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So you'd actually like to stay at Cat 1 then if it means so much to you? So does that mean the score does mean something? And tell me about your childhood?
How much is this costing me
So you'd actually like to stay at Cat 1 then if it means so much to you? So does that mean the score does mean something? And tell me about your childhood?
Only your dignity and reputation![]()
Only your dignity and reputation![]()
Totally agree. The book is more than just thinking positive thoughts, but it focusses on specific techniques/ways to apply these and other principals to the game of golf, without getting too deep or heavy. And you can just dip in or out of the specific areas you most struggle with.
Come on, try it out, it's only the price of 1.5 Pro V1s.![]()
I'll give it a miss mate
Surprising as it may seem - I'm a pretty simple guy when it comes to golf
I just hit the ball and then enjoy the company - it's nothing worth worrying about or thinking too much and the score at the end is immaterial
The same thing is applied to chips, say you have a 20 yard chip to the pin and you leave it 5 yards short, you have actually missed the target area by just under 10 yards, on the basis that 4 yards 35 inches past is better than , 5 yards short.
and you have given it a chance to go in and you should have noted how the ball reacted as it went past, giving you a read for the return
What it is doing is subconsciously increasing the target area in your head thus making it easier to hit .
Not convinced by this.
Your target isn't 5 yards past the hole
If you leave a 20 yard chip 5 yards short then you miss by 5 yds....has to be better than saying you're missing by 10 doesn't' it? Or are you aiming to put it nearly 5 yards past..?
Any 20 yard chip that is going to end up nearly 5 yards past the hole hasn't got a cat in Hell's chance of going in unless it smacks the pin squad and drops.
And the read you get from a ball going 15 feet past is useless. The ball is going too fast past the hole to give you any idea of break.
I agree. I can't think of one hole on our course you would want to be long. Most greens slope from back to front, so if you are long and not in the rubbish, you will have a downhill chip, often needing to carry a small bank. I always aim for the middle of the green, and would rather have a long uphill putt, than a short downhill chip. Most older courses have bunkers to the side of the greens with room to run a shot between. Few have bunkers long, instead a lot have jungle behind. Course designers liked to put greens tight into the trees, heather etc. New courses with water are of course different, with trouble short, but I try and avoid those ones.Back of the green yardage surely very course dependent, theres only 2 holes on our course where I would prefer to miss long rather than short and with the rough round the greens growing pretty severe already theres several holes where you've next to no chance if you're past the pin
Ah young padawan, the idea is that you eliminate shorties and get yourself in the mindset that the ball is going where you want it to
4 yards 35 inches past is better than 5 yards short
Im afraid you are suffering from "Old Golf Thinking" you stick in the mud![]()
The links to download are here
www.newgolfthinking.com
amazon georiot.co/EqV (http://georiot.co/EqV)
apple georiot.co/10t2 (http://georiot.co/10t2)
The books cost a fiver and there will be more information in "The Open" edition of the magazine where there will be coverage of our day and more information on the contents of the book itself
Unless going past leaves you a downhill putt and being short leaves you an uphill putt - I prefer to be putting 5 yards uphill than 4 yards downhill
Being short isn't always a bad thing
4 yards 35 inches past is better than 5 yards short
But, for the sake of an inch, you still have a 15 footer..but you've missed by 5 instead of 10 yards - which is better for confidence?
Looking forward to no "shorties" tomorrow Master:rofl:
Luddite,Dont want any of your "negative Waves maaan"
doh. well obviously , thats why he said that in 80% of occasions past is better than short. the other 20% are covered by where its not a good idea to be long.
There are always exceptions to every rule
So is 4 yards 35 inches short better than 5 yards long?![]()
I'm sorry, but I'm not buying into this. You hit a bad shot, just forget it and think about the next one.
What's the point in clutering your mind with "oh that was a C", "I'll get an A next time". Is the game not tricky enough without all that floating about your mind.
If I couldn't tell myself my next shot is going to be a belter without the help of a book I'd pack the game in tbh.
Nothing against anyone trying to peddle their wares, more power to them, but it seems from what I have read so far that folks would be buying a book for the sake of buying it. Telling you to think about your club choice and where to aim isn't exactly a new way of thinking to me, more like common sense.
Well again if you go past the hole a lot of the holes at our place you will be faced with a downhill putt - over 50% plus a few more dependant on pin positions
Dukes also has a lot of greens sloping from back to front - as does Marquess - Duchess is a bit more even
In fact thinking about it a lot of clubs have a lot of greens sloping back to front.
So you will be faced most of the time with downhill putts if you go past the flag.
80% seems far to high