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Jordan Spieth used to ‘freak out’ during bad rounds. Now he does this instead.
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Jordan Spieth used to ‘freak out’ during bad rounds. Now he does this instead.

By: Luke Kerr-Dineen
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April 5, 2021
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Think about playing what you have, not looking for something you don't.

We all know the feeling in golf when things start to unravel. The dread can build on itself. One thing goes wrong, and then another, and then the next thing, until you’re anticipating bad things which haven’t even happened yet.

The funny thing is that no matter how good you get at golf, it’s a feeling that you can never truly escape. The pros feel it, too. The difference is, they’re better at knowing how to manage it.

And there’s no better living embodiment of that fact on the PGA Tour today than Jordan Spieth.

Spieth captured his first win on four years last Sunday at the Valero Texas Open and is among the favorites at Augusta National this week. For nearly five years, he’s alternated between various swing thoughts and countless second-guesses from analysts. The victory provided some sweet relief for Jordan, but for as easy as it looked for those of us at home, that wasn’t quite the case for Jordan.

‘I didn’t have great control’

I play with a lots of different golfers from a range of skill levels, and one of the biggest differences between players is their understanding of what it takes to shoot a good score. Higher handicaps, at least in my experience, tend to think they need to perform perfectly in order to shoot a good score. Highly-skilled golfers think the opposite. They know they don’t need to play perfectly to shoot a good score.

As Spieth evidenced on Sunday.

“I really didn’t have great control of the ball this weekend at all,” he said.

The difference, as Spieth went onto explain, is in mentality. Spieth shot a score and won the tournament not firing on all cylinders. Though he may be competing at the highest level, figuring out how to shoot a good score when you’re not playing your best is an eminently relatable problem that we all have to solve. Here’s how Spieth said he did it.

Jordan Spieth

How to play well when you’re not at your best

When the bad shots come it’s easy to lose confidence and go searching for answers in a hurry. It’s something Spieth admitted he’s struggled with in the recent past. But it’s the absolute worst thing you can do.

“[In the past] I would have maybe started to freak out and change swing feels,” he said. “Instead I stuck to my guns and said ‘what I’m doing is the right thing, let’s just try and figure out what we’ve got.'”

“Do we have a shot that we can play? How are we going to step into this next one confidently?” he continued.

“Let’s play some Bubba shots if we need to,” Spieth, referring to Bubba’s penchant for significantly moving the ball one way or the other. “Some bigger turners one way or the other, to just establish some feel in the game and get away from kind of the technical side when the technical side doesn’t feel great.”

As Spieth says, when things go sideways, don’t try to find something you don’t have. Try to figure out what you do have, and how you can play with it. If that means aiming left and hitting a 40 yard slice into the fairway, than that’s what it takes.

All you’re trying to do in these moments is to park the technical swing thoughts to one side and re-establish a feel for playing the game. If you can do that, you won’t need to bring your best stuff to shoot your best score.

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Luke Kerr-Dineen

Golf.com Contributor

Luke Kerr-Dineen is the Game Improvement Editor at GOLF Magazine and GOLF.com. In his role he oversees the brand’s game improvement content spanning instruction, equipment, health and fitness, across all of GOLF’s multimedia platforms.

An alumni of the International Junior Golf Academy and the University of South Carolina–Beaufort golf team, where he helped them to No. 1 in the national NAIA rankings, Luke moved to New York in 2012 to pursue his Masters degree in Journalism from Columbia University. His work has also appeared in USA Today, Golf Digest, Newsweek and The Daily Beast.

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