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#21 |
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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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#22 |
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Thanks for all the advice guys. I went to the range last night and went through 3 buckets of balls, just drove the first bucket to release frustration. Once I started working I realised I was lifting my head to quick and not making very good contact.
I guess I'm just a perfectionist. I like everything to just work. I used to be our opening batter in the local cricket team and averaged 70 over 4 seasons. One season I averaged 65 and also made the most ducks out of anyone in a year so I know any sport has it's ups and downs. We just have to develop methods and mechanisms to come back from it. |
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#23 |
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#24 |
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unless I'm playing the next day, I sulk for a day and really beat myself up over it. Probably not the best or even right answer but it's what I do, can't help it. After I'm done it's like hitting the refresh button and it's back to the range to try and work on with whatever was not working for me at that time. If it's a total CF of a round then I'm in for a loooong range session.
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#25 |
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#26 |
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#27 |
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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. |
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#28 |
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#29 |
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If you look at scores on the PGA tour for almost any tournament you will see a pro or two that has shot the odd 82 or 85 or something when they are capable of shooting 65, that is pretty much equivalent to what you are talking about, a 20 shot swing. An amateur - even a good one- that is used to scoring in the low to mid 80s or occasionally breaking 80 is going to shoot 100 once in a while or they either aren't being honest or they aren't challenging themselves in any meaningful way by playing new courses or playing a different tee or a different club setup.
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#30 |
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Man, That seems to happen more than anyone realizes. But some of my best rounds have always followed my worst. Stay positive and try and go 79-104-79. Also when a round for me seems to go from bad to worse. That is when I usually start thinking of the round as a good practice session. Hit extra shots, putt and chips a few extra times (If you have time and the course isn't crowded). Stuff like that.
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