Shot-making skill is developed from years of practice, building a feel and confidence for almost any imaginable shot.
Professional golfers are excellent at running down a long list of factors before arriving at a shot-making decision, considering the lie, footing, incline of the original position and the landing, turf surrounding the lie and that of the potential landing, wetness of soil both at the address and at the target area.
They also account for the numerous environmental conditions (gravity, wind, air density, and temperatures) that also vary significantly and require adjustments.
Obviously, good golfers assess all these factors and have the confidence in their muscle memory to make the necessary adjustments, intuitively visualizing how hard to hit the ball, calculating the trajectory, spin, landing, and the bounce and roll expected to best take advantage of the conditions.
Nevertheless, what is so simple in principle is devilishly difficult in execution.
Whenever the slightest bit of uncertainty — over-factoring, or over-discounting sneaks into the picture — a shot that should have been well executed can turn into a nightmarishly bad one.
Elkins Lake Golf Report
May 10, 2009
The human factors in shotmaking
- Elkins Lake Golf Report
-
-
Golfers are mental masochists
The majority of sports today require both the participant and the spectator to have masochistic tendencies.
-
The power of negative thinking
This article is primarily for older and experienced golfers. Beginners and young people are concerned mainly in hitting the ball. They have not lived long enough, in the world of golf to have experienced the extensive trauma related to the game.
-
Seniors, you have it made
As a man grows older he starts complaining about the things he can no longer do. He needs to look at the bright side and appreciate the advantages he has acquired.
- A golf pro’s thoughts on important matters A vast majority of men, when turning on the radio or television in the morning, will turn to the sports news.
-
Nerves, our major enemy
All participants in sports experience nervousness at the start of a game or contest. The nervousness usually leaves quickly after the contest starts and there is bodily contact.
-
Weapons of mental destruction
The weapons of mental destruction are the 14 golf clubs in your golf bag.
-
The Obnoxious Golfer
Golf, in the early stages, was considered a “rich man’s sport” or a “gentleman’s game.”
I have determined that being rich does not automatically qualify you as being a gentleman.
-
Choose the shot that best fits your capabilities
The adage in golf has always been not how, but how many. There is no set rule as to how you get the ball close to the hole when just off the green, but the decision you make could mean all the difference in your score.
-
An adventure of a lifetime
Last week, through the kindness of a close friend, I was able to spend five glorious days in Alaska. My journey started on Wednesday with a seven-hour flight out of Houston straight to Anchorage.
-
SHOT-MAKING: Art or science?
Getting the ball to go where you want is equal parts science and art. A professional golfer has a mastery of mind, body and club that is likened to an artist’s exquisite control of a paintbrush on a canvas, or a musician’s deft fingertips on an instrument.
- More Elkins Lake Golf Report Headlines
-
Golfers are mental masochists
The majority of sports today require both the participant and the spectator to have masochistic tendencies.



