 Time spent on the range is key
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Practice time
Most single figure golfers spend at least 1-2 hours a week on the practice range, or at least half an hour warming up before they play. Category 2 plays (6-12 handicap) rely on their natural talent and a warm-up session before they play, while mid-handicappers rely on a quick practice putt (5 minutes) and a little stretching on the first tee. The rest of us take our chances with whichever game 'turns up' on the day.
Course strategy
The better players will study their course planner before the round and gauge from how they're hitting the ball on the range how they will attack the course. Mid-handicappers will perhaps consult their course planners occasionally and try to let their head rule their heart when a wayward shot demands their next gets them back into play. Higher handicappers will blast it from every eventuality and see what happens.
Psychology
They say that golf is 10 per-cent technique and 90 per-cent mental. That may be true for good players with an established golf game but for most of us our lack of confidence in our technique causes us to fear what can go wrong, rather than what might go right.
The better player will be buoyed by their confidence knowing they can recapture their quality with just a minor adjustment or a little more concentration. For the mid-handicapper too many questions outweigh the answers while for the higher handicapper the tendency to disintegrate is only a shank away.
Already half a dozen members have responded to Boomer's thread and revealed good analyses of their own game. The thread deserves even more attention to help us understand where all of us might improve.
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