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The Solitude of Practice: Free your psyche to focus your mind

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You know those lonely days on the range by yourself when, for whatever reason, every little mishit and mistake drives you crazy? I’m going to help you find inner peace in these moments, and make those range sessions more productive.

For me, I can’t even begin to tell you how many hours I’ve spent beating balls on the range in an attempt to improve my game. Sometimes that “hard work” was fun; other days it felt like more of a chore. Even on those tough days when I felt like snapping every club over my knee, I always tried to make sure I reminded myself that golf was “only a game.” While that’s easier said than done, I want to discuss the “zen,” or solitude of practice that we should all strive to achieve when we are hitting balls so we can actually get better when we practice.

Look at the photo above of me hitting balls a few years ago at Bighorn in Palm Desert, California. I want you to notice several things that I would suggest you try the next time you are out on the range.

Dressed for the Day 

It’s difficult to have a solid practice session when you’re not wearing the correct attire — whether it’s the wrong shoes, or you forgot to wear a hat and you’re looking straight into the sun. Remember that you are responsible for dressing for success and making sure you have your glove, sunscreen, hat, glasses, and the proper type of clothing for golf. It’s not about wearing $1,000 shoes and matching your outfit perfectly. You want to make sure you wear things that allow you to sweat less, avoid sunburn, feel better while practicing, and generally allow yourself to make the most out of your session. There is nothing worse than trying to work on a certain shot when you are sweating like a dog, slipping around, or being blinded by the sun.

On the Far End of the Range

If you are truly practicing and working on something in your game, you must remember that it’s not social hour; it’s a time for you to focus and meditate on your feels and your goals for that practice session. It’s impossible to get better between jokes and keep your focus when your buddy is goofing around next to you. This does not mean you cannot ever practice around people. I’m not encouraging you to be anti-social, but if you truly want to step inside yourself, you must break away from the masses. Concentration and solitude is required to “be the ball,” as Ty Webb once said in Caddyshack.

Using a Solid, Level, and Grassy Portion of the Practice Area 

Now I understand that not every facility has a range as nice as Bighorn’s — or even a manicured strip of grass — but every facility has sections that are better than others. I suggest you find these areas and camp out if you’d like to really work on your game. It’s not reasonable to try and work on certain things when you are hitting off downhill, sidehill hardpan or a sandy lie. And what chance do you have to find the feel, much less your groove when hitting out of a divot or a mat with a hole in it?

Most of the time, I see people drop their bags on the range at the closest spot to the cart path. Think about it; that’s probably the most overused and worn-out section of the range. Find a less frequented spot, and you’ll have a more productive session.

One Ball at a Time 

One of my favorite things about the photo taken of me aboce is that you can only see one ball. The others are in a pile a few steps from where I am hitting. Why did I put the balls out of arms reach? So I have to stop, regroup, and go through my pre-shot all over again before every shot. This keeps me focused and in the best mindset possible to stay in the zone so I can get my best work done. How many of you resemble a machine gun while hitting range balls? I know many people who have another ball teed up and ready to go before the last one lands. Don’t be that guy!

Clear Target in Mind 

When you dial a phone, you have a specific goal in mind. For that reason, you input the correct number pretty much every time. You don’t just pick up your phone and hit random numbers; if you did, you probably wouldn’t reach the person you intended to dial. The same is true with golf. If you don’t focus on a target — an EXACT target — for every shot you hit, you won’t get much out of your session. If I ask you “What was your target?” and you answer, “I don’t know, I was just hitting the ball,” I can guarantee that you learned nothing from that shot, and you did not get better on that swing.

Relaxed and Un-rushed

If you have time to practice, then you have time to slow down. It’s never about the number of balls you hit; it’s about the quality of the balls you hit, especially when you are trying to learn a different move or swing feel. Far too often I see lunch-break golfers trying to hit a large bucket in 30 minutes. They get nothing accomplished but exercise. The goal of practicing on the range is to make a high number of correct repetitions in order to change a motor pattern, not finish a large bucket.

Focusing on Feels, NOT Results (Just Yet)

When you’re working on your swing, the range is a place to feel your new move versus an old one. It offers a low-pressure environment to work a new skill into your current game without repercussion. When you practice, don’t worry so much about the outcome at first; you only want to work on the feeling of the new move and understand just how close you’re actually coming to making “it.” Don’t ruin your zen by worrying on results quite yet… they will come.

I hope by now you have learned how to set yourself up for success by preparing, slowing down, and focusing on the task at hand. And please remember to enjoy the quest of golf and the constant strive for improvement!

Tom F. Stickney II, is a specialist in Biomechanics for Golf, Physiology, and 3d Motion Analysis. He has a degree in Exercise and Fitness and has been a Director of Instruction for almost 30 years at resorts and clubs such as- The Four Seasons Punta Mita, BIGHORN Golf Club, The Club at Cordillera, The Promontory Club, and the Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort. His past and present instructional awards include the following: Golf Magazine Top 100 Teacher, Golf Digest Top 50 International Instructor, Golf Tips Top 25 Instructor, Best in State (Florida, Colorado, and California,) Top 20 Teachers Under 40, Best Young Teachers and many more. Tom is a Trackman University Master/Partner, a distinction held by less than 25 people in the world. Tom is TPI Certified- Level 1, Golf Level 2, Level 2- Power, and Level 2- Fitness and believes that you cannot reach your maximum potential as a player with out some focus on your physiology. You can reach him at tomstickneygolf@gmail.com and he welcomes any questions you may have.

15 Comments

15 Comments

  1. Labia

    Sep 9, 2017 at 12:56 am

    Find feel between the bedsheets…. NOT by hitting golf clubs….. that’s pathetic

  2. Nundie

    Sep 7, 2017 at 8:05 pm

    Just go commando in really loose pants

    • Chipolte

      Sep 7, 2017 at 8:09 pm

      and one ball at a time so you don’t stress your Fruit of the Looms.

  3. OB

    Sep 7, 2017 at 3:22 pm

    If you want to be good in sports, music, dance, it’s 99% practice and 1% performance play.
    You may be on the golf course for 4 hours (240 minutes) but you must reduce that to the time you are swinging or putting or strategizing for perhaps 10 solid minutes. You are doing nothing athletic or strategic for 230 minutes, other than socializing and taking in the scenery!
    So, if that 10 minutes of performance time is backed up by 99% practice time, you would need to be practicing 1000 minutes (~17 hours)! Sounds just about right.

  4. acemandrake

    Sep 7, 2017 at 10:15 am

    1. Use an alignment rod

    2. Stop if tired

    • Chipolte

      Sep 7, 2017 at 8:06 pm

      and shove the alignment rod for your spinal axis

  5. Solid Golf

    Sep 7, 2017 at 9:21 am

    Good points in this article. You kept it very simple and straight to the point. Sometimes I get carried away on the range and get to exhausted. Once that happens I start hitting bad shots. Then to rectify this I hit more shots. That’s when I know it’s time to leave. I am just wasting my time at the range at that point.

    • Chipolte

      Sep 7, 2017 at 8:07 pm

      same on this fine forum…. wasting time

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Instruction

The Wedge Guy: Beating the yips into submission

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There may be no more painful affliction in golf than the “yips” – those uncontrollable and maddening little nervous twitches that prevent you from making a decent stroke on short putts. If you’ve never had them, consider yourself very fortunate (or possibly just very young). But I can assure you that when your most treacherous and feared golf shot is not the 195 yard approach over water with a quartering headwind…not the extra tight fairway with water left and sand right…not the soft bunker shot to a downhill pin with water on the other side…No, when your most feared shot is the remaining 2- 4-foot putt after hitting a great approach, recovery or lag putt, it makes the game almost painful.

And I’ve been fighting the yips (again) for a while now. It’s a recurring nightmare that has haunted me most of my adult life. I even had the yips when I was in my 20s, but I’ve beat them into submission off and on most of my adult life. But just recently, that nasty virus came to life once again. My lag putting has been very good, but when I get over one of those “you should make this” length putts, the entire nervous system seems to go haywire. I make great practice strokes, and then the most pitiful short-stroke or jab at the ball you can imagine. Sheesh.

But I’m a traditionalist, and do not look toward the long putter, belly putter, cross-hand, claw or other variation as the solution. My approach is to beat those damn yips into submission some other way. Here’s what I’m doing that is working pretty well, and I offer it to all of you who might have a similar affliction on the greens.

When you are over a short putt, forget the practice strokes…you want your natural eye-hand coordination to be unhindered by mechanics. Address your putt and take a good look at the hole, and back to the putter to ensure good alignment. Lighten your right hand grip on the putter and make sure that only the fingertips are in contact with the grip, to prevent you from getting to tight.

Then, take a long, long look at the hole to fill your entire mind and senses with the target. When you bring your head/eyes back to the ball, try to make a smooth, immediate move right into your backstroke — not even a second pause — and then let your hands and putter track right back together right back to where you were looking — the HOLE! Seeing the putter make contact with the ball, preferably even the forward edge of the ball – the side near the hole.

For me, this is working, but I am asking all of you to chime in with your own “home remedies” for the most aggravating and senseless of all golf maladies. It never hurts to have more to fall back on!

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Instruction

Looking for a good golf instructor? Use this checklist

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Over the last couple of decades, golf has become much more science-based. We measure swing speed, smash factor, angle of attack, strokes gained, and many other metrics that can really help golfers improve. But I often wonder if the advancement of golf’s “hard” sciences comes at the expense of the “soft” sciences.

Take, for example, golf instruction. Good golf instruction requires understanding swing mechanics and ball flight. But let’s take that as a given for PGA instructors. The other factors that make an instructor effective can be evaluated by social science, rather than launch monitors.

If you are a recreational golfer looking for a golf instructor, here are my top three points to consider.

1. Cultural mindset

What is “cultural mindset? To social scientists, it means whether a culture of genius or a culture of learning exists. In a golf instruction context, that may mean whether the teacher communicates a message that golf ability is something innate (you either have it or you don’t), or whether golf ability is something that can be learned. You want the latter!

It may sound obvious to suggest that you find a golf instructor who thinks you can improve, but my research suggests that it isn’t a given. In a large sample study of golf instructors, I found that when it came to recreational golfers, there was a wide range of belief systems. Some instructors strongly believed recreational golfers could improve through lessons. while others strongly believed they could not. And those beliefs manifested in the instructor’s feedback given to a student and the culture created for players.

2. Coping and self-modeling can beat role-modeling

Swing analysis technology is often preloaded with swings of PGA and LPGA Tour players. The swings of elite players are intended to be used for comparative purposes with golfers taking lessons. What social science tells us is that for novice and non-expert golfers, comparing swings to tour professionals can have the opposite effect of that intended. If you fit into the novice or non-expert category of golfer, you will learn more and be more motivated to change if you see yourself making a ‘better’ swing (self-modeling) or seeing your swing compared to a similar other (a coping model). Stay away from instructors who want to compare your swing with that of a tour player.

3. Learning theory basics

It is not a sexy selling point, but learning is a process, and that process is incremental – particularly for recreational adult players. Social science helps us understand this element of golf instruction. A good instructor will take learning slowly. He or she will give you just about enough information that challenges you, but is still manageable. The artful instructor will take time to decide what that one or two learning points are before jumping in to make full-scale swing changes. If the instructor moves too fast, you will probably leave the lesson with an arm’s length of swing thoughts and not really know which to focus on.

As an instructor, I develop a priority list of changes I want to make in a player’s technique. We then patiently and gradually work through that list. Beware of instructors who give you more than you can chew.

So if you are in the market for golf instruction, I encourage you to look beyond the X’s and O’s to find the right match!

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Instruction

What Lottie Woad’s stunning debut win teaches every golfer

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Most pros take months, even years, to win their first tournament. Lottie Woad needed exactly four days.

The 21-year-old from Surrey shot 21-under 267 at Dundonald Links to win the ISPS Handa Women’s Scottish Open by three shots — in her very first event as a professional. She’s only the third player in LPGA history to accomplish this feat, joining Rose Zhang (2023) and Beverly Hanson (1951).

But here’s what caught my attention as a coach: Woad didn’t win through miraculous putting or bombing 300-yard drives. She won through relentless precision and unshakeable composure. After watching her performance unfold, I’m convinced every golfer — from weekend warriors to scratch players — can steal pages from her playbook.

Precision Beats Power (And It’s Not Even Close)

Forget the driving contests. Woad proved that finding greens matters more than finding distance.

What Woad did:

• Hit it straight, hit it solid, give yourself chances

• Aimed for the fat parts of greens instead of chasing pins

• Let her putting do the talking after hitting safe targets

• As she said, “Everyone was chasing me today, and managed to maintain the lead and played really nicely down the stretch and hit a lot of good shots”

Why most golfers mess this up:

• They see a pin tucked behind a bunker and grab one more club to “go right at it”

• Distance becomes more important than accuracy

• They try to be heroic instead of smart

ACTION ITEM: For your next 10 rounds, aim for the center of every green regardless of pin position. Track your greens in regulation and watch your scores drop before your swing changes.

The Putter That Stayed Cool Under Fire

Woad started the final round two shots clear and immediately applied pressure with birdies at the 2nd and 3rd holes. When South Korea’s Hyo Joo Kim mounted a charge and reached 20-under with a birdie at the 14th, Woad didn’t panic.

How she responded to pressure:

• Fired back with consecutive birdies at the 13th and 14th

• Watched Kim stumble with back-to-back bogeys

• Capped it with her fifth birdie of the day at the par-5 18th

• Stayed patient when others pressed, pressed when others cracked

What amateurs do wrong:

• Get conservative when they should be aggressive

• Try to force magic when steady play would win

• Panic when someone else makes a move

ACTION ITEM: Practice your 3-6 foot putts for 15 minutes after every range session. Woad’s putting wasn’t spectacular—it was reliable. Make the putts you should make.

Course Management 101: Play Your Game, Not the Course’s Game

Woad admitted she couldn’t see many scoreboards during the final round, but it didn’t matter. She stuck to her game plan regardless of what others were doing.

Her mental approach:

• Focused on her process, not the competition

• Drew on past pressure situations (Augusta National Women’s Amateur win)

• As she said, “That was the biggest tournament I played in at the time and was kind of my big win. So definitely felt the pressure of it more there, and I felt like all those experiences helped me with this”

Her physical execution:

• 270-yard drives (nothing flashy)

• Methodical iron play

• Steady putting

• Everything effective, nothing spectacular

ACTION ITEM: Create a yardage book for your home course. Know your distances to every pin, every hazard, every landing area. Stick to your plan no matter what your playing partners are doing.

Mental Toughness Isn’t Born, It’s Built

The most impressive part of Woad’s win? She genuinely didn’t expect it: “I definitely wasn’t expecting to win my first event as a pro, but I knew I was playing well, and I was hoping to contend.”

Her winning mindset:

• Didn’t put winning pressure on herself

• Focused on playing well and contending

• Made winning a byproduct of a good process

• Built confidence through recent experiences:

  • Won the Women’s Irish Open as an amateur
  • Missed a playoff by one shot at the Evian Championship
  • Each experience prepared her for the next

What this means for you:

• Stop trying to shoot career rounds every time you tee up

• Focus on executing your pre-shot routine

• Commit to every shot

• Stay present in the moment

ACTION ITEM: Before each round, set process goals instead of score goals. Example: “I will take three practice swings before every shot” or “I will pick a specific target for every shot.” Let your score be the result, not the focus.

The Real Lesson

Woad collected $300,000 for her first professional victory, but the real prize was proving that fundamentals still work at golf’s highest level. She didn’t reinvent the game — she simply executed the basics better than everyone else that week.

The fundamentals that won:

• Hit more fairways

• Find more greens

• Make the putts you should make

• Stay patient under pressure

That’s something every golfer can do, regardless of handicap. Lottie Woad just showed us it’s still the winning formula.

FINAL ACTION ITEM: Pick one of the four action items above and commit to it for the next month. Master one fundamental before moving to the next. That’s how champions are built.

 

PGA Professional Brendon Elliott is an award-winning coach and golf writer. You can check out his writing work and learn more about him by visiting BEAGOLFER.golf and OneMoreRollGolf.com. Also, check out “The Starter” on RG.org each Monday.

 

Editor’s note: Brendon shares his nearly 30 years of experience in the game with GolfWRX readers through his ongoing tip series. He looks forward to providing valuable insights and advice to help golfers improve their game. Stay tuned for more Tips!

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