Finally a membership that pays for itself.

InsideGOLF Premium
Instruction

What to do when you can’t keep your ball on the planet off the tee

golfer with tee

You’ve been looking forward to this round all week, and then when the time finally comes, it all goes wrong. You can’t keep the ball on the planet off the tee, and it’s ruining your round. What should you do next? GOLF.com’s resident low-handicappers are hear to help…

1. Stop and recharge

Dylan Dethier (+3.3 handicap): First, get recharged. Eat a granola bar. Drink some water. Take a deep breath. The first thing you should do is check out your alignment, so have someone else in your group see if your feet, hips, shoulders and clubface are all facing the target. That’s a great first step.

Then get back to the basics of your swing, too. When your round is going off the rails, things tend to move very fast, so slow them down — and think back to one very simple swing thought that has worked for you in the past. You’re not looking to find the perfect golf swing. You’re just trying to have a little more fun and get in to the clubhouse.

2. Get a go-to shot

Luke Kerr-Dineen (2.5 handicap): You can’t play golf without, occasionally, everything collapsing around you. It’s one of the less delightful parts of the game, but as DJ explains, it’s part of the game nevertheless. The best way to prepare for that eventuality is to spend a few shots each time you’re on the range perfecting a go-to shot. Something simple that you know you’ll work even on the worst of days. Maybe it’s a 50 percent driver swing, or a back-of-the-stance knockdown. Whatever it is, find it and use it.

3. Stay calm, stay positive

Ashley Mayo (3.1 handicap): First, take a deep breath and remember that all golfers hit poor shots and have bad rounds. Second, revisit the basics! Remember that your grip pressure should be light—if you imagine your grip being a tube of toothpaste, you shouldn’t squeeze any paste out when you swing. And S-L-O-W down—try to hit the ball half the distance you typically hit it, you’ll be amazed by how far the ball actually goes when you make a relaxed, slow swing. Also, try everything you can to keep your spirits up. Remind yourself that you DO know how to play golf and you DO know how to hit the ball. Your talents will emerge far faster if you stay positive during challenging moments.

4. Slower swing, better contact

Zephyr Melton (5.5 handicap): Slow down your swing and focus on solid contact. A lot of this game is figuring out a way to grind out a decent score when you don’t have your best stuff. Slowing down is the method I use when things go sideways.

5. Find your tempo

Josh Sens (6 handicap): My old approach was to curl into a fetal position and wallow in self pity. But that slowed down play and earned me few friends, so I switched to focusing on my tempo. And to reminding myself that it’s just a game, and that part of its beauty is its elusiveness. Corny as it sounds, the quest is what makes golf so compelling. Embrace it. To one degree or another, we’re all searching out there. Always. Don’t forget that.

Need help unriddling the greens at your home course? Pick up a custom Green Book from our sister company Golf Logix.

Related Articles

Instruction
10 ways to improve your pre-round warm ups
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Instruction
10 tips to improve your on-course decision making
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Instruction
10 tips to help you hit amazing fairway woods
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Instruction
10 tips to help you master long greenside bunker shots
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Instruction
15 real golfers reveal the biggest mistakes hurting their game
By: Luke Kerr-Dineen
Instruction
10 simple ways to get the most out of your golf lessons
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Putting
10 tips to help golfers make all their short putts
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
Instruction
How this golfer fixed his massive 'over-the-top' move and solved his slice
By: Luke Kerr-Dineen
Short Game
10 basic tips to help you pitch the ball better than ever
By: Kellie Stenzel, Top 100 Teacher
was:
Exit mobile version