The One Thing Most Golf Lessons Don’t Emphasize Enough
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The One Thing Most Golf Lessons Don’t Emphasize Enough

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The One Thing Most Golf Lessons Don’t Emphasize Enough

You’ve taken lessons and worked on your grip, posture, backswing and weight shift. Your instructor gave you drills for tempo, sequencing and lag. You’ve spent hours practicing these moves. But your score isn’t improving. Something important is missing and it’s costing you strokes.

What gets ignored

Most golf lessons focus on the swing which makes sense since the swing moves the club and the club hits the ball. But not enough attention goes to your pre-shot routine and your ability to deliver in high-pressure situations.

You might have a great swing on the range when nothing is at stake. But the course is different. There’s trouble on the left, water on the right, friends watching, maybe money on the line. Your mind changes. The swing that felt easy now takes effort. You start steering, guiding and trying to be perfect. That’s when things fall apart.

What’s missing isn’t another swing tip. It’s having a reliable process that helps you use your swing when it matters most.

Why this matters more than mechanics

I’ve watched players with perfect swings shoot 95 while others with odd swings shoot 75. The difference isn’t their mechanics. It’s their ability to repeat their swing when it matters.

A pre-shot routine helps you stay consistent. It keeps your mind busy so you don’t worry about the result. It helps you focus on the process, not just the outcome. It also connects your practice on the range to your play on the course.

If you don’t have a routine, every shot feels different. Sometimes you stand over the ball longer, take more or fewer practice swings or think about different things. Your mind has nothing steady to rely on so it improvises. And improvising under pressure usually doesn’t work out.

What actually works

A good pre-shot routine has three steps.

First, stand behind the ball and choose your target and shot shape. Picture the shot in your mind and pick a specific landing spot, not just a general area. This is when you make your decision.

Next, walk up to the ball and set up. Align your clubface first and then your body. Take one or two practice swings to feel the motion you want. This is your preparation step.

Finally, look at your target one last time and swing. Don’t add extra thoughts or last-minute changes. You’ve made your choices. Now just swing. This is your commitment step.

The whole routine should take 20 to 30 seconds. If it’s longer, you might start to doubt yourself. If it’s shorter, you could be rushing and not fully committed.

What good players do differently

Good players use the same routine for every shot. If you watch a pro, you’ll notice the same steps each time: same number of looks at the target, same waggle, same timing. The routine becomes automatic and lets them focus on the swing itself.

Good players practice their routines, not just their swings. They go through the whole process, from choosing a shot to hitting it. On the range, they use their full routine even when it’s just practice. This way, it feels natural when it really counts.

Good players rely on their routines to block out distractions. When they feel doubt or pressure, they stick to their usual steps. The routine acts as a mental anchor, helping them stay focused.

How to build yours

Start with something simple. Choose a routine that feels comfortable and isn’t too long. If it helps, write it down. Then use it for every shot, starting on the range.

Repetition is the key. Your routine should become so automatic that you don’t have to think about it. This takes hundreds of tries, not just a few. Stick with it for a month. Use it on every shot, even short putts and practice swings.

Notice what helps you commit and what makes you doubt. If any part of your routine causes hesitation, change it. Your routine should give you confidence, not make you second-guess.

The simple truth

Your swing is important but being able to use it under pressure is more important. A good routine won’t fix a bad swing but it will help you get the best out of the swing you have. For most golfers, that’s more valuable than another swing tip. Even the best swing won’t help if you can’t use it when it matters.

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

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      Ol Jim

      5 months ago

      When I first got into golf seriously I struggled with the mental side of the game until I developed a pre-shot routine. Now I stand behind the ball, visualize my shot and take a half swing as a cue to shut off my mind. Then I stand over the ball, waggle and swing. Keeping that consistent on every shot has helped keep em focused and made me a better golfer.

      Reply

      Pat

      5 months ago

      I’m kind of a “grip it and rip it” person. I don’t leave time for bad thoughts. I address the ball, look at the target and GO. But I actually change my routine for pitches and chips where backswing length is more important. I do a quick rehearsal and then hit the shot. The key is figuring out what works for you.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      5 months ago

      “Next, walk up to the ball and set up. Align your clubface first and then your body. Take one or two practice swings to feel the motion you want.”

      We should take our practice swing(s) *while* we’re already set up to the ball?

      I wouldn’t think it possible to take a legitimate practice swing while *already* set up to the ball. I’d have to adjust *something* to avoid hitting the ball itself, and that adjustment would seemingly negate the value of the practice swing, making it not a genuine swing.

      I would’ve thought we’d take our practice swing(s) maybe while we’re standing behind the ball and visualizing the shot shape, the landing area, etc. Or maybe just before stepping into the ball. Then step into the ball, aligning the clubface, then the body, take one look, and pull the trigger. No?

      Reply

      Wilson Player

      5 months ago

      I agree with you on this part. Practice swings belong in the area behind the ball. You’re getting your swing feels in and adjusting if needed. This is still a thinking stage item and belong behind the ball.
      When you go to the ball you should only address, align and fire (no adjusting or practicing)

      Reply

      Suncoast9

      5 months ago

      Replace “one or two practice swings” with “one or two waggles” and it makes sense.

      Reply

      Andrew the Great!

      5 months ago

      Thanks, Wilson and Sun, for confirming. And yeah, waggles rather than practice swings, that makes sense.

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