3 Things I’d Tell Anyone Trying To Become A Scratch Golfer
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3 Things I’d Tell Anyone Trying To Become A Scratch Golfer

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3 Things I’d Tell Anyone Trying To Become A Scratch Golfer

Getting to scratch is not about playing perfect golf. The more low rounds you have, the more you realize it’s about damage control and consistency. The difference between being a single-digit golfer and a scratch golfer is that the margin for error gets smaller.

If you want to get to scratch, you have to start looking at certain parts of your game differently. Some shots that feel acceptable as a 7-handicap are not acceptable when you’re trying to shoot even par.

Here are the three things I’d tell anyone trying to get there.

Your chipping has to be better than you think

As you get better at golf, you have to look at your chipping with more discretion.

When you’re trying to break 90, getting the ball anywhere on the green is fine. When you’re trying to break 80, leaving yourself 20 feet after a chip might feel like a decent result.

When you’re trying to play scratch golf, that 20-footer matters a lot more.

You may need that putt to save par and keep the round at even.

I don’t think golfers are always honest enough about their chipping. Ask yourself if you can get it close from a tight lie, do you know how to handle the rough, are you choosing the right club, how much distance are you leaving yourself? Start tracking this and looking at your chipping with a higher standard.

But scratch-level chipping is not about the occasional great chip. It’s about not wasting shots from around the green.

You don’t have to chip everything to tap-in range. Even the pros don’t do that. But if your normal miss around the green leaves you a putt you probably won’t make, your short game is not as good as it needs to be.

Cross-Handed Chipping

Approach shots put pressure on everything

Playing scratch golf is considerably easier when you hit greens in regulation.

That sounds obvious but it becomes more and more important the better you get. When you miss greens, you’re asking your short game and putting to save you all day. That’s a tough way to shoot even par and you’ll feel like you are continually coming from behind.

Approach shots carry a lot of pressure because they decide what kind of hole you are going to have.

Hit the green and you probably have a pretty stress-free par. Hit it close and you have a real birdie chance. Miss it in the wrong spot and suddenly you’re trying to hit a perfect chip just to save par.

If you want to become a scratch golfer, you have to practice approach shots with more pressure than just beating balls on the range. Give yourself targets. Change clubs. Go through your routine and make that iron practice as close to what golf feels like as you can.

You get smarter the longer you’re around the game

The longer you play golf, the more you understand that the game is not just about the swing. You start to see things earlier. You start to know what a lie is going to do and how the wind is going to impact your shot.

You get smarter at playing golf.

For example:

  • A ball sitting down in the rough probably won’t spin so the middle of the green may be the right play.
  • A downhill chip is not the time to get cute. Get it on the green and avoid the second chip.
  • Into the wind, swinging harder usually makes the ball spin more and climb.
  • If the pin is short-sided, 20 feet past it may be the smart target.
  • From trouble, getting back in position is often better than trying the hero shot.

You can practice these situations but a lot of it gets easier the longer you’re around the game and the more shots you’ve seen. The point here is to stick with it and learn from every round; don’t repeat the same mistakes.

Final thoughts

Becoming a scratch golfer takes time and discipline but I think the process gets overcomplicated. Start with small goals and check them off one at a time. Become a student of the game and keep picking away at lower scores.

There is, of course, a physical component that makes getting to scratch easier for some players. But if you’re serious about getting there, these three things should help.

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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





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      Jim

      18 seconds ago

      Glad to see an article that actually tells you how to improve, not simply to just get better

      Reply

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