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Hellow TLers anyone love to golf? if so then fuck yes! i just got really exited and wanted to brag about my sick 5 bogeys in a row today... and then finished with a little birdie. Poll fun
Poll: Golfis the bomb (26) 54% is cool (10) 21% is boring (7) 15% is lame (5) 10% 48 total votes Your vote: Golf (Vote): is the bomb (Vote): is cool (Vote): is boring (Vote): is lame
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I hit the ball sideways on the driving range...so yes, I love golf.
Trying to get better though...
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I love golf, though I've still got a long way to go. I injured my shoulder coming out of high school, so I can only do a half-swing, but I still have a great time chipping 150-200 yards at a time down the course.
one of my favorite things is city executive courses that are always cheap. Just go there with my friends, pay 10 bucks, crack open a few beers and relax for 18 holes.
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I really can't get down to 70's... GG
Driving average: 270~80ish (R9 is the best driver out there)
Score average: Around mid-high 80s~90s
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I LOVE GOLF
Driving Average around 250 (I weigh 111 lbs 5'8")
Score average: 80's
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Does Mario Golf count?
I wanted to play golf but it was too expensive
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I really can't get down to 70's... GG
Driving average: 270~80ish (R9 is the best driver out there)
Score average: Around mid-high 80s~90s
I know its cliche, but its all about the short game. Unless you whack several OB a round off the tee, if your not shooting lower the biggest issue is almost always the short game. If you're short game is like the typical 10-15 handicaps you can easily shave 5 or more a round by getting reasonably decent at chipping and putting. Moreso if you get some wedge consistency from inside 100 yards.
Sounds like you hit the ball plenty far, so your fundamentals aren't garbage, its just a matter of honing your game so your bad misses aren't as bad; and improving your short game.
Driving average: 310-330
Score average: 73.8 tournament average last season. Typical score is probably 68-75.
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It all about the up and downs mang
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It all about the up and downs mang
This is so true. I mean if you watched a scratch player next to a tour player hitting drivers you probably couldnt tell who was who.
Get to the shorter irons and you probably have a good idea who the tour pro is.
Get down to the chipping and putting and it will be clear as day.
Almost any decent kid coming up today, even at high school ranks, drives it 270+. I can't tell you how many times I played with kids that would bomb hit consistently 330+ and then take 35 putts and shoot 78; despite having sand wedge into five pars and pitches into par 4's. Its the finer aspects like distance control and short game that seperate solid players, from good ones, from great ones, from "S-Class" players.
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Calgary25951 Posts
Instead of working today I went golfing. It's fun
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Calgary25951 Posts
On June 04 2010 12:23 L_Master wrote: I played with kids that would bomb hit consistently 330+ I fucking CANNOT STAND people like you. "Oh I rocked that 300+" No, in fact you didn't.
Do you know how far 330 yards is? Look at the average drives of PGA professionals.
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On June 04 2010 12:27 Chill wrote:Show nested quote +On June 04 2010 12:23 L_Master wrote: I played with kids that would bomb it consistently 330+ I fucking CANNOT STAND people like you. "Oh I rocked that 300+" No, in fact you didn't. Do you know how far 330 yards is? Look at the average drives of PGA professionals.
True. However, I also live in Colorado, where the ball flys at least 10% farther than sea level. 330 here turns into 300 at sea level. Also, if you look at many of the top pros they hit it around 300, maybe a little more on average, which includes holes on which the may not use driver (though they usually select holes the player will hit driver on). But a player who drives the ball 300+ yards average will hit plenty of drives in the course of a round that are 330+. When I say a player consistently hits the ball 330+ what I'm trying to say is that it is routine for them to hit tee shots of this length, even though they may not average this distance.
Also, most kids these days that are serious junior and certainly college golfers have a plenty of power. They have grown up emulating players like Tiger and Phil, as well as constantly having the benefits of distance bombarded at them and as a result, most of them have learned to hit the ball quite far. There are plenty of kids in the collegiate and lower tours that hit it quite a bit further than most of the professionals on the PGA Tour.
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On June 04 2010 12:23 L_Master wrote:This is so true. I mean if you watched a scratch player next to a tour player hitting drivers you probably couldnt tell who was who.Get to the shorter irons and you probably have a good idea who the tour pro is. Get down to the chipping and putting and it will be clear as day. Almost any decent kid coming up today, even at high school ranks, drives it 270+. I can't tell you how many times I played with kids that would bomb hit consistently 330+ and then take 35 putts and shoot 78; despite having sand wedge into five pars and pitches into par 4's. Its the finer aspects like distance control and short game that seperate solid players, from good ones, from great ones, from "S-Class" players.
this really isnt true. Lots of people overrate scratch players. Scratch really isnt shit at all in terms of golfing ability. Obviously you werent saying scratch players can compete with tour professionals which Im not accusing you of I just wanted to bring up a point .
The courses the tour plays are all surely rated well over 76 on the course rating so a scratch player on their better days (roughly 50% of their time) would at best shoot 4 over. How good the tour players are is fucking insane. Id imagine youd have to at least be a +5 to 6 to be on tour and when Tiger is on hes probably close to a +8.
But ya short game does separate the very top tier players a long with the mental game.
Seriously if you go to a tour event and go to the driving range it will make you sick how good they hit the ball. Also if you watch them in person standing on a single tee you can bet 2/3 of them will hit the fairway at the very least and almost always 1 person in the group makes birdie on the hole or at least 1 person birdies the hole every other group.
Oh and ya people overrate their distance so much. The longest driver I ever played with hit it probably 310 regularly and occasionally could put it out there 330. He was also 6'4" and gangly so that helps a lot in terms of leverage. I myself hit it about 270 ish lately as long as I make relatively good contact. My best ones are up around 285-290. A few years ago a took a couple lessons and was hitting it around 290+ most of the time. It was so much easier. Every par 5 was reachable that I played and it was nice having driver wedge or driver 9 iron into 450+ yard par 4's from time to time =)
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. How good the tour players are is fucking insane. Id imagine youd have to at least be a +5 to 6 to be on tour and when Tiger is on hes probably close to a +8.
Totally true. I believe the average Tour handicap has been estimated at around +6 (like you said), and Tiger (based on estimated slope/CR) has been estimated as high as +10.5 which is so off the charts crazy its ridiculous.
Its crazy though how big of a gap that scratch to +6 is. Going from a 5 or 6 to a scratch handicap isn't absurdly hard if you put in some good practice time on the right things. Getting deep into the plus handicaps is a whole nother matter. I practiced, and pretty efficiently I feel, for about 6 hours a day last summer and barely went from around a 1 or so handicap to a +2. And while I'm a decent player I can't even sniff at the skill a tour pro has; its just a whole different level. A 3 and a 5 or 6 handicapper are somewhat close in ability; but a +3 and a +6 are in a whole different league altogether.
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I play every once in a while, but if someone got me this I'd play every day with them :D.
Source
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Sounds like there are some sticks that hang around TL. Good to hear. Hit em long and straight, and may all your putts fall .
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Used to play a lot of golf from 6th to 9th or 10th grade. I was pretty good for my age, shooting in the upper 70's in highschool. But now, I just play disc golf everyday. Way more fun, and just skill demanding imo.
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Funny how someone posts a driving average and then the next one is longer. That said I drive 175-225 with a Hybrid. (Don't have a true driver yet). I wish we had cheap courses here, executive 9 = $20.00 and no beer cart.
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I refute that it's not that hard to get from a 6 to a scratch!
I'm a 2 now. Got back into golf last summer after a decade or so off. (I was a ranked jr player, +2 cap at one time, I'm 27 now)
Last summer I got it back to 3, this summer I got it back to scratch for a week or so but finished the year (damn canadian weather) at 2.
I play on a fairly tough course, breaking par doesn't happen too often, and that is what you need to do consistently to get to scratch.
What I find helps me the most are my playing partners. The course I play at has a ton of fun guys and I'd say we've got 40 or so players that are a 3 cap or below, and 5 or 6 that are legit +1 - +3. Playing with these guys really pushes you to work get better.
Anyone in Ontario or nearby should check out the Kawartha Invitational tournament in Peterborough. It's the only 3 day amateur invitational event in Ontario, has past winners like David Morland IV and Moe Norman, and is super fun to play in! PM me for info if you'd like.
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