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
 
 
 

The Place of Confidence in Golf Putting

Year in and year out, the average golfer will miss about the same percentage of putts. However, there is considerable variation from day to day, and from week to week. Many golfers say, "I am putting well," or "I am putting poorly," when nothing other than chance is operating.

The mathematical truth is that it does not make much difference whether the putt drops or not on any given occasion. With any consistent amount of practice combined with any given method of stroking, the so-called poor luck and good luck will balance out over a period of time. If the stroke becomes better and if you practice more, the average will improve, of course, but poor luck and good luck, like the poor are always with us. It is essential that the golfer believe this. If he does not, the resulting experimentation will introduce variables, destroy confidence, and effectively block improvement.

Confidence is a "sometime" thing. On the days when one putts well, confidence grows automatically. On other days, confidence droops. Confidence is secondary. Confidence does not produce good putting. It is good or even lucky putting that produces confidence.

The only confidence that is worth anything is certain knowledge of how much skill you do have. This comes from much practice and periodic analyzing of records to see where you stand. Any other type of confidence is false confidence, as anyone can attest who has practiced excessively indoors and attained great confidence, only to find that the putts would not drop on the course.

Confidence can only continue to exist where there is a limited and attainable objective. No matter how good a putter one is, the further he is away from the hole the less confidence he has, and rightly so, for this is what experience has taught him.

What is the answer then? As always, it is the learning and practice of better methods. This automatically gives one confidence at greater and greater distances from the hole, until we get to the point at which confidence again fades.

The best confidence, then, is confidence in the value of putting practice.


 
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