Listen Your Way To a Better Golf Game
Have you ever met anyone who is satisfied with their golf game?
Chances are that if you are like the vast majority of duffers
out there you're always on the lookout for things that you can
do to bring those scores down. But it's probably never occurred
to you that you can use your ears (yes, I said ears!) to improve
your game and lower your handicap.
The first place you might want to try starting is with the CD
included with John Novosel and John Garrity's excellent book
Tour Tempo. Novosel and Garrity studied thousands of players and
reached the conclusion that the best players had a 3:1 ratio
between the timing of their backswing and the timing of their
downswing. The actual timing varied from player to player (e.g.,
Phil Mickleson has a "quicker" swing than Jim Furyk) but the
ratio was consistent across the vast majority of tour players.
Here's how you can apply this revelation to your golf game. The
CD that comes with the Tour Tempo book has a series of tracks
you can listen to and get a feel for your swing's tempo. To gain
the maximum benefit, bring a portable CD player (or load the CD
onto your iPod!) with you the next time you head to the range.
Use the tracks to groove your swing. You'll be amazed at how
quickly your tempo will improve.
Another cool way to improve your golf game is through
visualization and anchoring. Most people are familiar with
visualization but anchoring is less well-known. Anchoring is a
process that links a specific physical activity with a certain
state of emotion. For instance, if you pump you fist a la Tiger
Woods (you don't do that do you?!) every time you sink a long
putt then you've anchored fist pumping to a very positive
emotion.
Anchoring can be used to your benefit by helping you to recall
feelings of confidence and past peak performances. A great way
to practice visualization and anchoring is through a series of
audio programs created by Nicholas Rosa. Integrating Mind &
Body: NLP for Better Golf - Driving will help you to link a
"trigger" with your memories of the best drives you've ever hit.
Integrating Mind & Body: NLP for Better Golf - Putting will do a
similar thing for your short game.
A final way that you can use audio to improve your golf game is
simply by listening to audio books while you're practicing.
Bring a portable player with you to the range or when you head
to the putting green and listen to some of those great books
that you never seem to find the time to read. Some great
golf-related books you can listen to include A Good Walk Spoiled
by John Feinstein, Golf and the Spirit by M. Scott Peck and
Michael Murphy's classic Golf in the Kingdom. Listening to books
while you practice can make practice more enjoyable which in
turn might help you practice a little more and finally start
playing the golf you know that you've been capable of.