Scratch By 50: Forget The Flagstick
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Scratch By 50: Forget The Flagstick

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Scratch By 50: Forget The Flagstick

Graham Averill will turn 50 this year and he’s freaking out. Instead of buying a motorcycle or getting a tattoo, he’s decided to try to get really, really good at golf. He started this project as a 13 handicap attempting to reach scratch in a year. Welcome to his midlife crisis. 

Is there any more satisfying shot in golf than hitting a wedge shot to two feet from the pin for a tap-in birdie? 

That’s not a rhetorical question. I legitimately want to know because I don’t think I’ve ever done it. Usually, I take a gap wedge from 125 yards out, take dead aim for the pin and leave it short or just wide right, then try to pull off a bump-and-run to scramble for par. Most of the time, I walk away with a bogey. 

I have the data to prove it, too. Look at the numbers and you can see that approach shots have become my achilles heel. Over my last 10 rounds, I’ve lost an average of 3.7 shots per round to a scratch golfer on approach shots from 50 yards and beyond. I’m only hitting 50 percent of greens in regulation from 50 to 99 yards. Scratch golfers are hitting 77 percent from that distance. And my percentages only get worse further from the hole.

So, yeah, I want to know: What does it feel like to throw a dart with your wedges? Is it awesome? I bet it’s awesome. Sam Hahn, my golf life coach, wants me to stop trying. 

“You’re aiming at pins and you’re not accurate enough yet to aim at pins,” Hahn says. “You have to forget the pin is even there and try to put your ball in the middle of the green.” 

He went on to tell me about a study that compared scores of golfers who played rounds with pins in the holes and rounds with no pins at all. I couldn’t find the study online but Hahn says every golfer improved their scores when the pins were removed. Aiming for the center of the green is basic course strategy but it’s easier said than done. It’s like when someone tells you not to think about a zebra. 

You’re going to think about a freaking zebra. 

But I’ve played four rounds since my last column and I’ve gotten better at ignoring the pins with each round. I just finished playing 18 at my home course here in the mountains of North Carolina and I shot 80, my best score to date. It was a good day. I kept the ball in the fairway, made some bad decisions when I rushed through a couple of holes as I was playing through some foursomes, but played straightforward safe golf. And the biggest difference was my strategy on approach shots. I aimed for the fat part of the greens when I was beyond 75 yards out and I hit 10 out of 13 par-4 and par-5 greens in regulation. That’s the 77-percent GIR rate scratch golfers achieve.

I didn’t always land the ball in the spot I was aiming at and I had some pretty long lag putts.  But shooting for the center of the green minimized the risk of my miss. Take a look at the dispersion rate of your various wedges and then put the center of that dispersion in the center of the green. It’s like a big safety net that hopefully takes most of the danger out of play. That’s how it worked for me today. 

I didn’t sink any amazing putts so there were no birdies and I didn’t have a single one-putt situation, either, because my average putt distance was significantly further from the hole than usual. (Hahn said my putting metrics might shift with this new strategy.) Ultimately, it was boring golf where I found myself safely on the green with reasonable two-putt scenarios in front of me and I wasn’t having to scramble from the edges to hold it together. 

I did miss a five-footer for par on 18 which would have given me my first “breaking 80” situation. That putt will haunt me but I’m going to stay positive. I shot my best score to date and I did it by playing safe, smart golf, which feels far more repeatable than relying on a perfect swing. 

Obviously, my course strategy will evolve as I (hopefully) continue to get better with each aspect of my game and I look forward to the point where I can get more aggressive on certain holes depending on the pin placement. But, right now, I want to see where this new magic trick of ignoring the flagstick can take me. An 80 today. Maybe a 79 tomorrow? 

Dare to dream. 

Dig deeper into one golfer’s struggle to get better at golf in middle age and read last week’s Scratch By 50 where Graham discusses assisted stretching in search of high swing speeds. 

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Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill

Graham Averill





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      DJ

      1 week ago

      I agree that practicing is crucial to improvement if you understand the fundamentals well. But the type of facility you can practice at is also important. Where I live, there is no grass range, only mats, which do not give you the same feedback as turf. Of course, if you can’t make good contact on a mat you probably won’t from grass either, but still. Bunker practices are also hard to come by, and sand shots can be a major score killer. In my opinion, golf is a collection of numerous specialty shots, which must be individually practiced to achieve a decent, consistent, level of play. And that, as you mention so correctly, can require an inordinate amount time. In any case, good luck achieving your goal!

      Reply

      David

      2 weeks ago

      Generally agree with the concept for mid-cappers. But arbitrarily playing the middle of the green isn’t the play. Playing the safest part is. At my home course 50% of holes you’d be hurt playing the middle and you’d actually miss a few more greens due to slope and architecture designed to allow for run ups, tabletops, Redan’s, etc. aiming for the landing spot that gets you in the least trouble is a better play. A lot of the time that means the safe side with a bailout area. And this strategy basically bottoms out at a 10 index, where you need to be able to get to pins inside 50 and around greens to get to single digits.

      Reply

      Dok

      3 weeks ago

      Boring golf will get it done. Keep the ball in play, get on in regulation, 2 putt. Work on lag puts to eliminate the 3 putt. The more you do this, the more you’ll have some of those 2 putts turn into 1 putts for birdie.

      Reply

      Graham

      2 weeks ago

      That’s the dream!

      Reply

      UpstateNewYork

      3 weeks ago

      Find a slow day and time at the course, go solo, and play two balls (different colors if that helps you). Play one where you go for everything – every forced carry over trouble, every pin, every hero shot – and play the other one where you ALWAYS play “safe golf” and ALWAYS play the center of the green. It’s pretty eye-opening.

      Reply

      Graham

      3 weeks ago

      That’s a great idea. I love dropping balls from random spots to try things out, but playing two balls consistently could be great. I appreciate the advice.

      Reply

      Kevin C

      3 weeks ago

      Most of us that have been golfing a while know this but man is it hard not to focus on the darn flag. At times I’m good about it and I only look at the Middle yardage on my GPS watch and line up with the center of the green but that’s usually when I’m farther away and my expectations of hitting the green are lower. Once I’m, say 140 yards or less, my focus starts drifting back to the pin. Honestly it’s so bad I have a tendency to focus on the pin when hitting a pitch even though I just picked my landing spot somewhere short of the pin…..it’s tough to look away from it : (

      Reply

      Graham

      3 weeks ago

      That’s definitely the case for me. It took me a few rounds before I fully committed to the idea. the first round I tried it, I honestly forgot about half way through and started firing at pins again.

      Reply

      Jeff

      3 weeks ago

      The only thing better than knocking a 100 yard shot to tap-in distance is putting it in the hole on the approach shot.

      Honestly, the best thing I ever did was the Dave Pelz 3 day scoring school. Every shot from 100 yards in: chip, pitch, sand and putting. This easily helped me to improve 5+ shots per round. I went from HC in the low teens to mid single digits after that class.

      Reply

      Graham

      3 weeks ago

      That sounds amazing. I could use some intensive multi-day work on my short game for sure.

      Reply

      Heyweb

      3 weeks ago

      I heard someone talk about playing practice rounds where on round you fire at every pin and another round you play middle of the green. There are times in a round where you have pins that are a “green light” pin and learning how to take that risk can be beneficial. For the regular round middle of the green is most helpful. But trying to set a PB round might include taking a risk. Also we can benefit by learning how to deal with a pressure shot so when we need it we can learn to pull it off. Practice and variety is always beneficial in golf.

      Reply

      Graham

      3 weeks ago

      I hear you. I think learning the nuance of when to go for it and when to play it safe is part of the art and creativity of golf. It’s also fun to go for it every once in a while, right?

      Reply

      Joe Cronin

      3 weeks ago

      Yeah!!! I understand what you are saying, but I have been PLAYING this game for nearly 70 years and I do it for FUN. Last week I hole a chip from about 75 yards for an eagle. I was aiming to do it and lightning struck. Two holes later I hit a sand wedge that landed two feet from the hole and struck the pin on the bounce. I left a two-foot putt for my birdie. Ask me if I enjoyed the round. :) :)

      Reply

      Graham

      3 weeks ago

      That definitely sounds like a fun round. I enjoy trying to figure out how to get better and working on different techniques and strategies, but I also love the occasional hole in from 75 yards out too!

      Reply

      Pat

      3 weeks ago

      I find that the better I get the MORE I play to the safest part of the green. You would think the opposite would be true. I’ve gotten down to shooting 83’s and 84’s without changing much. Two years ago I was just trying to break 100. I do work on lag putting now too. I’ve also learned to consistently get close to the front of greens with hybrids, then chip on fairly close and make sure bogeys are the worst I am going to card. This kind of boring golf has really helped my scores.

      Reply

      Graham Averill

      3 weeks ago

      Boring golf is pretty great, right? Putting is a whole other issue, but making it safe to the green consistently feels like a step in the right direction.

      Reply

      Sean

      3 weeks ago

      Course management an save a high handicapper a ton of shots with no material improvement in technique.
      I’d recommend playing with scratch players and seeing how they play, which side of the tee they set up on, where they dial back etc.

      Sean

      3 weeks ago

      At 12 HCP (in fact at scratch too) you’ll play far better golf if all you ever do on every hole is take enough club to get to the largest part of the green.

      Reply

      Graham Averill

      3 weeks ago

      I believe it and am totally converted to this approach.

      Reply

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