Probably a better title would have been "The Scrambling Game".
You have no idea what you're talking about Tim.
You say putting is the same as a short game, but it really isnt. Putting you will make your stroke different you will check the line of the putt you will see where slopes are. How many times have you from 100 yards walked up to the green to check the slopes to see the exact spot your going to take and the roll it will have.
Putting is so much more than a normal shot or short game shot. Its a different style no power which you may need in short game for bunker shots etc. Theres so much more you assess in a putt to get that ball on its way to the hole.
Tim,
Have a read of this mate.....
It " MIGHT " make you take the blinkers off....
http://www.popeofslope.com/downloads/therealdifference.pdf
You have no idea what you're talking about Tim.
I thought that was obvious after his first half dozen posts
Cant believe all you guys still bite when he posts![]()
1 shot from the tee to the fairway.
1 shot from the fairway to the green.
2 putts.
Where is the short game, please?
"One of the most telling numbers was
how dramatically the amateur players inflated
their driving distances. The lower
handicappers claimed their average drives
went 247 yards, while driving-distance
stats taken on two holes documented an
average of 232—a 15-yard exaggeration.
Poorer players claimed a driving average of
227 yards and, in actuality, hit it 198
yards—a 29-yard lie of the mind.
Many conclusions can be drawn from
this data, but the hard lesson on this aspect:
The worse the players, the more they
kid themselves about how good (and long)
they are. Nobody, it seems, wants to admit
he drives the ball less than 200 yards. Succumbing
to self-delusion, it seems most
amateurs tend to equate their best drive
with their average drive".
You heard it here first
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
"One of the most telling numbers was
how dramatically the amateur players inflated
their driving distances. The lower
handicappers claimed their average drives
went 247 yards, while driving-distance
stats taken on two holes documented an
average of 232—a 15-yard exaggeration.
Poorer players claimed a driving average of
227 yards and, in actuality, hit it 198
yards—a 29-yard lie of the mind.
Many conclusions can be drawn from
this data, but the hard lesson on this aspect:
The worse the players, the more they
kid themselves about how good (and long)
they are. Nobody, it seems, wants to admit
he drives the ball less than 200 yards. Succumbing
to self-delusion, it seems most
amateurs tend to equate their best drive
with their average drive".
You heard it here first
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
1 shot from the tee to the fairway.
1 shot from the fairway to the green.
2 putts.
Where is the short game, please?