MashieNiblick
Tour Winner
Saw this in our local library and realised I’d never actually read it so got it out and must say I was impressed.
Lots of common sense advice, no psychobabble and some nice anecdotes about the tour players he’s worked with. Just a few of his thoughts:
On the course, trust your swing, don’t think about mechanics, that’s for the range
Have a good pre-shot routine (physical and mental) and stick to it
Don’t dwell over the ball (a fault of mine!). Over the ball, once you’re ready to hit, look at the target, look at the ball, then swing.
The short game is the key to low scores
Whatever shot you choose, be decisive when you hit it
Don’t get annoyed at a bad shot, it happens in golf. Accept it and move on
Always have a game plan
Play only the shots you know you can play but commit yourself to each shot –“conservative strategy, cocky swing†- the former encourages the latter.
Make your practice purposeful, don’t just bash balls
And lots of other good stuff.
Nice foreword by Darren Clarke too.
It’s only 200-odd pages, and is now on my Christmas list.
I was particularly struck by what he said about how ironic it was that pros, who are great ball strikers and practice all the time, cope much better with bad shots than high handicappers, who may get really upset and angry when they hit a bad one even though they have limited ability and hardly practice. The pro just accepts it and gets on with the next shot. Getting angry just makes you play worse.
I'm sure that others on here have read it, any thoughts? Has it helped on the course?
It's a well known book so sorry if there have been similar threads before.
Lots of common sense advice, no psychobabble and some nice anecdotes about the tour players he’s worked with. Just a few of his thoughts:
On the course, trust your swing, don’t think about mechanics, that’s for the range
Have a good pre-shot routine (physical and mental) and stick to it
Don’t dwell over the ball (a fault of mine!). Over the ball, once you’re ready to hit, look at the target, look at the ball, then swing.
The short game is the key to low scores
Whatever shot you choose, be decisive when you hit it
Don’t get annoyed at a bad shot, it happens in golf. Accept it and move on
Always have a game plan
Play only the shots you know you can play but commit yourself to each shot –“conservative strategy, cocky swing†- the former encourages the latter.
Make your practice purposeful, don’t just bash balls
And lots of other good stuff.
Nice foreword by Darren Clarke too.
It’s only 200-odd pages, and is now on my Christmas list.
I was particularly struck by what he said about how ironic it was that pros, who are great ball strikers and practice all the time, cope much better with bad shots than high handicappers, who may get really upset and angry when they hit a bad one even though they have limited ability and hardly practice. The pro just accepts it and gets on with the next shot. Getting angry just makes you play worse.
I'm sure that others on here have read it, any thoughts? Has it helped on the course?
It's a well known book so sorry if there have been similar threads before.