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#1 |
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Last month I was playing Ka'anapali on Maui from the Blue tees a few days after the Senior Skins Game was there. I started with a double on one, bogey on two, but then birdied 3 of the next 6 holes. Made the turn at 1 over and was 2 over through 14. I started thinking, "I am on pace for a career round on a Championship course". I really felt tried not to think about it too much, but doubled 15, par on 16. Bombed a drive on 17 and had 110 over water. Hit a 50 degree wedge fat into the water, (rarely hit it fat like that), and ended 17 with double. Ended the round shooting an dissapointing 80. In the clubhouse, I couldn't help but think the reason I finished like that was the pressure I put on myself to "finish strong". This isn't the first time this has happened to me. I guess I am wondering a few of things:
1. How do I avoid doing this? 2. Do others have problems like this? 3. Is it all mental? HAHA |
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#3 |
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Last month I was playing Ka'anapali on Maui from the Blue tees a few days after the Senior Skins Game was there. I started with a double on one, bogey on two, but then birdied 3 of the next 6 holes. Made the turn at 1 over and was 2 over through 14. I started thinking, "I am on pace for a career round on a Championship course". I really felt tried not to think about it too much, but doubled 15, par on 16. Bombed a drive on 17 and had 110 over water. Hit a 50 degree wedge fat into the water, (rarely hit it fat like that), and ended 17 with double. Ended the round shooting an dissapointing 80. In the clubhouse, I couldn't help but think the reason I finished like that was the pressure I put on myself to "finish strong". This isn't the first time this has happened to me. I guess I am wondering a few of things: 2. Yes! ![]() 3. Mostly, if not even completely. Check the tournament pressure thread - probs some good advice there. In the end it's about pressure and the mental game. |
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#4 |
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1. Don't think about golf between shots. |
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#5 |
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Its all mental. I just refuse to allow any thoughts about what I could shoot or anything negative to come into my mind while playing. I keep all thoughts 100% positive all the time. Brush off bad shots. You know they will come so when they do, I just move on quickly. You can do nothing about the shot you just hit. Think only about the great shot you are about to hit.
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#6 |
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Its all mental. I just refuse to allow any thoughts about what I could shoot or anything negative to come into my mind while playing. I keep all thoughts 100% positive all the time. Brush off bad shots. You know they will come so when they do, I just move on quickly. You can do nothing about the shot you just hit. Think only about the great shot you are about to hit. |
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#7 |
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It's funny, I play well under pressure in tourneys, (for the most part). HAHA. But my biggest goal is to shoot under par and I have been very close 5 or 6 times in the past year and haven't finished a single one strong. Yet I finish strong quite often to make a average round better. I have won tourneys before, but have never shot under par, so I am openly wondering if I put too much pressure on myself to finally do it after 20 years of golf. My low round last year was 76, and I should have finished that round better too. Fatigue is and interesting thought. I am a big dude. |
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#9 |
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#10 |
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I'd worry about avoiding fatigue (eat and hydrate throughout the round) and lack of concentration over your shots at the end. Stop thinking about the potentially good round and finish each hole as well as possible. It doesn't help to be thinking about a score that isn't real yet, or to think of ways to ruin that potentially good score.
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#12 |
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You are probably too 'aware' of your goal and the end result, rather than focusing on the next part in the process. That might be why you finish so-so rounds strong as well - your "ultimate" goal is out of reach so you relax and try to make the best of the day, not thinking about what you "have to do". You're focusing on what you can do. |
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#13 |
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#14 |
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Another thing that may help is to avoid tallying your score if at all possible. If you are a single digit handicapper you probably always know your relation to par but if you are a 22 or something like me and breaking 90 is a goal I would avoid tallying your score after 9. I have started to do this as a way of not putting unnecessary pressure to finish with the needed pars or whatever.
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#15 |
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#16 |
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Another thing that may help is to avoid tallying your score if at all possible. If you are a single digit handicapper you probably always know your relation to par but if you are a 22 or something like me and breaking 90 is a goal I would avoid tallying your score after 9. I have started to do this as a way of not putting unnecessary pressure to finish with the needed pars or whatever. |
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#18 |
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I don't even bother adding up my score until the end now. I've been doing this for a while and I think it helps a little bit. You generally know if you're having a good round or not so why jinx yourself? Maybe this is an indication im not focused enough. |
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#19 |
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As hard as I try not to count up my score it always seems to be in my head? You ever get that? Usually I play the first hole and I go, "okay, Par, EVEN" next hole "Bogey, +1" and as much as I try not to count in my head it always keeps coming up with my +1, +2 numbers, so I always know where I am. |
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#20 |
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you get used to it. you need to develop a go to shot that might not be ideal, but at least you know it only going to miss in one direction. eventually you will come to realize what your common mistakes are under pressure, and once you have that you do everything in your power to do the opposite. that is my method, it may not work for everyone. a lot of people simply focus on breathing.
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