Blog
Articles for golfers who want to improve through better practice. Range plans, drills, short game, fitness, and the mental side, all aimed at helping you train with purpose and track what matters.
Plan a month at a time around real life: weekly themes, short game, weekly tests, and backup plans so your whole game stays in the picture.
Gate work, start line, and speed games you can do at home. Make the mat feel like training, not random tapping.
Cut volume, keep rhythm, and reset. Deloads are for sore joints, bad sleep weeks, and swing fog after hard training blocks.
Simple metrics that help practice without spreadsheet hell. Fairway tests, gate makes, streaks, and time on task.
How to add clubhead speed without wrecking your swing or back. Warm-ups, caps, and when to stop.
Sand basics without a tour facility: entry point, face open, speed through, and a simple progression you can repeat.
Progressive landing games with one club, multiple distances, and clear pass rules. Stop guessing carry around the green.
Make a range session feel like golf: fairway poker, 21 with wedges, worst ball, and streak rules that force decisions.
What actually changes your swing: feedback, difficulty, and rest. Why large buckets often train the wrong habits faster.
Five lines that capture what broke, what worked, and what to practice next. Memory lies. Notes do not.
Turn range time into consequence reps: scenarios, streak rules, and small stakes so nerves feel familiar before the round.
A simple pre-shot sequence for practice: pick a cue, commit once, review without spiraling. Train focus, not superstition.
Simple at-home patterns: split squats, hinges, rows, and core bracing. Build force without a membership card.
A simple pre-range sequence for hips, thoracic spine, and shoulders. Move well first, swing hard second.
Structure for tee shots: face strike, start line, and fairway tests. Stop defaulting to max swing every time you pick up the big stick.
Map carry distances for wedges and partial swings. Ball count, order, and how to turn numbers into on-course decisions.
Start line, speed, and green reading habits you can measure on a mat or practice green. Build a routine you will use under pressure.
Split a short game hour into landing zones, distance control, and pressure. Chips, pitches, and sand without wandering the green.
A simple 60-minute range order: warm-up, block work, test, cooldown. Ball counts, targets, and a way to leave with a score.
Build a simple weekly off-course plan: how to split range, short game, and putting when you only have a few windows. Routines, not guilt.