 20ft.

This. When I was playing to the + side of things I was making a lot of birdies/eagles. For me though, it had more to do with my chipping than anything else. Getting up and down was almost automatic, to the point that there wasn't a pin that I wouldn't shoot at. When you're playing to stick every pin because you [i]know[/i] that you'll make par even if you miss the green, you leave yourself with a lot of good birdie opportunities.

Yonex Ezone Type 380 | Tour Edge Exotics CB Pro | Miura 1957 Irons | Yururi Wedges | Scotty Cameron Super Rat | TaylorMade Penta

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Hit more greens... and make more putts/more one putt greens.  Once yout get to single digit handicappers... the fastest way to improve is undoubtedly these two.  If you are playing Tour level courses, or just below that level, with severe penalties for missing the fairway, then hitting fariways becomes #3 in importance instantly.  If you are playing typical courses, some public, some private or semi-private... then greens and one putts it is.

 :macgregor: V Foil 8.5*    :tmade: Mid Rescue 16*  -- :wilsonstaff: RM  2 thru Wedge -- :vokey: 56/10  -- :scotty_cameron: Studio Design 2  & a  :srixon: Z Star 

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • 1 month later...

There are many different ways to approach this and so this is how i view it. I am 23 years old, ive played D2 golf for college and ive played with some of the best amateurs around. I think it mainly depends on what type of player you are. If you are like Tiger or Phil, the "go for broke", "grip and rip", "power player", fairways are really not a concern because you are strong enough to get it out of the rough, unless its like U.S. Open rough ha, but a lot of courses do not have that. And then you have the straight shooters that hit every fairway and are on or around the green all the time and just play "boring" golf which is cool too. I am a power player, but i do have touch around the greens where i can scrap it around so I've came up with an analogy that may work for you, but it helps me and shows me what i need to work on. I do the 12, 8, 4, 50/50, no charity golf routine. What that means is; I try to hit 12 greens, have 8 of those 12 greens within 25 or less, and try to convert 4 of those 8 GIR for birdies. Now the 50/50 part is the other 6 greens if you do hit the 12 out of 18 greens, for 50/50 on up and down. And the charity golf is, no three putts, no penalties such as OB and water hazards. The reason i came up with that analogy is bc when you three putt or can try to avoid an OB or water hazard, your "giving" strokes away like a charity. So when you come to think of it, if your playing a par 72, and you have 12 greens, with 8 of those greens out of the 12 with 25 feet or less of a putt and convert 4 of those 8, you are 4 under for those holes. Now, that is with no three putts of those 12 GIR. I think you can get the picture. And if your 50/50 is perfect, which means out of the 6 greens you missed you got up and down 3 out of the 6 times, then thats 3 bogies if you did not three putt the par attempt for the up and down so that puts you 3 over on that department and your overall score is at 1 under every time. So it depends on what Par your course is. My home course, is a par 71 and i try it and it works great!! The more greens you hit the better you are off and the more fun you are having. So i would work on trying to hit more greens, keep it in play, (rough or fairway), know the course and where to miss at ya know and that all has to deal with playing a lot and it will come. Being a 10 or under handicap is great accomplishment and that is great man you are striving to break 70. But, that is what i do to my home course and also to other courses. If i do not know the course that well, i am a little bit more tentative, and play the course management and try to from my point of view put it in a general area where i have a shot at making birdies and getting to the green with ease. Good players take the course in parts and dissect every hole and that is what i would tell you to do. If you play a course 3 to 4 times a week consistently then you know where to hit it and get away with it if you do hit an arrant shot and you know where you can score well ya know? Overall, just keep it in play, play to your strengths, try not to "give strokes away", and manage the course to your advantage. Every golfer is different and has a different view on things and i hope this helps!

Link to comment
Share on other sites


1. work on tee shot placement...be able to put your driver exactly where you want it to set up the distances and lines you want on approach shots

2. work with your wedges...you should be almost 100% within 135, if you want to break 70 you cant afford to miss a green on short approaches

3. think birdie, turn with your hips...if you have a short approach you have to have the game and confidence to attack the pin and leave yourself a tap in birdie

4. get your body involved...even with your mid-irons and through your wedges (6,7,8,9,P,G,S,L) you need to be able to pick the part of the green you want and hit it. Don't leave yourself putts that are across ridges or down hill down grain.  You do this by hitting shots that take 1 hop then stop because when your trying to break 70 just hitting the green isn't enough.

5. hit your putts...work on a consistent putting stroke that you can trust when lag putting and short putts.  You should be making more putts inside of 8 feet and getting up and down more than half the time (at least on the days when you are shooting below 70)

|callaway.gif X460 Tour Fujikura Tour Platform 26.3 73g | taylormade.gif 2i Rescue 11 |  3i HiBore Hybrid |  710 MB |  Wedge Works 48/06 |  cg12 52/08  | vokey.gifSpin Milled 56/11 | nike.gifSV Tour 60/10 | cameron.gif Studio Select Newport 2 34" |

 

rangefinder : LR550

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Note: This thread is 4713 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.
  • Posts

    • My two cents? Don't. As a beginner that's interested in learning about the golf swing, you'll find yourself consuming a lot of information, most of which isn't even relevant to your own swing. You need to learn you can't think your way to a good golf swing. Focus on the one thing that you're working on and doing that on every swing, come what may. And remember, mishits happen.
    • Day 6 (7 May 24) - More work in the backyard focused on tempo in addition to setup.  Worked with 6 and 7 irons hitting hard foam balls - used the old MacGregor irons to mix it up a little.   
    • No! lol. But they have to be in the right sequence to play mid-handicap golf or little better. Mostly. And even in that there is range/margin for error in the motions and positions that most normal humans can handle. It helps if you have a decent idea of how a golf club moves around the body like you would any other equipment sports (baseball and hockey might be the closest) After all, fairways are 40 yards wide. Don't overthink it. Be diligent in getting basics right. I will concede that it is harder than it sounds but it certainly is not exact angle/exact position/exact degree of bend/exact speed/exact facial expression, etc, every.... single.... time or the result is horrible death. 
    • Looking to play in the Severna Park Golf league and it got rained out the first three weeks. I know the course is being renovated so it is not in great shape but the location is easy for me and I would love to meet some other golfers in my area. Anyone here in Maryland Annapolis area? 
    • I like to look at the positives.  Overall you are fairly consistent down the center with most shots 20 yards or less off center.  On most fairways that should be in play.  Sure, you had some very short duds, but also if you look there is a good cluster in the 110-125 yard range.  Sure, we would all like to be longer, but knowing your typical shot is more important than trying to hit the 7-Iron 175 Yards.  Just take more club for longer shots and do not worry about it.  Your distances may increase as you improve over time so do not get caught up on that now.
×
×
  • 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...