Listening to golfers on the range, I hear conversations like this, from Bob;
"Hey Jim. I noticed that all the top pro golfers eat chicken, so I tried it out this week – ate more chicken than usual. Lo and behold, I shot my best round in 4 months. I think there is something to this."
Maybe he is right – maybe there is an incredible percentage of tour pros who eat chicken.
Maybe Bob DID play his best round in 4 months after eating more chicken than usual.
Please, bear with me here, there is an important lesson for you.
Eat More Chicken
A couple of weeks later, Bob’s form slowly subsides and he goes back to his normal level of play.
"I must need more chicken." (Bob, 2018)
As Bob shovels unhealthy amounts of breast, thigh and wing down his gullet, his form starts to decline even more than normal as he is so full all the time.
Finally, he gives up of the idea of chicken. He’s finally figured out the secret to golf.
BEEF!
Adam, You’ve Lost It!
Maybe I have – I’m always on the verge.
As stupid as this whole scenario is, golfers worldwide are going through something very similar every single day.
They pick some random thing – usually something that tour pros do, or a unique characteristic that the latest “tour-winner” has. They then try to incorporate it into their own swing, hoping that this one is the magic-move.
In many cases it’s not – and then it’s back to the drawing board.
But, in many cases, they have a bit of success for a while. And it might have absolutely nothing to do with the intervention – as our “chicken” example clearly demonstrates.
And, due to confirmation biases, it can lead players to spend inordinate amounts of time on things that really are not making much of a positive impact on their game.
But I Got Better
I had to have this conversation with a player of mine recently, who always comes in with the latest fad gadget or swing advice he found on youtube.
He’s always “finding the secret” – and always finding out later down the road that it wasn’t the secret.
Yet, this player got better.
But how? When we look back at what he was trying, he stuck with none of it.
Well, throughout this whole process, he was practicing and playing. So he got better at golf in the same way as an ectomorph might gain muscle by lifting a can of beans 20 times a day.
However, as I pointed out to this pupil, he actually got better because he inadvertently improved the things I told him to focus on a year earlier – the stuff he should have been working on but was too busy scrambling around for the secret. But I got better
he replied. True – but you would have gotten a lot better a lot quicker if you had actually spent all that time working/focusing on the things I said to work on. Look at all the time wasted on that could have been productively channeled.
Spinning Wheels
Sure, this “pick a random swing piece” approach might work during your first 3 years or so of play – but eventually you hit a wall. THEN, you have to start working on things that actually improve your game.
The things that actually change ball flight and result.
This is why so many golfers end up spinning their wheels year after year. Through;
- Lack of understanding of what actually creates a good shot
- Lack of appropriate feedback
- Lack of a plan
golfers end up playing what I call “voodoo golf”, where the game becomes like a dark-art that is seemingly random and uncontrollable. They then take to doing all sorts of rain-dances to try and improve their games.
These players are always finding things that work, but end up the same level at the end of the year – or have a very slow progress considering the amount of work they put in.