How to play better golf

3 Tips For Better Management your Golf Shots. Play better golf.

Play better golf. 3 Tips For Better Management your Golf Shots.

Play better golf: there are a lot of angles you can chose for improving your score and hcp in golf, where some are easier than others.

Course Management is something many amateurs overlook almost completely, where small changes to the way you play can give a solid return in your overall score. You can play more or less the same golf, with the same swing and technique, with great and bad shots and all in between, but if you implement better course management, your average score will drop.

Tip #1: Play your golf shots towards the center of the green.

If we have a look at statistics in golf, even for low hcp players, we quickly realize that missing the green leave most players with at least a 40-50%+ chance of using more than 2 shots from there to get in the hole. Now if we compare that to putting, the percentages for using more than 2 shots are drastically lower. Many players will tend to be in the 8-15% chance for a 3-putt (category), while 1 putting for birdie is usually at 1 birdie per round or less ( 1/18 =aprox 5-6% or less).

When taking these stats into consideration it becomes clear that if your goal is to play overall better golf and score lower, you want to make sure you hit as many greens as possible, and the simplest way to hit more greens without improving your actual swing or performance, is to adjust where you aim; Going more for the center of the green much more often, to ensure you have the maximum chance of keeping it on the green as much as possible and then have a 85-90% chance of 2 putt instead of a bunker shot or chip that would leave most players with a 50% chance, or less, for getting down in two.

Lets take an example:

– Player A has a 10 hcp and hits 5 greens in regulation on average golf course by going for all the pins on every hole, often costing him to miss the green when the pin is located closer to the side of the green, or even closer to a bunker. That gives him 12 holes where he has around a 40-50% chance on average of making up and down in two. This is costing him approximately 6-8 shots per round because of missing the green (sometimes more) and not getting it down in 2 from there. In a 3 round tournament that would mean these green misses cost him at least 18-24 shots in total (and that’s with a 40-50% up and down rate from outside the green).

– Player B is also a 10 hcp player, but he is playing very conservative with his approach shots and irons towards the green, always aiming for the center of the green, and taking a club that goes the distance towards the center of the green. In comparison Player B is hitting 4 more greens per round because of this decision and only has 9 holes where he needs to make up and down at a 40-50% chance of 2 from there. With the same short game statistics as player A, that will leave player B with around 4-5 shots more than wished for because of missed greens and making 2 from there with only 40-50% of the instances. Over the course of 3 rounds in a tournament, that would mean player B is getting 12-15 bogeys because of missed greens.

When taking these two players in comparison we see that player B would use 2-3 shots less per round on average than player A, which is a trade in player A uses to have a few percent more chance of birdie on a couple of holes here and there, by going for all the pins. Now over the course of a 3 round tournament this would mean a shot advantage for Player B with 6-9 shots, where you can subtract 1-1,5 more birdies for player A, compared to player B.

Player B with exactly the same hcp, playing stats has been able to beat player A in the 3 round tournament with 5-7,5 shots on average.

If we were to translate that into hcp, player B would drop down at least 2 in hcp compared to player A due to his decision of always going for the center of the green, making him a 7,5-8 hcp, instead of 10.

Taking this into consideration when playing golf will help many golfers improve scores simply by making a different decision when attempting to hit the green. Putting stats for getting down in two will always beat chipping and bunker stats for the same. This is why even the pros tend to often aim more at the center of the green because they know how important even just 1 shot less per round could be for the total of a tournament. In many PGA events that could be the difference of winning a tournament or coming T10-T20.

3 Tips For Better Management your Golf Shots. Play better golf.

Tip #2: Don’t over estimate your Golf Shots distance with your irons. Learn to know your distances better and get the right distance with golf shots approach on a more common basis.

Many amateurs, if not most, at any golf course have a high percentage of their approach shots being short of the green. That is one difference you will see with pro players, they are very good at getting the distance right. One reason for this is obviously more steady ball contact, but another is also that they don’t over estimate what they can do with a golf club. They KNOW how far it goes, and they play it to the distances they are comfortable with for each golf club.

For the next couple of rounds you play, try to note down how often you come up short of the green compared to long of the green, and notice if even shots that are struck all right on the face, still come up short.

One way of dealing with this is to have a session with a teaching professional at a Trackman to actually measure your average carry distance, to get a clear picture of how far you actually hit each golf club.

Another thing to keep in mind is choosing a club that you don’t need to hit more than 90% power on to reach the center of the green, thus ensuring that you can comfortably reach far enough without “giving it the little extra”. Swinging too hard not only tends to make contact worse, which makes you lose distance, but also in many cases simply doesn’t go any farther in any case because players tense up too much and lose swing speed instead of gaining it. Therefor a good controlled tempo and rhythm is key for hitting more greens, and center of greens, which should be the goal here.

Lastly you want to make sure you measure the distance to the pin correctly, and then adjust from there towards the center of the green when choosing your approach distance and club. Getting a range finder, either laser or GPS is highly recommended as it will help take the guessing out of the picture, or the needing to walk the distances to closest measure point, which often can be inaccurate in any case.

Follow these guidelines, and you will hit more greens, and more often get it down in 2 from there.

3 Tips For Better Management your Golf Shots. Play better golf.

Tip #3: Keep the golf ball more in play and hit more fairways by eliminating one side of the fairway.

Many good players through the history have played golf by eliminating either the left or the right side as a possible miss. Let’s take Ben Hogan for instance. He was able to develop a swing where he could hit as hard through the ball as he wanted without missing it left.

To me this means that when he played, he knew that if he was to miss, he would be a lot more likely to miss it right than he would be to miss it left. By playing that way, he could play holes by aiming down the left of the fairway, slightly or not, and then have more space on the right-hand side for a miss if it should happen.

Many other great players if not most pros tend to do the same. They know where their most likely miss will be, and they play golf by giving themselves more space on that side of the fairway when they have the chance.

So following this reasoning I would encourage you to try and reach a level with your game off the tee to practice and improve until you have as far as possible eliminated one side, and then from there play golf with that in mind, giving you more space to miss with, towards the side that you have the tendency to miss the most

If you hook the ball when you miss, and rarely fade or slice it, play towards the right side of the fairway when you can, giving more space on the left for a possible draw or hook, should it happen.

If you play with a fade or slice miss, play down the left of the fairway when you can, and give yourself more room to have possible misses still land safe on the right of the fairway, or semi rough.

Conclusion

I hope these tips will help you play better golf, and that you will try them out and see for yourself how it can make a good difference on your score and hcp over time. If you have other tips in mind for better golf course management leave them in a comment below.

Tiago Cruz is 3rd on Ballesteros Course in Quinta do Vale

Tiago Cruz 1º Quinta do Vale Classic

Tiago Cruz

Tiago Cruz

Tiago Cruz keeps strong at the Portugal Pro Golf Tour. He was for the second straight tournament the best Portuguese and although we do not known where he stands now in the rankings of this international Portuguese tour, he is likely to hold or even improved his 3rd place from the last update, one month ago.

In the 1st Quinta do Vale Classic, in Castro Marim, the former two-time national champion was 3rd place, with 68 strokes, 4 under the Par of the course designed by the late Seve Ballesteros.

Cruz was only 1 shot short of Englishman Ben Parker and Swiss Marco Iten, who could only play the title-winning play-off two days later, due to inclement weather in the Algarve.

Marco Iten Wins the Quinta do Vale Classic

Marco Iten – Winner

Marco Iten won on the first hole of the play-off and pocketed €2,000 of the €10,000 total prize Money at stake, for his first title at the Portugal Pro Golf Tour.

This second tournament of the 7th Swing of the 2017/2018 season seemed doomed from the start and was contested with high winds and heavy rain.

It was planned for the Castro Marim Golf & Country Club, but was moved shortly before to the “neighboring” Quinta do Vale Golf Resort.

And then came the bad weather that whipped the field and led the organization to sanction only the first round results. The second started but had to be canceled later on. It was the first time that this happened in a tour where the weather conditions are not usually an impeachment to golf, even in the Winter.

For Tiago Cruz the 3rd place was positive. He came from a 10th place in the 1st Quinta de Cima Classic, where he had tought times on the greens, but he did not face the same problem in Quinta do Vale, mainly because he managed “to hit more fairways and put the ball closer to the hole.”

Quinta de Cima Classic is a longer course and there were not so many birdie possibilities. Here there are six holes of Par-5 and in four of them we can reached the green in 2 shots. In some of them we played a 9-iron or even less,” said the BiG player, who converted 4 of his 5 birdies in those Par-5s (holes 4, 7, 13 and 17).

On the other hand, “the course was in good shape, especially if we take into account the storm. I liked to see that the lakes were clean and the greens were a bit slow, but the ball was rolling well», he added to the Tee Times Golf.

There were 71 players in the 1st Quinta of Vale Classic, 12 of whom Portuguese, and they had the following scores:

Tiago Cruz, 68 (-4)
11th (tied) Ricardo Santos, 71 (-1)
11th (tied) João Ramos, 71 (-1)
11º (tied) Tomás silva, 71 (-1)
19th (tied) Miguel Gaspar, 73 (+1)
23º (tied) Tomás Bessa, 75 (+3)
37º (tied) Hugo Santos, 76 (+4)
44º (tied) Pedro Figueiredo, 77 (+5)
44th (tied) Tiago Rodrigues, 77 (+5)
44º (tied) Filipe Lima, 77 (+5)
60th (tied) António Sobrinho, 80 (+8)
68º Alexandre Abreu, 84 (+12)

The Portugal Pro Golf Tour travels now from the Quinta do Vale Golf Resort to the Amendoeira Golf Resort, in the municipality of Sines.

Hugo Ribeiro / Tee Times Golf

Gary Player Course in India shows game improvement in Ricardo Melo Gouveia

Ricardo Melo Gouveia

Ricardo Melo Gouveia

Ricardo Melo Gouveia

What a difference a year makes in Ricardo Melo Gouveia. By the middle of March 2017 he had played seven tournaments and had only made two cuts, with a T-23rd at Abu Dhabi and a T-62nd at the Tschwane Open.

In 2018 everything changed for the better. Last week he was 4th after 36 holes at the Tshwane Open in South Africa, finishing T-29th, and last week he led the Hero Indian Open after 9 holes, closing in T-16th, equaling his best standings this season, in December at the Mauritius Open.

Perhaps the most important statistic of all is that in nine tournaments played he made the cut in six – and the last three in a row.

Ricardo Melo Gouveia had not yet gone through three consecutive European Tour tournaments this season playing the four days. He had not done so since the end of 2017 and the consistency of making a lot of cuts was one of his strengths in 2015, when he became the first Portuguese to become Challenge Tour #1, and in 2016, when he was the first Portuguese to qualify for the DP World Tour Championship.

Of course in the European Tour, the main Tour, it’s not enough to simply make the cut, and that is why, despite these positive results, the Team Portugal star is “only” the 114th in the Race to Dubai, knowing that only the top-100 at the end of the year retains the card to compete among the European elite.

But going through a lot of cuts builds the confidence that he will sooner or later break through, as Matt Wallace did in India.

Matt Wallace - Winner - by Getty Images

Matt Wallace – Winner – by Getty Images

Until last week, the Englishman had not achieved better than a T-19th in the 2018 European Tour (in Qatar), but he was the one to leave New Delhi with a second European Tour career title, to add to the one he got last May, at the Open de Portugal at Morgado Golf Resort.

Wallace (rounds of 69, 70, 60 and 68), 27, beated Andrew “Beef” Johnson (72+66+73 +66) in a play-off, after a tie for 277, 11 under Par of the DLF Golf & Country Club.

“Congratulations to Matt Wallace for finishing at the top,” Ricardo Melo Gouveia wrote on Twitter, adding that, for himself, “it was a positive week,” showing “good signs.”

The Quinta do Lago Pro scored 288 (Par), with rounds of 69, 73, 71 and 75, and collected his highest prize of the season – €18,016, out of the total of €1.4 million at stake. Wallace pocketed €235,495.

A roller coaster performance that took him briefly to the lead after 9 holes, to the top-10 after 18 and 54 holes, and to the final T-16th, in a “tricky course”, as he wrote in social media. A course that last year had been considered one of the toughest on the European Tour.

“I feel that my game is slowly getting back to the level I want,” the ACP Golf player told Tee Times Golf, after showing in India a more complete game, with na average 1.7 putts per green in regulation and 83% driving accuracy.

“I started working with a new putting coach at the end of last year, Paul Hurrion, who also works with Danny Willett (the 2016 Masters champion), we made some important changes and I feel a lot of improvements,” added the Portuguese #1.

Another progress in Ricardo Melo Gouveia was the way he dealt with the test of the course. Fortunately, the weather was nice – “four very similar days, with 30 degrees every day and relatively slow wind” – because the playing conditions were challenging enough.

“This course is quite penalizing and this year the owner wanted to change some things in the setup to make us suffer,” said the Portuguese golfer from Srixon.

Matt Wallace’s caddy, Dave, agreed. “He told me that it was setup sometimes like the U.S. Open. You can hit great shots, but it can run into the rough or slope.”, said the Portuguese Open champion.

The DLF Golf & Country Club, designed by the great Gary Player opened in 2015. It is a tremendous challenge, but Ricardo Melo Gouveia appreciated it: “It was in excellent conditions, with the greens fast and rolling very consistent. A very penalizing course, with plenty of water, shrubs and greens quite undulating.”

Under these circumstances, the players knew that there would be bad holes. The champion, Matt Wallace, had a double-bogey and 9 bogeys in four rounds.

Also Ricardo Melo Gouveia did not avoid 2 double-bogeys, adding them 12 bogeys, compensated by 16 birdies. It was a constant struggle and the Portuguese London resident showed the mental strength to reverse negative trends.

A good example was the last round: it started badly, with 3 bogeys in 6 holes, but then came 2 birdies. Another dark series of 4 bogeys in a row, but then finished the round with the last 5 holes played in 2 under Par in the final and most difficult strech of the course.

The Portuguese Olympic athlete may have progressed technically, but he also showed the guts that were his strenth in his first two seasons as a professional.

“I knew it would be a difficult week on a mental level and I would have to have a lot of patience and a good attitude. I feel like I’ve been good in that departement and that has certainly helped me to get back after tough times,” he said.

“At the end of last year I also started working more seriously on the mental side with David Lewellyn (his longtime coach) and Tiago Boto. I’m slowly getting the rewards of that work and I feel I’m on the right track,” he concluded.

Ricardo Melo Gouveia will only be competing again on the European Tour from April 12 at the Spanish Open and is likely to lose some places in the Race to Dubai, after climbing from 133rd to 114th, but with his confidence growing up, he knows that spring can bring him back to the European top-100.

Hugo Ribeiro / Tee Times Golf