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#3 |
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My last two rounds of 2011 were like that. It was very frustrating. When that happens to me, I get to the range as son as I can, and try to slow everything down. Once I start making good contact again, and my confidence starts to get back to normal, I slowly take my swings back to normal speed. I ended the year with some of the worst golf in years, but since then, I have played some of my best golf yet.
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#4 |
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#5 |
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I did something similar last season, shot 81 in the first round of my club championship. My problem was simply expecting too much and trying to hard to force it.
My advice would be to go out again, and play within yourself. Make a conscious attempt to not hit anything too hard, aim for the middle of every green and take your medicine when you get in trouble. It happens, don't let it get you down. |
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#6 |
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#7 |
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British Open 2010 When I have "one of those days", I usually try to take a day off from golf. Just do something else entirely and get some distance from the debacle. You gotta try to not let it weigh you down or give it more weight/value than it has. You had a rough 4-5 hour stretch where everything went wrong. **** happens. Thing is that just like one good round doesn't make mean you are golfer, one bad round doesn't make you a poor golfer. We all have off-days. |
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#8 |
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#9 |
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#10 |
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My last two rounds of 2011 were like that. It was very frustrating. When that happens to me, I get to the range as son as I can, and try to slow everything down. Once I start making good contact again, and my confidence starts to get back to normal, I slowly take my swings back to normal speed. I ended the year with some of the worst golf in years, but since then, I have played some of my best golf yet. |
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#11 |
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#12 |
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I went and played 18 today. When I got to the course I was feeling really good, the last round I played I broke 80 for the first time in a very long time. My confidence was through the roof. I had a few warm up swings in the nets and felt really good. I have been there so many times I cannot count them. I was just posting in another thread how I was playing some great golf just 6 weeks ago, and now I cannot get the clubface onto the ball. Usually I take a few days off, and then when I do get back out to a range I start out with some short game shots and try to get the feel back. When I start taking full swings, I just try to make contact and don't think about distance at all. That said, I'm in a pretty serious swing funk right now. |
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#13 |
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I don't know how often you practice or play 18, but sometimes its best to take a break and come back fresh in a week or so. |
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#14 |
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It happens! Every time I think I'm making really good progress and becoming a consistent golfer, I have a round that goes really bad like that. I just get back out there and try not to let it bother me. My game usually comes right back. It's just a bad day mentally for whatever reason. We all have those days.
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#15 |
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I always find it hard to come back after I shoot a really good round and do the same. I think we over try and press ourselves. We get so pumped up we forget to relax and play one shot at a time. Just don't let it get in your head. I have even seen the Pros shoot an awesome round and then hack it up the next day. It's pretty much a mental game anyway and when we try to hard it backfires.
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#16 |
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#17 |
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I went and played 18 today. When I got to the course I was feeling really good, the last round I played I broke 80 for the first time in a very long time. My confidence was through the roof. I had a few warm up swings in the nets and felt really good.
Went to the first hole, a par 5 and bogied it. Didn't even deserve that, should have been a double or a tripple just got lucky with a chip in. Then it went down hill from there. I didn't hit one GIR, didn't get a single par and ended up shooting 104 for the day. In just a couple of days my game went from 79 to 104. No matter what I did I couldn't hit the ball right. Could it have been overconfidence? I was paired with a really annoying guy but normally that kind of thing doesn't affect my game. What do you do to come back from a round like that? I have mechanisms in place to cope when I mess up one hole but messing an entire round up like that just shoots your confidence. |
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#18 |
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Some great suggestions and this same exact thing just happened to me yesterday. I have no answers, but will be trying several of the suggestions you get. I have shot around 80 all year long, sometimes slightly above or below, but go out yesterday and knock down a sweet 101, lol. Honestly, I think a week off and some other distractions just might do the trick.
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#20 |
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