7 Beginner Golf Myths That Make The Game Harder Than It Needs To Be
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7 Beginner Golf Myths That Make The Game Harder Than It Needs To Be

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7 Beginner Golf Myths That Make The Game Harder Than It Needs To Be

Golf is a difficult game and sometimes the advice that gets tossed around makes it even harder. For beginners, distinguishing between valuable tips and harmful ones can be a challenge. Here are seven beginner golf myths that are likely making your entry into the sport more difficult than it needs to be.

Myth 1: Start with the cheapest clubs you can find

Being smart with your money when purchasing a beginner set is a great idea. However, if you go out and simply find the cheapest set available, you’re doing yourself a disservice.

In my teaching career, I saw this exact mistake cause golfers to quit.

I’d much rather see you play with a set of used clubs, fitted to your needs and of decent quality. A brand-new, shiny bargain set that will never help you succeed.

Myth 2: You need all 14 clubs to start

Speaking of cheap clubs, I’ll go ahead and add this statement as well.

I’d rather see a beginner with five or seven clubs that work for their game than a full set of 14.

All 14 clubs won’t come into play until you’re making consistent contact with the ball. To be honest, I still only carry 13 clubs, and that’s enough for my game.

Myth 3: Practice makes perfect

In reality, bad practice can make you much worse at golf. Repeating the same flawed motion over and over only locks in the problem.

The key is to take your time on the driving range. Focus on fundamentals and practice with a purpose. Taking a few lessons and asking your instructor for a specific practice routine is one of the smartest moves you can make.

The biggest mistake many beginners make is rushing through practice time and not allowing themselves time to learn in the process.

Myth 4: You can figure it all out on YouTube

I love YouTube as a tool for getting better at golf.

But you need to be smart about what you’re watching. One video will tell you to keep your head down and your left arm straight, the next will say that’s a mistake.

The problem is that YouTube isn’t tailored to your swing, at least not yet. Early on, you don’t even know what would be tailored to your game. A few in-person lessons can help you identify your real issues. Once you know, for example, that weight shift or an open clubface is your main problem, you can find targeted videos that help.

YouTube Golf May

Myth 5: Any old golf ball will do

When you lose three balls in the woods off the first tee, it makes total sense to just grab the cheapest balls you can find. I get that.

As your game improves, consistency matters. The right golf ball can add several yards off the tee and give you more control around the greens. When you’re ready, take the time to find one that fits your swing and style of play. There are still reasonably priced golf balls that offer strong performance on the course.

Myth 6: Keep your head down

Focusing on the golf ball is good but as your shoulders rotate through impact, your head has to move with your body. If your only swing thought is “keep your head down,” you’ll limit your rotation and hurt your contact.

Instead, maintain your posture through impact, keep your spine angle steady and let your head move naturally as part of the turn. Watch professional golfers and then take a video of yourself. You’ll notice that they are rotating around a fixed center but none of them looks like their eyes are glued to the ground from start to finish.

Myth 7: Scratch golf should be the goal

Chasing a single handicap number too early takes the fun out of the game. Golf is a lifelong journey and just when you think you have it figured out, the sport will humble you. Don’t get so caught up in the numbers at this stage in the game. You’ll miss the point of what we all love about the game.

Instead, focus on skill-building and small wins. The scores will come naturally.

Final thoughts

As a new golfer, what were some other myths that you heard that made your learning process harder than it needed to be?

For You

For You

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Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Britt Olizarowicz is a scratch golfer, former teaching professional and one of MyGolfSpy’s leading voices on equipment testing and golf performance. She has spent more than 15 years working at private clubs in New York and Florida and now specializes in translating test data and swing mechanics into practical advice for everyday golfers. Britt began playing at age 7 and has never left the game. When she’s not writing, you’ll find her on the course, playing pickleball, cooking, running or out on the boat with her family.

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz

Brittany Olizarowicz





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      Fake

      10 months ago

      It’s funny. I play a full 14 club bag because…well, more is better and I bought a 4H that I rarely hit because it was on sale. I also have a 60 degree wedge that I don’t hit often.

      All of that to say, I don’t need 14 clubs.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      10 months ago

      “Myth 6: Keep your head down”

      The ACTUAL myth is that that’s meant literally. It is NOT. It’s meant as part of the “feel ain’t real” maxim. If you *feel* like you’re keeping your head down, you’ll keep it down through *impact*, not through the finish. And that’s where it matters. Through impact. Staying *in* the shot.

      The swing thought “keep my head down” has helped me enormously in staying IN the shot through impact which usually leads to solid contact and a good shot (I’m still picturing in my mind’s eye a 5I I hit in June from 158 yards into a stiff headwind, and off the right a bit; I can still see the ball’s flight; I can still see it ending up 2 feet from the hole; birdie).

      “Keep your head down” is meant to be applied through impact, not literally through the entire swing. THIS distinction needs to be made, because it’s great advice when it’s NOT taken literally.

      Reply

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