Golf psychology: 5 tips for success

Golf psychology: 5 tips for success

 

Very few of us put much thought into golf psychology and how
we can improve our mental game. We might buy a new driver or a new set of irons
every now and then, but a much easier way to knock a few shots off our rounds
is to think and talk to ourselves more helpfully.

Mental performance coach Duncan McCarthy works across all the main professional tours. We caught up with him to ask how we can improve our thinking and psychology on the golf course to help lower our scores.

Read on the find out what he had to say.

 

5 golf psychology tips for success

golf psychology

 

1. Self-Talk: The quality in between shots

We’re always talking to ourselves—whether it’s about things
around us, judging, analysing, looking to the future or the past, and so on. So,
when we step on a golf course, self-talk is normally going on inside our heads,
either about the last shot, what’s coming up, what we need to do, or what we
shouldn’t have done before.

This will always happen—it’s part of being human. But many
people have a bad relationship with the voice inside their heads, as it’s
normally more hurtful than helpful.

When thinking in the context of golf psychology, the top piece of advice I’d give to any amateur golfer is to go out there and set a goal purely related to self-talk, i.e. today’s goal is to have good self-talk. So, we’re thinking less about the obvious, such as shooting a number, and more about being better towards ourselves internally.

Good self-talk is where we talk ourselves up with compliments,
give ourselves a break, and don’t berate ourselves for a bad shot. It’s not
false positives, it’s more about being kind to ourselves.

When we get off the course later on, that’s the time to be
honest. It’s really important to go out there and pat ourselves on the back and
say that was a really good effort, we committed well to that, and we’re proud
of the decision we made. Then, when we get on the next tee, we’re going to
really commit to our target. These are all helpful statements and ones we should
also make to our playing partners.

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We don’t often say these kinds of things to ourselves, but I think it’s really important that we do because they have a big impact on our performance. When we get off the course, then it’s time to look more in detail at what was good, what wasn’t so good, and how we can improve next time. 

 

2. Intention: Be clear with our instruction

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We take this for granted, especially nowadays with equipment like rangefinders. Amateurs all have yardage devices, which is great, but they’re always zapping the flag, and without even realising it, they end up playing to the flag. We don’t see the top players going at flags—instead, they’re playing away from it. Many amateurs end up just aiming at the flag rather than picking an intentional target, so we need to be clearer on that. Golfers should identify a target beyond where they’re actually going so it’s easier to commit to it.

The main reason it’s important to have that target in mind
is so that we can send our brain clear messages. The brain waits for us to
instruct it, but amateur golfers usually don’t instruct it well enough. They
instruct it with ‘don’t go left’ or ‘don’t do this’, and our brains get
confused. It doesn’t know exactly what we want, so being clearer with our
intentions from the start makes everything easier.

Every golfer has a different method when it comes to setting
targets. For me, though—if I know I want to hit the ball down the right side of
the fairway—great, that’s a clear intention. Now, I need to identify a target
beyond that, on that line, where I want to aim.

When standing over the ball and having a last look at the target before playing a shot, it’s much easier to look at a target in the distance rather than one on the ground. I always want my players to have their heads up, and having a target in the distance will help ensure they do.

 

3. Do golf, not don’t golf

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Most amateurs (and even some pros) often use unhelpful self-talk
phrases such as ‘don’t go left’, ‘don’t go in the water’, ‘don’t fat it’, or ‘don’t
three-putt it’. As we touched upon earlier, these are confusing messages for
the brain. The subconscious mind can’t always interpret ‘don’t’ and will only
hear the words after it.

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So, if we were to tell our brains ‘don’t go left’, all the brain might hear is ‘go left’. With this in mind, remember that we’re the ones who instruct our brains, so let’s instruct it well. If we were caddying for a player, we would say, ‘I want you to hit this here,’ but we never say that to ourselves.

A good golf psychology tip is to eliminate the word ‘don’t’ from
your course vocabulary and heighten your use of ‘do’.

I do want to do this. I do want to do that. Let’s instruct ourselves better. 

 

4. Acceptance: Draw the line

Acceptance is such an important part of golf and golf
psychology. Too many of us get upset at hitting poor shots and we then get
frustrated. We give ourselves a hard time for hitting a poor shot, but the fact
is we’re always going to hit poor shots. Nobody ever plays a round of golf in
which every outcome is exactly what they want—and that’s the same at every
level of the game.

So, instead of giving ourselves a hard time, let’s focus on the
skills required to get better for next time and just accept the poor outcome.
Acceptance allows us to move on, and time that we’re not accepting is time when
we can’t move on, and we’re dragging bad energy with us.

Acceptance doesn’t mean that we like the shot or that we’re OK with the outcome, but that we are willing to accept it and move on, and that’s massive.

Whether we’re on the fairway or the tee, it’s really important to stand still, take two or three deep breaths, and draw the line. That’s the beauty of golf. There’s always a new challenge ahead, so being able to slow ourselves down in that moment is a great skill to have and develop.

 

5. The game within a game: Three-hole loops

We all normally view golf as one round of 18 holes, but we
don’t always have to see it like that. We can change the lens through which we
see it and reduce the timeframe that we’re competing on. Eighteen holes is a
lot of time to remain focused on, and there’s so much that can happen during
that time. However, if we break things up into smaller, more achievable
sections, we can make our time on the course more manageable.

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A great way of doing this is to play three-hole loops in our
heads. My tour players do it, and if they play the loop in under par, then
they’ve ‘won the loop’. Level is a half, and over-par is a loss, so it’s easy
to adapt to when we receive strokes on a hole.

The beauty of this is that we get a reset walk after each third hole. Then, we start a new loop, which takes us away from the bigger picture and keeps us closer to the present moment and challenge at hand. We might be thinking of the front nine or the chance of finishing off a good round, and this makes us focus on starting again. If we’re truly bought into this mindset, we’ll step onto the 16th tee playing to win that final loop of three. 

 

About Duncan

Duncan McCarthy is a mental performance coach who works with golfers across all tours, including Marcus Armitage, Mel Reid, and Major champion Ashleigh Buhai.

 

However you
approach your game and whatever golf psychology tips you find useful, the risk
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