Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: What NOT to say when things are going badly on the golf course June 2, 2021 Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share by Email Off Course with Claude Harmon: What NOT to say when things are going badly on the golf course Tommy Fleetwood's Hometown Major The Go-To Chip Every Golfer Needs BBQ, Boat Rides, and Golf on the Georgia Coast | Destination GOLF Mark Grace dishes on playing Pebble with Bill Murray | Subpar Mark Grace on Vijay Singh range tips | Subpar Warming Up with Cameron Young She Chose to Lose Her Leg. Now She's Chasing Golf and the Paralympics Inside Cameron Young's Breakthrough: How Golf's Intriguing Star Joined its Elite What makes the PRO Tour appealing to retired athletes | Subpar Aaron Hicks reveals his ridiculous Trackman numbers | Subpar LPGA winner Mel Reid joins Claude Harmon III and discusses how when things aren’t going as you were expecting on the course itself, a pep-talk won’t help. Latest In Instruction 19 hours ago The go-to chip every golfer needs, explained in 4 simple steps 4 days ago The 3 types of mistakes every golfer makes — and how to avoid them 4 days ago Cameron Young taught me 10 lessons in 45 minutes. Here they are 5 days ago 5 quick at-home drills that will help you hit the ball solid immediately Related Articles Gear How the Kalea Premier line is upgrading women's golf clubs for good Lifestyle What I learned playing golf with a 5-time Solheim Cupper News Aramco Team Series returns to New York: Here’s what to watch for Short Game Pros Teaching Joes: How to hit flop shots that launch high and land softly Lifestyle Off Course with Claude Harmon: This two-time LPGA winner has big plans for her post pro-golf career Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: The stark differences between the PGA and LPGA Tour Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: Why this LPGA pro’s second career win was so sweet Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: Why golf appealed to Mito Pereira as a kid Instruction Off Course with Claude Harmon: Why Mito Pereira quit golf for two years as a teenager