What Good Golf Rounds Have In Common (That Bad Rounds Don’t)
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What Good Golf Rounds Have In Common (That Bad Rounds Don’t)

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What Good Golf Rounds Have In Common (That Bad Rounds Don’t)

You shoot 78 one day and 92 the next. Same course. Same clubs. Same swing. What changed? Most golfers think it’s their ball-striking. They hit it better on good days and worse on bad days.

That’s not it.

The difference between your good rounds and bad rounds isn’t how well you hit it. It’s what you do after you hit it. Good rounds and bad rounds are separated by decisions, not swings.

A note on golf statistics and your game

You’ve probably heard about Strokes Gained statistics and other analytics. These metrics are built on professional golfer data. At the PGA Tour level, players already have elite short games so their scoring variance comes from long-game performance. That’s why those stats show the long game matters most.

You’re not a professional golfer. If you’re lucky, you may have a few hours a week to practice. Your short game is inconsistent. Your swing changes take months to ingrain. For the average amateur, the math is different.

This article focuses on what moves the needle for recreational golfers with real-world constraints. The advice here applies a realistic strategy to your game.

The biggest difference between a good round and a bad round is how many holes you ruin. On good days, your worst hole is a double bogey. On bad days, you make a triple or worse. That one hole destroys your score. It’s not that you hit it worse all day. It’s that you made one catastrophic mistake and couldn’t recover.

Good rounds avoid disaster. You hit it in the trees, you punch out. You short-side yourself, you accept bogey. You’re in a bad spot, you take your medicine. Bad rounds are full of hero shots that don’t work. You try to thread it through the trees. You try to flop it over the bunker to a tight pin. You go for the green over water when you should lay up. One bad decision leads to another and suddenly you’re writing down an eight.

Good rounds avoid big numbers

The biggest difference between a good round and a bad round is how many holes you ruin. On good days, your worst hole is a double bogey. On bad days, you make a triple or worse. That one hole destroys your score. It’s not that you hit it worse all day. It’s that you made one catastrophic mistake and couldn’t recover.

Good rounds stay in play off the tee

You don’t need to hit fairways to shoot a good score but you need to stay in play. Good rounds are full of drives that might not be perfect but are playable. Bad rounds are full of drives that put you in jail. You’re reloading off the tee. You’re punching out sideways. You’re taking unplayable lies.

The difference isn’t swing quality. It’s target selection. On good days, you aim at the fat part of the fairway and give yourself room to miss. On bad days, you aim at tight lines and pay the price when you miss. Good rounds are built on smart driving, not perfect driving.

Good rounds have a short game

When you shoot a good score, it’s not because you hit every green. It’s because you saved par when you missed. You chipped it close. You made the putt. You turned a potential bogey into a par and you did it multiple times. Bad rounds are full of missed greens that turn into bogeys or worse because your short game disappeared.

The short game is the difference between shooting your handicap and shooting 10 over it. Good players get up and down. Average players don’t. It’s not about talent. It’s about practice and course management. If you’re not spending time on your short game, your bad rounds will always be worse than they need to be.

Good rounds have a game plan

On good days, you have a strategy for every hole. You know where you’re aiming off the tee. You know what club you’re hitting into the green. You know where you can miss and where you can’t.

Bad rounds are reactive. You get to the tee and figure it out. You hit driver because that’s what you always hit. You aim at the flag because it’s there.

Good rounds are played with intention. You’re not just hitting shots. You’re executing a plan. That plan might be conservative but it’s a plan. You’re playing to your strengths and avoiding your weaknesses.

Good rounds stay present

The mental game separates good rounds from bad rounds more than anything else. On good days, you’re focused on the shot in front of you. On bad days, you’re thinking about the double bogey three holes ago or the birdie putt you missed. You’re not present. You’re somewhere else and your score reflects it.

Good rounds are played one shot at a time. You hit it, you deal with it, you move on. Bad rounds are full of emotional swings. You get angry. You press. You try to get it all back on one hole. That never works.

The simple truth

Good rounds aren’t about hitting it better. They’re about managing your game better. Avoiding big numbers. Staying in play. Getting up and down. Having a plan. Staying present. The difference between your best and worst rounds is smaller than you think. It’s just a few better choices.

For You

For You

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Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

PGA of America Golf Professional Brendon Elliott is an award-winning coach and golf writer. Check out his weekly Monday column on RG.org, and to learn more about Brendon, visit OneMoreRollGolf.com.

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

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Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott

Brendon Elliott





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      Andrew

      3 months ago

      Sometimes it’d just luck and variance. One day the bad drive hits a tree and returns to the fairway, the next day you get a bad bounce in the fairway and the ball stops next to a tree trunk. One day you hole everything inside 8ft and are 80% for up and downs, the next day you lip out and only make 30% of saves. One day your thinned drive happens on a downhill hole and you barely lose any distance, the next day it happens on an uphill hole and you’re 50 yards back.

      Reply

      Greg

      3 months ago

      Andrew’s correct , I assembled 16 holes of solid golf … Par 5 decimated my score . The Drive , 3m off Friday in good position . The 3w again found the middle of the fairway 120m out, yet a singular bounce on rock hard slope kicked it sideways into the Lake
      Back onto obscured green and several Putts .
      The strategy was good , as was first two . Left was the side to be avoiding Bunkers .

      Execution of theirs shot pulled the ball but wasn’t , terminal , until that bounce..

      Sometimes for all the, planning . Fortune , may be not in favour .

      If that had fallen , an early 80s score was certain. Not bad for 18 hcp.

      Reply

      Krauter

      3 months ago

      It applies to all golfers, even the pros. As Clint Eastwood told me back in ’73, “A man’s got to know his limitations”.

      Reply

      Mark R

      3 months ago

      Brendon, first off, all rounds of golf are good. It’s that some rounds are better than others.

      Keeping the ball in play and avoiding any blow-up holes. Have a course management plan. Hero shots for the amateur golfer normally result in doubles and triples.

      Reply

      Chuck Zirkle

      3 months ago

      I have only played two rounds since Oct 8th and have not been able to practice. The two rounds that I did play were in the low 100s. Lack of practice and play, plus my swing is way out of alignment and tempo. Have the right equipment, just need to get the Drs to release me to swing full time. Had another medical procedure two weeks ago, this Thursday. Meeting with PCP tomorrow and surgeons PA on Thursday hoping to get the green light. Did cash in on the Titleist 3/4 Prov1s today.

      Reply

      Rick Stocker

      3 months ago

      I’m thinking this might not necessarily apply to big handicappers like me..One day I hit my irons well, then the next day I’m topping and hitting fat. That equaled bogey golf one day, double bogey the next.

      Reply

      John

      3 months ago

      Good article! My way of thinking on the course is,(It’s all about the next shot). You can hit a beauty off the tee and hit a fat shot on the next, or duff your tee shot but smash a beauty to the green. I don’t get upset with a bad shot, it all evens out. It is what it is.

      Reply

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