By Chuck Evans
Special Contributor |
Some golf
courses are suited for a particular type of player while other types of
players have problems with them.
If you have played this game long enough you know what I mean.
How many times have you gone out, played a round of golf, and played pretty
well, only to go out a few days later and shoot 15 to 20 strokes higher on a
different course. If you're stroke
mechanics were good enough to produce a score of say 75 then why do you go
out a few days later and shoot 90?
It could be that the course doesn't fit your eye or your particular shot
pattern. If your normal ball flight is a slight fade but the course is designed
for players that draw the ball you'll have problems. The same thing is true for
players that hit the ball high and then they go to a golf course that requires
you to hit it low.
So it is not always your mechanics.
That's also the reason why Tour players
pick and choose how many events they play each year. Outside of the Majors,
these players typically will only play events on golf courses that suit their
game. While most of us will never have the opportunity to play in a Major we can
however still choose to play courses that fit our eye, and our game.
Yeah, it's macho to go out and play the longest, tightest, toughest course we
can find but that may not be in our best interest. Most of the time it will be a
humbling experience instead of an enjoyable one.
Yes golf is a sport, golfers are athletes, and among other things golfers
supposed to be fun - and not endure some form of medieval punishment!
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