How to Break 85 - MISS BETTER, KNOW YOUR DISTANCE, AIM PROPERLY
Contact/email: matt@golfsidekick.com for collaboration/partnership opportunities . JMac is back on the Els Club - this was his second round in two days. We filmed this last year and it s interesting viewing. I intended to show you the difference if the high handicappr had a low handicapper hitting his greenside shots. Truth be told, JMac hits it in places that I can t get up and down from, which actually means, JMAC, START HITTING IT IN EASIER PLACES TO CHIP FROM! The Greatest Apparel and Accessories in Golf: https://waddaplayagolf.com DIVOT TOOL: https://bit.ly/2J208fd BALLMARKER: https://bit.ly/2QASj4y FB GROUP: https://www.facebook.com/groups/waddaplaya/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/golfsidekick/ URL: https://golfsidekick.com/ JMac hits a mean ball but we can see a few things: 1. He misses right with that 6 iron he bought. He hits it solid but it doesn t draw as much as he expects. 2. He short-sides himself often so he will have more trouble getting up and down to save the pars which will lower his score the most. 3. With more and more short game help inside 100 yards and practice prctice practice, he will be a single figure golfer. There is no doubt he will be shooting sub80 this year if I get my hands on him. 4. JMac needs to know his distances. His carry distances. Especially with wedges in hand. You cannot ever GUESS what distance you hit your clubs if yo want to slash your scores. You must KNOW the carry distance of all your clubs especially your wedges. On the final hole, we see what happens when the correct play conflicts with the play you feel is right even thought it is wrong all day. There was no commitment and then there is a fat shot, a thin shot or a shank. Then with the plan you had in mind, you pull it off, but it leaves a result that is terrible. Now on one hand that s good. You committed to a shitty plan, and it worked. And no commitment means a good plan can be shit too. So imagine combining the good plan and the commitment. That final hole would easily have been a bogey or a par. In the end, the tension caused by the cognitive dissonance in decision making, brought tension and a high score. JMac is a superb golfer. We just need him learning his shot shape and trusting it will work so he can hit better approaches that don t leave him in a short sided position. We need him to know his distances and that way he can make the ego-free decision and hit the right club in the situation. He has come a long way in a short space of time. I am going to see him in April and we should see some good golf out of him. Music by audionautix and bensound.com