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Tournament Golf Is Hard!


Erin B

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Last week, I played in my 54 hole club championship tournament. This year, I felt ready, but I knew it was going to be intense. I practiced diligently, managed the course well, avoided “hero shots,” and maintained the right mindset for the tournament. This is how each round went:

First Round: I aimed to shoot my handicap and get a feel for the course and conditions. I ended up 4 over my handicap, placing me in the middle of the pack in my flight. I had zero penalties or lost balls.

Second Round: I sought improvement and succeeded, shooting my handicap. Again, zero penalties or lost balls.

Final Round: This is still hard to think about—I completely derailed my chances of placing. The first 5 holes yielded 5 penalties. I ended the round with 8 penalties, averaging almost one every other hole, and scored a 95. A complete 180 from my previous two rounds.

I was perplexed and after licking my wounds, I reviewed the results. I gathered that without the final round penalties, I would have finished second in my flight. Those 16 lost strokes, due to the penalties in the final round, crushed my chances.  But they did not crush my spirit or drive to move through it and grow from the experience. To do this I thought I should first identify consistencies. 

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There are a few things that I know remain unchanged whether the round is for a championship, tournament or for leisure.  The first is my warm-up routine, this has been the same for many years. Of course, I used my usual equipment (with a minor a shaft change on a hybrid) so my swing would remain unaffected. I even went so far as to not change the balls I have been using so I could depend on the distance, control and spin.  I knew I had to take a stab at identifying the issues that may have influenced the problems I encountered.  

Elements That May Influence Tournament Performance:

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Mental Preparation:This is crucial for playing well. Mental preparation impacts every aspect of the game. An amateur might not be mentally ready for the competitive play that tournaments demand. They might not consider the different opportunities a shot choice can create and may develop “tunnel vision” during the round.

Pressure and Expectations: Tournament play comes with higher stakes and increased pressure. The fear of poor performance or the desire to excel can lead to anxiety, negatively impacting performance. While some players thrive under pressure, others may struggle.

Focus and Mindset: A consistent pre-shot routine helps maintain focus and reduce errors. In practice, players often have a more relaxed mindset, allowing them to focus better. In tournaments, however, players, especially amateurs, may overthink and let self-doubt creep in, particularly after making mistakes.

Routine Disruption: Tournament rounds differ significantly from practice rounds. Warm-up routines can be disrupted due to the number of players in the practice area. Changes in rhythm, waiting times, slow play, and different schedules can all affect a player’s performance.

Adrenaline and Fatigue: The adrenaline rush experienced during tournaments can be a double-edged sword. While it can heighten awareness and add strength, it can also lead to fatigue or tension if not managed properly.

Course Management: Thoughtful course management is essential. In practice rounds, players often take more risks to see what they can get away with. In tournaments, however, they may feel compelled to play it safer, which can stifle creativity and lead to more conservative play, losing the risk verses reward aspect.

Negativity: Negativity can ruin a round, whether it’s recreational, practice, or tournament play. It can stem from the player’s own mind or from another player in the group.

I can rule out several elements that could have affected my final round performance, but I did see where I went wrong. Pressure and Expectations, Course Management, and Adrenaline and fatigue were suspected. Now that I identified some things that may have been contributing factors, I asked myself “how do I adapt and overcome?”

Tips to Improve Tournament Performance:

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Practice Under Pressure: Simulate tournament conditions during practice by keeping score and setting goals. Hole out every putt, no matter how close. Introduce pressure situations like penalties and tough shots. In short, practice as you play.

Develop a Consistent Pre-Game Routine: Establishing a consistent routine helps with anxiety and focus. Stick to your routine to create a sense of normalcy and control.

Focus on Process, Not Outcome: This can be challenging for amateurs. While results are often the focus, the process is crucial. If you have a solid process, good results usually follow. Execute your game plan rather than fixating on the final score.Prioritize the journey, not just the destination.

Mindfulness and Relaxation Techniques: Breathing exercises and mindfulness practices can help maintain composure during tough times. Keeping notes and having a good sense of the overall round can also help you stay relaxed. (speaking it into existence also helps)

Negate the Negative: Remove negative thoughts and ignore negative players. Stay within yourself and maintain a positive mindset. Tune out others who react poorly to bad shots or penalties. Think positive, play positive.

Develop Course Management: To improve your game, focus on eliminating poor shot selections. Sometimes, aiming for the safer side of the fairway, away from hazards, can significantly improve your score. Opting for a shot that might land in the trees but avoids out-of-bounds or penalty areas can lead to a manageable par or bogey with a chip out, rather than a double or triple bogey with penalty strokes. Similarly, laying up for an easy up-and-down instead of attempting a risky shot to the green can be a smarter choice. It’s all about balancing risk and reward.

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Most likely most of my mistakes could have been avoided if I’d just slowed down and thought about what happened, and the smartest path to recover. Golfers are well aware that the game presents significant challenges, particularly when the pressure is on, but I believe that incorporating these strategies into our “mental golf bags,” will enhance future performance in competitive play. I’ll admit some of these elements and strategies weren’t exactly part of my preparation, but they will be in the future. Golf is also a social sport, and I believe that sharing my experiences is part of the supportive ecosystem where golfers learn from one another.  That is why I would encourage you to look at the insights from this article that you believe will best enhance your game and incorporate them.

It’s been a long journey to get to this point, and I am glad that the club championship is in the rear view. I learned a lot this past tournament and am happy I made the choice to finish the final round instead of withdrawing. Some players did that, but I doubt they learned the lessons I did by sticking with it. I am going to alter my route by taking this new information and strategies and putting them into practice. So, if we meet on the links you might want to bring your A-game, because I’m bringing mine. Happy birdie hunting

Edited by Erin B

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Great blog post! 

It's hard to reset your mind during normal play after a rough hole, and you can generally not track your score until the end.

i imagine the thought process is Quite a bit more difficult to reset during a tournament.  If you are Using a book to track every shot, yardages, prime course position,  etc,  it just puts it front and center the whole time.

If you aren't, then just knowing you are playing to win is hard in itself.

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Good thoughts on the differences and what can be done to mitigate the impact to your game.  One thing that tends to affect me is the slower play of tournament golf.  I am used to playing 18 in about 3 hrs.  Anything longer than 3-1/2 hrs and i lose focus badly.  It is something i have to be aware of and adjust to while playing longer rounds.  Let my mind drift between shots and refocus when  i finally get to hit.

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25 minutes ago, Rob Person said:

Great blog post! 

It's hard to reset your mind during normal play after a rough hole, and you can generally not track your score until the end.

i imagine the thought process is Quite a bit more difficult to reset during a tournament.  If you are Using a book to track every shot, yardages, prime course position,  etc,  it just puts it front and center the whole time.

If you aren't, then just knowing you are playing to win is hard in itself.

For sure! Thanks for reading and comment!

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10 minutes ago, Shapotomous said:

Good thoughts on the differences and what can be done to mitigate the impact to your game.  One thing that tends to affect me is the slower play of tournament golf.  I am used to playing 18 in about 3 hrs.  Anything longer than 3-1/2 hrs and i lose focus badly.  It is something i have to be aware of and adjust to while playing longer rounds.  Let my mind drift between shots and refocus when  i finally get to hit.

Interesting point, and easy to understand.
I'm the opposite.

I enjoy playing scrambles with my friends.
Rather than playing against each other, we set a target score to reach as a team.

Scrambles take forever, and become even longer if you need to let other, faster groups play through.
Therefore, slow play doesn't annoy me nearly as much as it does most members of our forum.
If I don't have basically five hours, this including time for breakfast at the club, I simply don't play golf.
Although we sometimes play just nine, especially later in the season as we begin to get a little tired.

 

 


 

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57 minutes ago, Derek Eskam said:

Great article. I do love that we have a ton of apps to track our data now to help us track what we need to work on. I wish Arcoss had tournament tracking so we could separate recreational rounds vs tournament rounds.

As do I sir!!! USGA will track tournament scores but that’s about it. Thanks for reading!!!

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52 minutes ago, Shapotomous said:

Good thoughts on the differences and what can be done to mitigate the impact to your game.  One thing that tends to affect me is the slower play of tournament golf.  I am used to playing 18 in about 3 hrs.  Anything longer than 3-1/2 hrs and i lose focus badly.  It is something i have to be aware of and adjust to while playing longer rounds.  Let my mind drift between shots and refocus when  i finally get to hit.

I hate slow play as well, but over the past two years I’ve really made an effort to keep it from affecting me. I’ve been somewhat successful. Thank you for the read!

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34 minutes ago, RetiredBoomer said:

Interesting point, and easy to understand.
I'm the opposite.

I enjoy playing scrambles with my friends.
Rather than playing against each other, we set a target score to reach as a team.

Scrambles take forever, and become even longer if you need to let other, faster groups play through.
Therefore, slow play doesn't annoy me nearly as much as it does most members of our forum.
If I don't have basically five hours, this including time for breakfast at the club, I simply don't play golf.
Although we sometimes play just nine, especially later in the season as we begin to get a little tired.

 

 


 

Scrambles are fun. Did you catch the article from MGS on Facebook about scrambles? Thanks for reading!

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Good post @Erin B…love these reads!

The mind is a tough thing to control.  When things start going sideways, things start getting faster…then they go more sideways.

Not sure if it was intentional or not, but watching Scheffler after he shanked the bunker shot, it looked like he was ready to hit his next shot.  His caddie was still walking off the green…might be a coincidence or he might have purposefully been trying to slow him down a bit.

For me, always want to perform well in a tournament and get frustrated when it doesn’t go as planned.  Saw something recently…”play what you have got.”  I like to see a fade, but occasionally will be hitting a draw…typically try to work on it to get back to a fade, probably need to just accept it.

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7 minutes ago, Erin B said:

Scrambles are fun. Did you catch the article from MGS on Facebook about scrambles? Thanks for reading!

I believe that I did.

I understand that organized, competitive scrambles are getting difficult because the handicap cheating is flagrant.
Also, people can  essentially buy ridiculous scores with various charity contributions .
Unfortunately, the suggested solutions tended to involve altering the  basic scramble format that I love.

Not much of a problem for me, though.  We're seniors playing weekday golf on a casual, social level.
I'd be out right now if it weren't damp.

 

 

Edited by RetiredBoomer
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2 minutes ago, RetiredBoomer said:

I believe that I did.

I understand that organized, competitive scrambles are getting difficult because the handicap cheating is flagrant.
Also, people can  essentially buy ridiculous scores with various charity contributions .
Unfortunately, the suggested solutions tended to involve altering the  basic scramble format that I love.

Not much of a problem for me, though.  We're seniors playing weekday golf on a casual, social level.

 

 

Yeah, cheating sucks.

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3 minutes ago, TJ Hall said:

Good post @Erin B…love these reads!

The mind is a tough thing to control.  When things start going sideways, things start getting faster…then they go more sideways.

Not sure if it was intentional or not, but watching Scheffler after he shanked the bunker shot, it looked like he was ready to hit his next shot.  His caddie was still walking off the green…might be a coincidence or he might have purposefully been trying to slow him down a bit.

For me, always want to perform well in a tournament and get frustrated when it doesn’t go as planned.  Saw something recently…”play what you have got.”  I like to see a fade, but occasionally will be hitting a draw…typically try to work on it to get back to a fade, probably need to just accept it.

I had some of that in my final round and when I adjusted to it, here comes the draw again 😂. I totally get what you’re saying about Scheffler! As I think about it now, I was in a rush. I think it was frustration that caused it for me. Two rounds with no penalties then the final round with 8 was very frustrating. The other thing I was frustrated with was my putting. Average at best, but that’s maybe another topic… thanks for reading!

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1 hour ago, Erin B said:

I hate slow play as well, but over the past two years I’ve really made an effort to keep it from affecting me. I’ve been somewhat successful. Thank you for the read!

I absolutely hate slow play, as despite the fact that I try to not let affect me, it invariably does affect how well I play.

Yesterday, my wife and I played nine holes, as we often do on Thursday mornings. We were paired with two other golfers, and they were both really nice guys. However, one of them was a brand new golfer (his friend was pretty good, although rather inconsistent, and he did his best to keep things moving, as did my wife and me, but it was extremely difficult with the new and inexperienced golfer in our foursome). That nine hole round took about 2:45, and the final three holes were exceptionally slow (my wife and I usually play those nine holes at least an hour faster, and we have played with others and still finished in less than two hours, as we did just a week ago).

Through the first six holes yesterday, I was three over par, and was striking the ball quite well. However, when things ground almost to a dead stop on the seventh hole, a difficult par 5, I lost focus and just hit a couple of horrible shots. At that point I said to myself, “f**k it”, and I walked off of that green with an 8 on the scoreboard after hitting a good drive. I finished bogey, double bogey to shoot nine over, and to be honest I wasn’t concentrating very well and also attempted some shots that I would not have normally tried.

I know that I should be able to ignore the delays and distractions and focus on every shot, but slow play almost always causes these lapses in concentration and shot execution.

Edited by funkyjudge
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11 minutes ago, funkyjudge said:

I absolutely hate slow play, as despite the fact that I try to not let affect me, it invariably does affect how well I play.

Yesterday, my wife and I played nine holes, as we often do on Thursday mornings. We were paired with two other golfers, and they were both really nice guys. However, one of them was a brand new golfer (his friend was pretty good, although rather inconsistent, and he did his best to keep things moving, as did my wife and me, but it was extremely difficult with the new and inexperienced golfer in our foursome). That nine hole round took about 2:45, and the final three holes were exceptionally slow (my wife and I usually play those nine holes at least an hour faster, and we have played with others and still finished in less than two hours, as we did just a week ago).

Through the first six holes yesterday, I was three over par, and was striking the ball quite well. However, when things ground almost to a dead stop on the seventh hole, a difficult par 5, I lost focus and just hit a couple of horrible shots. At that point I said to myself, “f**k it”, and I walked off of that green with an 8 on the scoreboard after hitting a good drive. I finished bogey, double bogey to shoot nine over, and to be honest I wasn’t concentrating very well and also attempted some shots that I would not have normally tried.

I know that I should be able to ignore the delays and distractions and focus on every shot, but slow play almost always causes these lapses in concentration and shot execution.

Slow play is very tough to deal with and although I’ve learned to deal with it, it does take me out of my rhythm. Thanks for reading and adding to the subject! Much appreciated!

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Great blog!

The hardest part for me is the negative thoughts, I have always been the person who thinks they can always do better than they are. I think your points of focusing on the journey, not the outcome, and negate the negative go hand in hand. Many times I think of how a bad shot/hole is going to affect my final score. This leads me to start thinking negatively, my bad shots become more frequent which only leads to more negative thoughts; it's a vicious cycle. I am going to try to focus more on making sure each shot, just because I had one bad shot doesn't mean the next one will be bad too.

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23 minutes ago, Josh Stephenson said:

Great blog!

The hardest part for me is the negative thoughts, I have always been the person who thinks they can always do better than they are. I think your points of focusing on the journey, not the outcome, and negate the negative go hand in hand. Many times I think of how a bad shot/hole is going to affect my final score. This leads me to start thinking negatively, my bad shots become more frequent which only leads to more negative thoughts; it's a vicious cycle. I am going to try to focus more on making sure each shot, just because I had one bad shot doesn't mean the next one will be bad too.

Let’s make it happen the next time we play! I completely understand what you’re saying! I did have some negativity in the final round but washed it all away two hours later with a great round. Oh wait, you were there!!! Thanks for the read!

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Great article Erin! I can honestly say I resemble some of those remarks...🥴 

I believe that a positive mind set is key to a good round regardless of score. Hardest thing for me to do is properly manage my expectations as like many I feel I'm capable of playing better than I do in many cases. If I keep that under control, I generally have a better scoring round and even if not, I tend to enjoy the round more than when I get distracted mentally.

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7 minutes ago, William P said:

Great article Erin! I can honestly say I resemble some of those remarks...🥴 

I believe that a positive mind set is key to a good round regardless of score. Hardest thing for me to do is properly manage my expectations as like many I feel I'm capable of playing better than I do in many cases. If I keep that under control, I generally have a better scoring round and even if not, I tend to enjoy the round more than when I get distracted mentally.

Somewhere in the MGS universe someone was discussing negative energy. I don’t recall what, where, or who posted it, but I recall how it was well documented that negativity affects play negatively. I also believe that there’s a connection with negative energies from other people. Thanks for the contribution and reading!

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Really great blog! Well written, informative. Like the way so many facets of the mental game are outlined and explained .. followed up with your own self reflection on things that could be improved upon 👍

Sounds like you may have read things from Golf State Of Mind by David Mackenzie - an excellent resource imho. If not, def recommended. 

Also Jon Sherman of Practical Golf (the author of the very popular "Four Foundations of Golf") - in a recent newsletter titled "Why Golf Drives Us Mad" is a list of 10 items to be aware of / mindful of out on the course, including #4...

...

One of the hardest problems in golf to solve...

Existing in the space of caring too much or not enough.

You can't live and die at the result of each shot.

But you also can't play "I don't care" golf.

We all need to find a happy medium and that looks different for everyone.

...

Good stuff!

 

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23 minutes ago, cksurfdude said:

Really great blog! Well written, informative. Like the way so many facets of the mental game are outlined and explained .. followed up with your own self reflection on things that could be improved upon 👍

Sounds like you may have read things from Golf State Of Mind by David Mackenzie - an excellent resource imho. If not, def recommended. 

Also Jon Sherman of Practical Golf (the author of the very popular "Four Foundations of Golf") - in a recent newsletter titled "Why Golf Drives Us Mad" is a list of 10 items to be aware of / mindful of out on the course, including #4...

...

One of the hardest problems in golf to solve...

Existing in the space of caring too much or not enough.

You can't live and die at the result of each shot.

But you also can't play "I don't care" golf.

We all need to find a happy medium and that looks different for everyone.

...

Good stuff!

 

Outstanding!!! Great comment and thank you for adding! The mental side of golf is so important it’s hard to quantify. 

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