The following article was published yesterday in Women’s Golf emagazine at https://www.womensgolf.com

How Good is Your Golf Course Management?

Peak Performance Psychologist Joan King’s favorite course management golf tips include pre-round planning and making the best shot and club selection decisions.

Do you have a presupposition about the toughness of the golf course you are going to play? Are you visually intimidated by the many water holes, fairway bunkers, tree-lined fairways, mounds, railroad ties, tiered or severely undulating greens?

Plan for Good Golf Course Management

Intimidation can lead to indecision, which will most likely result in a missed shot. Most golfers think that course management is what you do to get out of deep trouble. It is more than that. Course management comes into play on every shot with some shots being more important than others. A good mental game includes good course management. Efficient course management is your ability to play around the golf course the way it was designed by the architect, avoiding the trouble and placing each shot in the best position to hit the next shot. It requires you to plan and concentrate before every shot. The golf course is set up so you will make hundreds of decisions.

Course management is smart golf; thinking positively to avoid mistakes and managing your imperfection. Golf is about managing yourself around the golf course without letting your ego take over. When you change the way you see the world, your world changes. When you change the way you see the golf course you can see opportunities.

Lexi Thompson and Cristie Kerr - Team USA 2018 UL International Crown - Photographer Ben HarpringLexi Thompson and Cristie Kerr – Team USA 2018 UL International Crown – Photographer Ben Harpring

You see the obstacles and make plans to avoid them. Your course management depends upon a myriad of things including your skill level, your personality, course conditions and the pressure of the situation. It is important to have a strategy for playing each hole so you will be prepared ahead of time to handle the feelings that might arise to deter you.

You can be a genius at course management if you are confident with your wedges and putter. Then it won’t matter if you miss greens. You have learned from experience how to manage your home golf course well because you know your plan. When you play a new course, you need to concentrate on creating the shots you want. Golf is a game of maneuvering the ball around the course and having fun doing it.

Course Management Golf Tips

Have a course management golf game plan

Manage your mental game

Position your long shots

Plan your shots to the green

Lizette Salas LA Open - Course Management Golf Tips - Photographer Ben HarpringLizette Salas at the 2018 LA Open | Photographer Ben Harpring

On short approach shots go for the flag

Use the putter from off the green for highest percentage shot

Think carefully to get out of trouble

Ariya Jutanugarn 2018 US Womens Open - Course Management Golf Tips - Photographer Ben HarpringAriya Jutanugarn at the 2018 US Women’s Open | Photographer Ben Harpring

When in trouble, maintain your equilibrium

Look to see where the trouble is

Make sure you get the ball out of a fairway bunker

I hope that these course management golf tips help you play better and enjoy your golf.

ALL ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Joan King

Joan King, BCH, Peak Performance Strategist, Master Sports Hypnotist & NLP Practitioner, founded Positive Mental Imagery, a mental sports consulting firm in 1992 in Florida. Her academic background includes a B.A. in Psychology from the University of Vermont, and Joan is Board Certified by the National Guild of Hypnotists as a Sports and Clinical Hypnotherapist.

A low handicap senior amateur golfer, Joan has competed in state, national and international championships, including qualifying for nine USGA Senior Women’s Amateur Championships, and three Canadian Senior Ladies Amateur Championships.

Ms. King has taught thousands of amateurs, junior tournament golfers and LPGA and PGA professionals how to understand the mind-body-spirit equation for peak performances.

Visit Joan King’s website at positivementalimagery.com where she writes monthly articles on the mental side of golf. You can also follow Joan on Twitter and Facebook.

Joan can also be contacted by phone at 828-696-2547.