You Can Get Better Without Beating Balls
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Tiger Woods news drops and we react in real time, not with hot takes, but with the questions every golf fan has when the spotlight hits the biggest name in the sport again. It’s a quick reminder that golf stories can turn fast, and that public pressure has a way of magnifying every detail whether it’s fair or not.
From there, we pivot to the part of golf we can actually control: how we practice and how we improve. We unpack lessons from a coaching summit and talk about using technology like TrackMan and force plates without drowning in numbers. The goal is simple: focus on what moves performance. That means knowing which metrics matter for each club, avoiding traps like chasing smash factor with irons, and respecting a few non negotiables while still leaving room for your swing DNA.
Then we get tactical. We outline a realistic driving range practice plan for golfers with jobs and limited time: do your drills at home, treat the range like a dress rehearsal, buy the small bucket, and give every shot a routine. We dig into wedge distance control through better contact and lower trajectory, iron practice that trains “miss patterns” by playing pins, and driver work built around setup consistency, alignment sticks, and a dependable shot shape. We finish with short game and putting, including a lag putting drill that trains speed feel at impact so you stop giving away stress free pars with three putts.
If you like practical golf coaching you can use today, subscribe, share this with a buddy, and leave a review. What part of your game would you build first: driver, wedges, or putting?
Website : measuredgolf.com
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