The Truth About Golf
Never try to keep more than 300 separate thoughts in your mind
during your swing.
When your shot has to carry over a water hazard,
you can either hit one more club or two more balls.
If you're afraid a full shot might reach the
green while the foursome ahead of you is still putting out, you have two
options: you can immediately shank a lay-up or you can wait until the green is
clear and top a ball halfway there.
The less skilled the player, the more likely he
is to share his ideas about the golf swing.
No matter how bad you are playing, it is always
possible to play worse.
The inevitable result of any golf lesson is the
instant elimination of the one critical unconscious motion that allowed you to
compensate for all of your many other errors.
If it ain't broke, try changing your grip.
Golfers who claim they don't cheat also lie.
Everyone replaces his divot after a perfect
approach shot.
A golf match is a test of your skill against
your opponents luck.
It is surprisingly easy to hole a fifty foot
putt if it’s for an 8.
Counting on your opponent to inform you when he
breaks a rule is like expecting him to make fun of his own haircut.
Nonchalant putts count the same as chalant
putts.
It's not a gimme if you're still away.
The shortest distance between any two points on
a golf course is a straight line that passes directly through the center of a
very large tree.
There are two kinds of bounces; unfair bounces
and bounces just the way you meant to play it.
You can hit a two-acre fairway 10% of the time
and a two-inch branch 90% of the time.
If you really want to get better at golf, go
back and take it up at a much earlier age. The game of golf is 90% mental and
10% mental.
Since bad shots come in groups of three, a
fourth bad shot is actually the beginning of the next group of three.
When you look up, causing an awful shot, you
will always look down again at exactly the moment when you ought to start
watching the ball if you ever want to see it again.
Every time a golfer makes a birdie, he must
subsequently make two triple bogeys to restore the fundamental equilibrium of
the universe.
If you want to hit a 7 iron as far as Tiger
Woods does, simply try to lay just short of a water hazard.
There are two things you can learn by stopping your
backswing at the top and checking the position of your hands: how many hands
you have, and which one in wearing the glove.
Hazards attract, fairways repel.
You can put "draw" on the ball, you
can put "fade" on the ball, but no golfer can put "straight"
on the ball.
A ball you can see in the rough from 50 yards
away is not yours.
If there is a ball in the fringe and a ball in
the bunker, your ball is in the bunker. If both balls are in the bunker, yours
is in the footprint.
Don't buy a putter until you've had a chance to
throw it. (No throwing clubs though - don't like it!)