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Learn to Learn From Your Scorecard

Learn to Learn From Your Scorecard

PGA Professional Ben Alexander tells you how to use your scorecard to help identify your strengths and weaknesses.

05.10.2005 02:23 pm (ET)

Many golfers struggle to play better golf but few lack the direction to get started on the road to better scores. One of the first things I do with my students is ask them what their handicap is. If they say "28," for example, I then ask them, "Well, where do you think you are loosing 28 shots per round?" Far too often their answer is, "I don't know."

If more players knew how to use their scorecard to their advantage, they would know where most of their strokes are lost.

A great learning tool, I tell my students, is to use your scorecard during your next four rounds as a record of every shot you hit. Along with the score for each hole, mark down on your card how many fairways you hit, how many greens in regulation you hit, how many putts per green you use, and how many times you did or didn't get up and down.

Ideally, I'd like to see you do this type of record-keeping for at least four rounds on four different courses. That way it will give you truer average of your strengths and weaknesses.

Once you do this, you and your PGA Professional can go over the results on the lesson tee and really see where you are having the most trouble scoring. Then it's simply a matter of working on the areas of your golf game that need the most help.

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