7 Signs Your Course Management Is Costing You Strokes
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7 Signs Your Course Management Is Costing You Strokes

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7 Signs Your Course Management Is Costing You Strokes

Every golfer thinks it’s the slice off the first tee that ruins their score. That’s just not the case. Most of the time it’s not one bad swing. It’s a series of small, preventable decisions that slowly add strokes to your round. You might not realize it but your course management habits could be the reason you’re stuck at the same scoring plateau. Here are seven signs your course management mistakes are sabotaging your game.

You tee up in the same spot every time

Most golfers walk up to the tee and place the ball right in the middle. The side of the tee box you choose can significantly influence your shot shape and your margin for error.

For example, if you tee up on the left side, the angle encourages a fade or a left-to-right ball flight (for a right-handed player) and gives you more fairway to work with if you naturally fade the ball. If you tee up on the right side, you might be able to open up the hole to a draw or better avoid trouble on one side.

On doglegs, narrow fairways or when you’re trying to shape a specific shot, pay more attention to where you tee up the ball.

You play every hole the same way, every round

Trying to break 80/90/100 with the exact same strategy every time is a dead end. If you’re using the same clubs off the tee, attacking pins the same way and making the same mistake on that one hole you always double, something needs to change.

Play a round from the wrong tee boxes on purpose. Drop down to a forward tee or move back a set. You’ll be forced to see new angles, rethink your shot selection and challenge yourself. This strategy is a great way to break out of your patterns and positively impact your game.

You plan your shot without considering the next one

Golf is played one shot at a time but sometimes you still have to think ahead.

Too many players focus solely on making clean contact without considering the consequences that follow. Your current shot directly affects your angle, yardage and options for the next swing. If you blindly fire away with a 3-wood just because it fits the yardage, you might leave yourself blocked out, on a downslope or with a poor look at the pin.

Play with intention. Think about what kind of approach shot you want, what yardage, what lie and what angle. Then choose your current shot based on what gives you the best chance to set that up.

You can’t adjust when the plan falls apart

Your strategy is the blueprint. Course management is how you respond when things go wrong … and they will go wrong.

When your tee shot clips a tree or you pop one up, rigid players panic and force bad decisions. The best players know how to shift gears. That flexibility stems from developing control over tempo, maintaining balance in your swing and learning how to hit a variety of golf shots.

The more tools you have, the easier it is to adjust to adversity.

You’re overly cautious

Avoiding danger is smart but too much caution can backfire.

Golfers who aim away from trouble without thinking ahead often end up in worse positions: blocked by trees, short-sided or stuck with a bad angle. Playing safe doesn’t mean playing scared.

The key is identifying smart bailout zones. These are areas that give you room to miss but still leave you a chance to get on or near the green. Fear-based golf rarely leads to confident swings. Good course management finds the safest path to a playable next shot, not just the farthest point from the hazard.

You automatically pull the driver on every par-4 and par-5

Closer to the green usually means lower scores so your instinct to pull out the driver isn’t wrong. However, a driver is not always the right choice.

If the hole has no benefit to being close (like a severely narrow half wedge shot) or your driver is acting up that day, taking a more conservative club can lead to better scoring opportunities.

7. You don’t consider the pin location until it’s too late

Too many golfers ignore the way a pin location will impact their approach shot to the green.

A front-right pin? You probably don’t want to leave your tee shot on the same side. It brings short-siding and tricky chips into play. A back-left pin might reward a tee shot aimed down the right side of the fairway to open up the green.

Even just a glance from the tee box to spot the flag’s general position can help you avoid trouble and play to your strengths.

Final thoughts

The real damage to your scorecard isn’t always the occasional bad swing; it’s the decisions you make in between. Playing smarter doesn’t mean playing scared and it doesn’t mean sticking to a inflexible plan. It’s more about having awareness and adapting when needed.

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





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      David B

      11 months ago

      Good article but are you saying teeing up on the left side of the teebox is best for those who fade or hit the ball left to right? (For a right hander) Maybe I misread what you said or meant but if you fade or slice the ball you want to tee up on the right side of the teebox every time.

      Reply

      Bill

      11 months ago

      Concur with you David.

      Reply

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