53 Golf Secrets
How To Begin To Improve Your Golf Game
You Must Capitalize Upon Past Experiences
Why Practice Is a Necessity
How to Overcome Inertia
How To Make Time and Place Work For You
How To Accelerate Emotional Drive
How To Avoid Conditions That Kill Interest
Stimulate Interest Through Your Own Golf Crowd
How To Stimulate Practice Through Self-Competition
How To Use Variety To Maintain Interest
How To Avoid Habits That Kill Interest
For Greater Pleasure and Improvement, Keep Golf Records
How To Keep and Use Golf Records
The Key To Accuracy
The Meaning of "Golf Bugs"
Handle Compensatory Adjustments With Care
Why Golf Lessons Fail
What To Do About Idiosyncracies
How To Make Faith Work For You
No Transfer of Training
A Tip On How To Remember
Understanding Trial and Error
Using Attention To Speed Learning
How To Practice Remedial Golf
Don't Practice Strengths
When Practice Does Not Make Perfect
How To Eliminate Stubborn Errors of Form
How To Eliminate Psychological Errors
How To Come Out of a Slump
How To Gain Confidence
How To Handle Anger
Beware of Golfing Masochism
How To Develop and Harness Compulsions
How To Practice Golf Thinking
Make Universals Out of Particulars
How To Destroy Your Golfing Delusions
How To Handle a Gambling Shot
How To Avoid the Most Missed Shot in Golf
Computing Distance
To Save Strokes, Avoid Ego Involvements
"To Think or Not To Think"
Taking Off The Pressure
How To Apply the Pressure
Do Not Rationalize Failure
Be Realistic About Putting
The Place of Confidence in Putting
Touch Versus Direction in Putting
The Truth About Carpet Putting
The Psychological Putting Stance
How To Use Finesse Putting
Putting Slumps and What To Do About Them
Longer Drives and How To Get Them
53rd and Final Secret
 
 
 

Don't Practice Golf Strengths

There are a number of errors of practice which lead to inefficiency. A common one occurs when a golfer practices the very shot with which he has the greatest skill.

How could such an apparently obvious mistake be prevalent? Here are a few reasons:

  1. Because a golfer can make a given shot, he derives more pleasure from practicing it than a shot which continually causes him anguish.

  2. He may not have the courage to make a public display of his weak shots.

  3. The good shot he is practicing may have been a weak shot at one time, and he has allowed a good idea to become a somewhat unreasonable fixed idea through simple habit.

  4. Poor form can force a golfer to practice strengths excessively and incorrectly. It is possible for a person to get good results by excessive practice of a weak technique. I saw an example of this by a player who was very successful in using lofted clubs close to the green, when a less lofted club was indicated. Although he did very well with his shot, he attained this by excessive practice which could have been better apportioned to his putting, which was only fair.

    Practice alone is insufficient. It is inextricably tied to form. If the form is poor, practice will hopelessly fixate that form. Each form has its upper limits beyond which practice runs into a disproportionately low improvement for a given amount of time.

    It is vital, therefore, that the golfer undertake a ceaseless quest for good form, and get it as early in his instruction as he can.

  5. He may make the error of not understanding the law of diminishing returns. This simply means that it can be dangerous to try to become "too good" with any given club. There comes a point in every shot at which additional practice does not produce an equivalent improvement in the score.

    A concrete example of the application of this is the following: The problem to be solved is that when you are off the green you are taking three and four to get down instead of two. There are several solutions. With the first, you can practice putting until you learn to get down in one. With the second, you can practice chipping until you are so accurate that it always leaves a "gimme." The third, which is the most efficient, would be to practice chipping and putting together until you could reasonably be expected to go down in two. The first two "solutions" would require excessive practice.

    Billy Casper and Paul Runyan are two examples of golfers who have drawn big dividends from a selective investment of practice time by concentrating on their short game. However, this does not mean that the short game should be practiced ad infinitum. After a good short game has been stabilized, an analysis of your play may well show diminishing returns from such practice, and the time will then have come to attack other weaknesses that are revealed to be more costly.

  6. Still another common error, which we have indicated previously by implication, is that a person is not practicing his true weakness. He may be practicing what is only apparently a weakness. To establish the weakness with the first priority on his time, it is necessary for him to analyze his records.

 

 
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