Thursday, May 24, 2007

One Artful Shot at a Time

"The golf swing, no matter how memorized, is a creative act born out of the conditions of the moment, no two of which are ever the same. Whereas you can reduce the swing to it's individual pieces, you cannot reduce the game to science. It is an art and you are the artist." -- Lynn Molhan

If in fact, there is a secret to playing artful golf, I'd have to say that it's taking the game one creative shot at a time, while letting go of all expectations and judgments before and after each shot. I finally got back in that mindset for a short time this week. After struggling lately to even break 80, I realized I was simply trying too hard to regain my past success. I decided to let go of expectations and just play the game. Better results followed immediately.


Artful shot by konderminator at flickr.com

During my 9-hole Tuesday night league this week, I was matched against a scratch golfer, 20 years younger than me. He had to give me 2 strokes. We both missed the green on the first hole and left our chips too far out to expect par. I 2-putted for bogie. He lipped his second putt and gave me the first hole. The next hole was a long par 5 which I've never seen anyone hit in two. My opponent missed doing so by hitting slightly left of the green with a 3-wood after an absolutely huge drive. I got on in three and 2-putted for par. His chip went a little long and he missed his birdie putt. Still up one. I stroked on the next hole which we both bogied. Up two. We both missed the green on the following par 4, but my pitch from behind the green ran past the pin and went off the green on the other side. He had a slippery downhill putt for par. I chipped in from 15 feet for par! He missed his 10 foot putt and bogied. Up three! We both parred the next par 3. Still up three.

My driver kicked into gear on the following par 4. I hit a 300 yard drive to 60 yards out. He followed with a huge pull left. He got on in three. I put my second shot about 15 feet beyond the pin, leaving me with a difficult breaking putt, but an easy par. He was looking at a makable par putt. I aimed about 3 feet outside the hole and watched the putt trickle in for birdie! I'd closed him out - up four with three to go! We finished the round since we also compete for strokes. We both bogied the next par 5 and parred the following par 4. On our final hole, the course's most difficult, I stroked again. He led off with a monster drive into the wind, leaving himself with a 130 yard approach. Rarely does anyone get inside 160 yards! I surprised all of us with another huge drive and was amazed to find myself only 5 yards behind his ball when we arrived in the fairway. We both made good shots in and 2-putted for par. I won 5 holes to his zero and shot 38 (net 36) to his 42.

The next day, I took the afternoon off to play another local course to practice for an upcoming tournament this weekend. I started off like I left off the night before. I chipped and 1-putted for par on the par 4 1st. I managed a sandy par on the par 3 2nd by sinking a 30 foot putt. My drive on the par 5 3rd went behind a tree. I punched out, but landed a fairway bunker. I left my third shot short and left of the green, but again, I chipped up and made a 10 footer for par. I parred the next 3 holes to remain even par after 6. Then I birdied 7, 8 and 9 to go 3-under on the front, shooting my first-ever 33 for nine holes! I did it with only 12 putts and 5 GIRs.

I started the back nine trying to stay present in the moment and not start thinking about the potential outcome. I missed a 10 footer for birdie on 10 and a 15 footer for birdie on 11. Still 3-under after 11. I hit a good drive on 12, then hit a wedge quite a bit left of the pin to avoid going right over a deep bunker guarding the right-side pin. My long lag putt stayed right on line, but went past the hole about 4 feet. On the front nine and during my round the night before, I sunk every putt within 5 feet. That streak ended on 12 when I 3-putted for my first bogie of the round. Still 2-under.

I got greedy on the following par 5 and tried to get on in 2 with a 3-wood after hitting a long drive. I landed the frontside bunker. The pin was back, so I took a big swing from the bunker, but didn't take enough sand and ended up well past the steep sloping green. I pitched on and barely missed my 15 foot putt for par. Another bogie and back to 1-under. I pulled out a par on the par 4 14th after missing my first fairway on the back. On 15, I hit an incredible drive, leaving me with a short pitch to the green. The pin was back behind a mound which I barely failed to carry. My ball ended up near the top of the mound, leaving me a pretty good chance for a 2-putt par. But while I was walking up to remove the pin, my ball rolled back down the hill about 10 feet! Still, I made a good putt over the breaking mound, leaving another 4 footer for par. I missed. Now back to even par!

With 3 holes to go, I started thinking a little more about what I needed to do to come in even or better. The par 4 16th is the hardest hole on the course, but 17 always proves to have the highest scoring average during tournaments. However, I can usually reach the par 5 18th in 2, providing a nice birdie opportunity. So, I guess I let my mind start getting ahead of the shot at hand and began to focus on the desired outcome. Regardless, I parred 16, then landed the par 3 17th with a nice tee shot. However, I left my 1st putt short and gave myself yet another 4 footer for par. I missed one more time and went to 1-over. I still had my birdie opportunity at 18! I hit another great drive and landed the green in 2 as planned. But again, I was left with a difficult putt over a huge mound. I picked a good line, but came up 3 feet short. I lipped out my birdie putt and 3-putted for the fourth time in last seven holes!

I'd ended the front nine 3-under with 12 putts and 5 GIRs, but managed to go 4-over on the back with a whopping 22 putts after hitting 8 GIRs! Nevertheless, I really had fun during my last two rounds and am excited that my game is going back in the right direction!

One artful shot at a time! One artful shot at a time! One artful shot at a time! Okay, I think I got it.

Stay centered in the current moment with the current shot. The past has slipped away, the future will take care of itself. Remain centered in the artful now.

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6 Comments:

Anonymous Andrew said...

Confucius once said, to have no expectations is to have everything
Golfers can be chained to their past.
Rather than using memory appropriately, they are haunted by comparisons with what has happened previously or dreams of what may come.

Let go and drift with what is happening.

You live in the present moment, so action must occur in the here and now.

Blogger The Artful Golfer said...

Excellent comments Andrew (and Confucius)! I'm playing in a Men's Tournament this morning and will take these words to heart. Let go and play.

Blogger Robert said...

I stumbled upon this blog trough John Richardsons blog which i stumbled upon looking for info about Ben Hogan.
Lucky I dont stuble much on the golfcourse tho.

Golf is a mental/physical game more than a swinggame since each swing is new.

Finding the grove the zone is all about performing at your best and being able to play well before you played well.

I coach and spend a lot of time setting up and define the game in how to play it before its done and then elicit and establish that so it becomes a task of finding that state with appropriate beliefs along supporting the task and results wanted.

I enjoyed reading your travel about playing golf.

Doing something similiar here.

Blogger The Artful Golfer said...

Hi Robert, glad you stumbled upon my site ;) I really liked what you said about setting up and defining how to play before the round. Today I had a Men's Club tournament from the Women's tees! I hadn't played this course from the Red tees before, so I wasn't sure what to expect. I tried to anticipate what club I'd need from each tee before the round, but couldn't figure out how I'd play the 7th and 8th (both doglegs). This indecision followed me into unto the course. It turns out I shot an even-par 72 today with a triple bogie on 7 and bogie on 8! I played the rest of the course at par or better ;) I could really get used to playing from the Women's tees!

Blogger Robert said...

"Today I had a Men's Club tournament from the Women's tees! I hadn't played this course from the Red tees before, so I wasn't sure what to expect. I tried to anticipate what club I'd need from each tee before the round, but couldn't figure out how I'd play the 7th and 8th (both doglegs). This indecision followed me into unto the course. It turns out I shot an even-par 72 today with a triple bogie on 7 and bogie on 8!"

That typically happens, easier to blend a mix between a whole round and each shot.

Our brain when it has to make a decision, comparing between two different outcomes or not sure how to play for example a hole it cant get the execution correctly done.

As I like to say, if unsure, pick the safest path, middle of fairway, middle of green. Walk away with a birdie or par.
In other way you will at least have a decision that supports the gameplay.

Blogger The Artful Golfer said...

A brief update... By taking the game one shot at a time, truly letting go of the outcome, and not trying so hard, I've followed up my 88 with a 79, 73, 72, 77, and 75! My 75 yesterday included 4 3-putts on a very windy day with lightning fast greens! Great ball striking. I hit 13 GIR and 11 Fairways, but tallied 35 putts.

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The Artful Golfer

The insights and experiences of a middle-aged software engineer taking up the artful game of golf.
Years: 3; Index: 2.5; Aces: 2
The Artful Golfer

Golf as Art

When you disappear, Golf as Art shows up. The resulting void is where all the important discoveries, personal development, satisfaction, joy and fulfillment take place.
Fred Shoemaker, Extraordinary Golf

Extraordinary Golf

The key to extraordinary golf is having the courage to keep your possibilities open.
Fred Shoemaker, Extraordinary Golf

Fearless Golf

Excellence in golf requires that you make fearless swings at precise targets.
Dr. Gio Valiante, Fearless Golf

Previous Posts

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Artful Milestones

  • Mar 05 - Started playing (1 rd/week)
  • Jun 05 - Broke 80 (21st round)
  • Nov 05 - Increased play (2+ rds/week)
  • Jan 06 - Sub-10 Index (54th round)
  • Jan 06 - 10 GIR (62nd round)
  • Mar 06 - Sub-30 Putts (75th round)
  • Aug 06 - First Eagle (124th round)
  • Aug 06 - 5 Birdies (138th round)
  • Sep 06 - Broke 76 (146th round)
  • Oct 06 - First ACE (161st round)
  • Oct 06 - Sub-5 Index (166th round)
  • Oct 06 - 13 Fairways (169th round)
  • Dec 06 - Broke 72 (184th round)
  • Dec 06 - 70's Streak (9/10 rounds)
  • Feb 07 - Sub-4 Index (219th round)
  • Feb 07 - 15 GIR (219th round)
  • Apr 07 - 3.3 Index (235th round)
  • Oct 07 - 24 Putts (298th round)
  • Jan 08 - 70's Streak (12 rounds)
  • Jan 08 - Second ACE (332nd round)
  • Apr 08 - 71 from Tips (370th round)
  • Apr 08 - Sub-3 Index (370th round)

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