By Chuck Evans
Special Contributor |
Most of us play golf with others and usually with players of the same
caliber. But as long as we play golf there will always be players that hit it
longer, straighter, hole more putts, better course management then we do.
I see the majority of players get intimidated by their playing partners and
then they try to do things they simply are not capable of.
One player "A" hits a comfortable 8 iron 150 yards and player "B" uses a 5
iron for the same distance. It won't take long for player "B" to start trying to
hit their irons farther - and because they are now out of their comfort zone
their scores and accuracy suffer.
A prime example of this is former British Open Champion Ian Baker-Finch. This
player was world class and was playing great golf when he won the British Open
but soon after, rumor has it, he thought he should be hitting it farther. His
quest turned into a nightmare, he completely "lost" the game that had won him
the Open. His accuracy was completely gone and he no longer had any idea where
the ball was going.
After struggling for a few years and not finding his way back he simply
retired from competitive golf rather then play golf like most of the golf world
does. When you have played golf at this high of a level it is extremely
difficult to come to terms that you have lost what you've had.
Can players hit the ball farther without giving up accuracy? Of course, but
there are limits to this. Once of those limits is the players physical make-up.
If you have the flexibility of Craig Stadler but are trying to swing like Davis
Love III then that is not going to work. You will have to rely on building speed
into what you do have.
Find a fitness trainer and work on your flexibility; see if you can add more
length to your swing but always under control. Think of it like this, your body
is the foundation for the golf stroke - just like a sturdy home must have a
study foundation - if you overload your foundation then structure will collapse.
So don't try to overload your physical structure build a precision golf stroke
based on what you can do - not what you can't do.
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