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4 comments

Comment from: Kiel Christianson [Member] Email
I don't even carry a 3-wood most of the time.
Lots and lots of blow-ups are caused by my 5-iron.
Or my wedge. Or simply a wayward drive and an unruly tree branch (or OB stakes). I think there are as many different ways to blow up as there are to make par, quite frankly.
11/01/07 @ 16:13
Comment from: Judge Smails [Visitor] Email
Percentage-wise, Marc is correct. Most people simply don't play the percentages.

I don't have blow-up holes per se; I simply need to eliminate a number of bogies. I'm a low-handicapper, and it's the bogies that prevent me from being scratch.

Of course, I need to practice my short game more. And, if you're talking about playing scratch golf, than there's no getting around the fact that you do have to execute at a high level. I shot five over yesterday, bogeying all four of the par threes. They're long holes and I just didn't get my tee shots close enough. Heck, on three of them I was putting on my second shot, albeit from absolutely horrible positions.
11/02/07 @ 12:42
Comment from: Ron Mon [Member] Email
I believe that many poor shots result from myriad factors. If you come to that hypothetical par five in good shape to shoot a career nine, you're battling more than just poor club selection. You need to be mentally there, on the razor's edge between cautious and courageous. I see just as many people who lay up improperly as golfers who go for it when there is nothing to be gained. I recall someone in our stable discussing of late how to lay up properly, and it is an art. Come to think of it, I give your golfer credit for getting his recovery shot into fairway position...the recovery, another art form.
11/04/07 @ 20:47
Comment from: sbmarto97 [Visitor] Email
I believe there is a time in every round where you will put yourself in the position where you could have a blow up hole. The difference is knowing how to get yourself out of trouble and back in play. The key is your recovery shot, get back on the fairway and still have a chance at par or at worst bogie. It's called knowing when to take your lumps. The problem is most peoples ego gets in the way. Take Phil Mickelson's blow up at the US open 2 years ago. It can happen to anyone.
11/11/07 @ 21:57

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